How did U.S. intervention in China differ from its intervention in Korea?

A) The United States could only respond with diplomacy in the Chinese conflict, but gave supplies and funds to North Korea.
B) The United States responded with all-out war in China, but refused to get involved in the Korean conflict.
C) The United States extracted itself from the conflict when civil war broke out in China but sent troops to aid South Korea.
D) The United States sent troops to China when civil war broke out, but only sent money to South Korea when the violence began.
E) The United States intervened with diplomatic efforts and supplies in North Korea, but did not intervene in any way in China’s civil war.


Answer: C

History

You might also like to view...

____________________ was a colonial port city that flotillas loaded with bullion departed from yearly to return to Spain

Fill in the blank(s) with correct word

History

The National Industrial Recovery Act (NIRA) was designed to encourage economic recovery by:

a. preventing workers from organizing unions and striking b. raising tariff barriers to encourage new American investment in manufacturing c. lowering tariffs to encourage healthy competition d. allowing businessmen to cut competition through industry-wide codes of fair practices

History

Which of the following did NOT work to convert the population of the New World to Christianity?

A) Jesuits B) Franciscans C) Dominicans D) Carmelites E) none of the above

History

In the 1980 presidential campaign,

a. Edward Kennedy challenged incumbent President Carter for the nomination of the Democratic party. b. Ronald Reagan failed to gain control of either house of Congress for the Republican party. c. third-party candidate John Anderson prevented Ronald Reagan from winning a majority of the popular vote. d. Ronald Reagan won the presidency by the closest margin since the Kennedy-Nixon election of 1960. e. Reagan tailored his campaign to appeal to independents and liberal Democrats.

History