Answer:
the union
Explanation:
B) Taking of American hostages in Tehran
C) Attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon
D) Ronald Reagan telling Gorbachev "Tear down this wall
Answer:
The correct answer is C. The events that led to the United States bombing Afghanistan on October 7, 2001, were the attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon.
Explanation:
The 9/11 attacks were a series of concerted terrorist attacks carried out by the Islamist terrorist organization al-Qaeda targeting civilian and military buildings in the United States on September 11, 2001. Four passenger aircraft were hijacked; two of them were flown into the civilian World Trade Center twin towers in Manhattan, New York, the third was flown into the Defense Pentagon headquarters in Virginia, and the fourth crashed in a field outside Shanksville, Pennsylvania. The attacks killed 2,996, injured over 6,000 people and caused property and infrastructure damage for at least $ 10 billion. The vast majority of casualties were those who died in or near the twin towers, either when they were attacked or raided, this has caused the attacks on the twin towers to receive the most attention by the media.
The attack is considered the largest terrorist attack in world history and is considered one of the most significant events of modern times in terms of economic, social, political, cultural and military effects in the United States and many other parts of the world. In response to the attacks, the US started the war on terrorism.
Answer:
Answer is C
Explanation:
What was the significance of the Peninsular Campaign?
Answer:
C)
Explanation: I have found the rest of your question.
We had to avoid wounding Austria too severely; we had to avoid leaving behind in her any unnecessary bitterness of feeling or desire for revenge; we ought rather to reserve the possibility of becoming friends again with our adversary of the moment, and in any case to regard the Austrian state as a piece on the European chessboard. If Austria were severely injured, she would become the ally of France and of every other opponent of ours; she would even sacrifice her anti-Russian interests for the sake of revenge on Prussia. . . . The acquisition of provinces like Austria Silesia and portions of Bohemia could not strengthen the Prussian state; it would not lead to an amalgamation of German Austria with Prussia, and Vienna could not be governed from Berlin as a mere dependency. . . . Austria's conflict and rivalry with us was no more culpable than ours with her; our task was the establishment or foundation of German national unity under the leadership of the King of Prussia.
Which argument is Otto von Bismarck making in this excerpt?
A. He is insisting that German unification should be the force that unites all German speakers in Europe.
B. He is offering to defend German Austria from Bohemian nationalism in the Austro-Hungarian Empire.
C. He is rejecting the idea that German Austria should be made a part of a future united Germany.
D. He is warning the Prussian king not to go to war with Austria over Russian territory.
Answer: it is C
Explanation:
For AP3X