History, asked by glendys13579, 7 months ago

Twentieth century conflicts such as world war I and world war II were often followed by periods of even more fighting because they:

1. Convinced citizens that their counties should become more isolated
2. Failed to resolve key issue and created resentments between counties
3. Helped powerful counties seize control over huge colonial empires
4. Led world leaders to abandon the political philosophy of nationalism

Answers

Answered by areg007
2

Answer:

Failed to resolve key issues and created resentments between countries.

Explanation:

APEX

Answered by anjalin
0

Twentieth century conflicts such as world war I and world war II were often followed by periods of even more fighting because they: 2. Failed to resolve key issues and created resentments between counties.

Explanation:

  • The Failure to resolve key issues and create resentments between counties is the reason for the Twentieth century conflicts such as world war I and world war II.
  • World War I was the most destructive conflict in human history.
  • It was fought in brutal trench warfare conditions and claimed millions of casualties on every side.
  • The industrial and technological sophistication of weapons contributed a deadly efficiency of mass slaughter.
  • The nature of the war was thus one of attrition, with all sides attempting to put others down by a prolonged series of small-scale attacks which frequently resulted in stalemate.
  • Thus, The League of Nations was established at the end of World War I as an international peacekeeping organization.
  • The League of Nations effectively resolved some international conflicts but it failed to prevent the outbreak of the Second World War.
  • Hence, the correct answer among all the options is option 2. Failed to resolve key issue and created resentments between counties.

(#SPJ2)

Similar questions