Answer:
The Emancipation did not apply to states under Union military control.
Explanation:
The Emancipation Proclamation was a law drafted on September 22, 1862 by the President of the United States Abraham Lincoln and entered into force on January 1, 1863, abolishing slavery throughout the Confederate territory still in Civil War.
At the time of its ratification, the Proclamation freed a minimum number of slaves, but as the Union annexed the Confederate territories, it paved the way for the total abolition of slavery on American territory. Slavery became illegal through the approval of the 13th Constitutional Amendment, a fact that occurred in 1865.
The law was severely criticized in the southern states, whose economic activity was based on slave labor. However, adherence of this measure to all Confederate states ensured Lincoln's main focus: strengthening Union ties.
Answer:
States under Union military control -- Missouri, Kentucky, Maryland and Delaware
Explanation:
Slaves in Missouri, Kentucky, Maryland and Delaware were freed by separate state and federal actions.
both b and D are correct
b. Roosevelt felt the other thirty percent were needed to defend the US mainland.
c. Roosevelt did not feel the US needed to engage Japan.
d. Roosevelt and Churchill decided to focus on the greater threat first.
Answer: d. Roosevelt and Churchill decided to focus on the greater threat first.
The strategy of the Allied forces was to focus on Europe first, and deal with the threat in the Pacific afterwards. The main reason was that two allied capitals (London and Moscow) could be directly treatened by Germany, while Japan could not directly threaten any capitals. The United Kingdom was particularly vulnerable to attacks from Germany, as Germany had alreday overrun most countries in Western Europe. It was also believed that if Germany was defeated, Italy and Japan would be severely weakened. Despite the attack on Pearl Harbour, the United States maintained this "Europe First" policy.
a is the correct anwser
B try to prevent domination by one country
C try to reduce their armies
D promote peace among nations