Germany was ready to increase their war effort with renewed submarine warfare, and wanted Mexico's help to keep the United States out of the war in Europe.
Explanation:
As Germany decided to resume unrestricted submarine warfare in the Atlantic, the idea behind the telegram was that Mexico would engage in war with the United States, which would keep US forces and funding occupied on its own continent and prevent them from jumping into the war in Europe.
Here is the decoded text of the telegram sent by German Foreign Secretary Arthur Zimmermann to the German ambassador to Mexico, Heinrich von Eckardt:
Answer:
French
Explanation:
Anti-Federalists were against the US Constitution because they believed that the new Constitution created a strong central government that had the capacity of becoming a tyranny. They believed that there should not have a central government or a central government should be a weak one. Eventually, the Anti Federalists were able to push for the approval of the Bill of Rights as a way to make the Central Government less powerful and to respect people’s basic rights.
B. The policy of isolationism followed by European nations had been largely ignored by 1914.
C. European leaders believed a war in Europe would revive their struggling economies.
D. A quick, reliable system of communication was not available to foreign ministers.
Answer:
A. Nations responded to threats to their allies by mobilizing their militaries.
Explanation:
The outbreak of World War I was greatly due to the system of alliances made between the powerful European countries of the time. This system obligated a country to go to war if its ally was being threatened or attacked.
There were 2 main alliances on the eve of WWI, the Triple Alliance between Germany, Austria-Hungary, and Italy, and the Triple Entente between France, Britain, and Russia.
Once the "powder keg was ignited" all of these countries began mobilizing their armies in order to support and uphold their alliances.
The correct option is A
After the fall of the monarchy the Republic was established in Rome (Res publica, that is to say, 'the public thing'), an aristocratic regime led by some forty gens; the patricians, the descendants of the oldest families in Rome held the power. The main institutions of the new regime were the Senate, the magistracies and the elections.
The Senate was one of the pillars of the Republic, being the political organ that demanded responsibilities to the consuls. Originally the Senate was constituted only by patricians, but from the Lex Ovinia of the year 312 a. C., plebeians were allowed to be part of it. The auctoritas of the Senate gave validity to the agreements taken in the popular assemblies. The Senate also resolved cases of interregnum, a situation that occurred when one of the consuls died.
The Magistracy was an original charge of the Republic. The head of the rex or monarch was replaced by two collegiate and temporary magistrates called consuls who could be held responsible for their government duties. Each magistrate could veto the other, which was known as intercessio. Also during the Republic popular assemblies, called Comitia Centuriata, were created.
The answer to this question is A).