A:
The Book of Daniel ends with Daniel still in Babylon, prophesying events that would occur between that time and the time when the book was actually written - approximately 167 BCE. Thus, it does not portray Daniel as helping bring the Jews out of Babylon. Leonard J Greenspoon says in 'Between Alexandria and Antioch: Jews and Judaism in the Hellenistic Period', published in The Oxford History of the Biblical World, that the Book of Daniel was a Jewish novel.
It is unclear what this question means. If you are asking, "In which year did the United States help Israel to bring Jews out of Arab countries and into Israel?" the answer is "Never". The United States has never assisted Israel in its missions to save Jews in peril worldwide with craft, financial support (specifically for this), or expertise and these missions have been entirely run on the Israeli budget. Most Jews actually fled Arab countries on their own, but arrived in Israel as result of there being minimal opportunities elsewhere. These mass immigrations to Israel occurred primarily between 1949 and 1952.
Babylon 4 was sent back in time 1000 years to help the Mimbari fight the shadows .
Carter managed to help bring about a peace between Egypt and Israel by showing their commonalities and using bribes that proved beneficial to both sides.
It helped Babylon by enforcing laws so there was more order.
The greatest trade post in that time.
To become more faithful to him
Probable if they where slaves.
Babylon was the center for the Chaldean Empire. Hope it help
Yes. It helps to assuage Israel's water issues.
In many scenarios where there is a lot of internal fighting and jousting for power, a singular enemy provides a commonality that can be used to bring the various factions together. Israel was the perfect enemy to rally Arabs from all different countries together to form an opposition movement.
Babylon was the center for the Chaldean Empire. Hope it help
Daniel the lead character of the Book of Daniel is not mentioned elsewhere in the Bible, and there is no record in history of his existence, even though the story says that he rose to become the second most powerful person in each of the Babylonian and Persian Empires. The Book of Daniel, written approximately 147 BCE, is of little help. It says that Daniel was a young boy at the time of the Babylonian Exile, but the story concludes with Daniel still very much alive.