East Germany, Poland, Hungary, Romania, Bulgaria, and Yugoslavia resisted Soviet control despite being a communist nation
Explanation:
- Khrushchev's policy of "coexistence" with the West did not mean that he was willing to recognize the peace settlement in Germany.
- he was determined to change it in favor of the Soviet Union and its East German satellite
- The Western powers refused the plan because the abolition of the U.S. "nuclear umbrella" would not leave NATO forces.
- both the Soviet and East German governments still continued to achieve the goal of a united, Germany under communist control.
- there was also a significant increase in academic and cultural contacts with the West.
The correct answer for the question that is being presented above is this one: "Hitler used propaganda, terror tactics, secret police (Gestapo), he outlawed other political parties, and made the army swear personal allegiance to him. <span>The Nazi-Soviet Pact was a 10 year Nonaggression pact that Germany signed with the Soviet Union in 1939 (which Hitler obviously broke a mere 2 years later). "</span>
It would be "d. eight-hour days" that was not a problem faced by workers in nineteenth century mills or mines, since legislation advocating for strict working hours did not come about until the Progressive Era.
The correct answers are A) He is considered to have been a good general and a wise ruler of his empire. B) He appointed governors to help control conquered lands. D) He established a permanent army. E) He united the Sumerian city-states with his empire of Akkad.
Those are the statements that describe Sargon's achievements as an empire builder.
Sargon the Great was the King of Mesopotamia in ancient Sumeria. Historians consider that he reigned from 2324 to 2279 BC. He was a great King that conquered many territories such as Kish, Asuhr, Cyprus, and Anatolia. He built his city, Akkad, next to the Euphrates River. The clay tablets that recorded the history of Sumer in cuneiform writing refers to many legendary tales of King Sargon.