The Washington Naval Conference of 1921-22 resulted in a number of treaties between the US, Britain, France, Germany and Japan, whose primary effect was to limit the size and displacement of warships.
Arms control treaties all share two common points; democracies use them as a way to cut spending on the military in order to pay for other priorities, while totalitarian governments plan to cheat. A few of the major effects after the beginning of World War II were these;
The battleship HMS Hood, limited by treaty to a maximum displacement of 35,000 tons, was built with little or no armor plate protecting some areas of the ship. HMS Hood was destroyed when a shell exploded inside the ship's magazines during its battle with the German battle cruiser Bismarck.
The Bismarck, treaty-limited to the same 35,000 tons displacement, was actually about 25% heavier, at 45,000 tons displacement. The heavier armor allowed the ship to survive several hours of intense bombardment when the steering gear of the Bismarck was damaged by an air-dropped torpedo, which rendered the Bismarck uncontrollable. Its sister ship Tirpitz was similarly oversized.
The Japanese battleship Yamato was half-again as large, at 72,000 tons displacement. Had the Yamato been pitted against American battleships like the ones destroyed at Pearl Harbor, the size difference would have been the deciding factor.
The Munich Conference was held to address Germany's threat to Czechoslovakia. It resulted in the Munich Agreement, which gave Hitler control over Sudetenland in Czechoslovakia.
It showed Washington was able as he had to deal with the problems of weather, clothing, starvation, training, and battle strategy.
The other nations at the conference didn't accept them. They were in favor of punishing the Central Powers, not solving problems. The fourteenth point was accepted, but the League of Nationa had many, many flaws. The most deadly was that it had no army or power to enforce its decisions.
the policy of the US in which we decided to stay isolated and mind our own business and not intervene in foreign problems. It was basically an isolation policy, made popular by George Washington's example. In other words,minding own business not minding other foreign problems to basically protect one's identity ect.
They might have done so, but both sides had seen the problems associated with green troops. The South may have been overly cautious, but they also had suffered in this battle.
He had some problems with his teeth
What problems can you foresee for Europe, based on the outcomes of the Paris Peace Conference and the provisions of the Treaty of Versailles
Berlin conference
Democratic Peace Theory: No two liberal democracies have ever gone to war, so the presence of democracies in the Middle East should help to temper conflicts.Internal Stability: Democracies tend to be more stable and free than dictatorships, allowing problems to be ameliorated without massive riots.Cooperation: The USA has an easier time forming alliances with democracies because it is a similar political system to the USA.
One of the biggest problems faced by Washington and his troops were the lack of food and clothing.
no george washington did not have any problems because he was to old:p
Montreal Protocol
There are a number of problems associated with running a direct democracy, including voter apathy and the ability of a majority to remove the civil rights.
A republic is a representative democracy, where the people elect representatives to make laws for them. All republics are democracies, and the phrase democratic republic is therefore redundant.Not all democracies are republics, however. A direct democracy, in which the people vote directly on all laws, is not a republic. Direct democracies rarely exist in practice, however, because of the logistic problems with getting everyone to vote on every issue.
George Washington wanted to publicize issues about war and other problems.
George Washington
The Munich Conference was held to address Germany's threat to Czechoslovakia. It resulted in the Munich Agreement, which gave Hitler control over Sudetenland in Czechoslovakia.