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No, the US was committed to not losing, which was entirely different then winning. It was never an attempt at winning a war, just deny the North a victory and prop up the South.
The primary reason was that he was dead. His assassination is considered a blow to the South that delayed the reunification. Many atrocities were committed in the south by the winning north.
Harry Truman helped Korea with armies, food, warmth,and just being there!!They were a great help.But Korea always pays their debts.And they did already!!Go to Did Korea pay their depts back to America?See Ya!!!!!
by reading there plans & following the instructions of the president
Richmond, Virginia and the president was Jefferson Davis this was the capitol and president of the C.S.A. when the south had seeded before the civil war
president truman ordered american troops moved from Japan to South Korea.
president truman ordered american troops moved from Japan to South Korea.
If this is civil war related, the north won, not the south. And the north freed the slaves in the south.
The south was winning in the East and the north was winning in the West.
The North had to do the invading, so the South had to react with defensive tactics.
the south agreed on slavery but the north didn't the union had more soldiers Abraham Lincoln was president in the north Robert e lee was president in the south the north won the war
Abraham Lincoln was the North's president, and in the south, Jefferson Davis.
if you bring north and north they would repel. if you bring south and south they repel. If you bring north and south they will attract
The Confederates won the battle. The rebel victory thrilled South and shocked the North. The North realized it had underestimated its opponent. As a result President Lincoln began preparing for a long war.
Jefferson Davis
No. South Africa has its own president. North America has more than one president, as there is one in Mexico and one in the United States of America. Canada does not have a president.
The Confederates won the battle. The rebel victory thrilled South and shocked the North. The North realized it had underestimated its opponent. As a result President Lincoln began preparing for a long war.