Linebacker 1
Linebacker 2
Viet Cong
The name of the offensive that even though it was an American victory changed public opinion on the war in Vietnam is "The Tet Offensive".
The Tet offensive was a military operation planned by the government of North Vietnam and executed by the North Vietnamese Army and the Vietcong in 1968, against the US-led allied forces during the Vietnam War.
The planning of the offensive was meticulous and the execution well done; but the military results were disastrous; not so the political consequences, especially in the United States. The large number of US soldiers killed during the offensive, about 14,000, was not tolerated by the American people. The rejection of the war in the United States increased and this meant a turn of the war towards the defeat of the coalition. Some authors consider that it was a tactical defeat, since in addition to the huge number of deaths among North Vietnamese fighters, they lost the totality of the conquered territories. However, it is considered to be a strategic victory due to the subsequent change that it caused in the US military strategy.
Americans were confident of a US military victory.
Americans grew critical of the war because the Viet Cong were viewed as remaining strong.
Americans were appalled at the brutality of the Viet Cong forces and wanted total victory.
Answer:
c. Americans grew critical of the war because the Viet Cong were viewed as remaining strong.
Explanation:
B. Edmund Spenser wrote The Faerie Queene about knights and their values.
C. The French philosopher Montesquieu wrote The Spirit of Laws, opposing despotic governments.
D. Many scholars in England and France argued that reason could illuminate or spotlight truth.
E. Louis XIV of France claimed the divine right of kings.
Statement which says Enlightenment ideas are true is the English philosopher John Locke wrote Two Treatises of Government, saying that laws should be made only for the good of the people. The correct answers are A, C & D.
John Locke, also called as the "founder of liberalism," was an English philosopher and physician who lived from 29 August 1632 to 28 October 1704. He is recognized as one of the most significant intellectuals of the Enlightenment.
Locke is similarly significant to the social contract idea as one of the pioneering British empiricists in the Francis Baconian vein. His contributions had a significant impact on the growth of political philosophy and epistemology.
His ideas had an impact on many Scottish Enlightenment philosophers, including Voltaire and Jean-Jacques Rousseau, as well as American Revolutionaries.
Further in the US Declaration of Independence, his contributions to classical republicanism and liberal ideology are acknowledged. Internationally, the idea and practice of limited representative government continue to be significantly influenced by Locke's political-legal foundations.
Therefore option A, C and D are correct.
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The correct answers are:
A. The English Philosopher John Locke wrote Two Treatises of Government, saying that the laws should be made only for the good of the people.
C. The French Philosopher Montesquieu wrote The Spirit of Laws, opposing governments.
D. Many scholars in England and France argued that reason could illuminate or spotlight truth.
c. Fidel Castro
b. Che Guevara
d. Lenin