A. a stretching of social, political, and economic activities across political frontiers.
B. a growing magnitude of interconnections in almost every sphere of social existence
C. an accelerating pace of global interactions and processes associated with a deepening enmeshment of the local and the global
D. all of the above
The Globalization of International Relations
The Globalization of International Relations
A. an attempt to secure its natural resources
B. an attempt to support the new Soviet policy of glasnost
C. an attempt to prevent the Soviet Union from gaining a seaport in the Horn of Africa
D. a proxy war with the Soviet Union
A. containment of American military power
B. economic reform
C. support of developing world communist revolutions
D. detente with China
A. Eastern Europe’s stated desire to remain politically close to Russia
B. The division between Eastern and Western Europe over expanding membership in NATO
C. Eastern Europe’s support of the U.S decision to invade Iraq in 2003
D. Western Europe’s rejection of high agricultural subsidies in international world trade negotiations
A. It cemented communist military control over Southeast Asia
B. It sparked a thaw in relations between the Soviet Union and China
C. It hardened overall American attitudes toward communism
D. It sparked a thaw in relations between China and the United States
A. North America
B. Western Europe
C. the Middle East
D. Japan
A. China
B. Japan
C. Great Britain
D. the United States
E. the Soviet Union
A. Bosnia
B. Croatia
C. Serbia
D. Czechoslovakia
A. dominance
B. reciprocity
C. identity
D. favoritism
A. Macedonia
B. Bosnia
C. Iraq
D. Rwanda