Respuesta :

D. Freedom of the seas.

The right answer is the D: Freedom of the seas. The Fourteen Points was an address delivered by President Woodrow Wilson before the U.S. Congress on January 8, 1918, with the goal of offering a program ("the only possible program," as he himself said) to attain national security in the U.S. and peace in the world after World War I.

Some of those points, or strategies, called precisely for demilitarization (the opposite of high militarization), fair trade conditions (the opposite of high tariffs), absence of private international understandings (the opposite of secret treaties), and "absolute freedom of navigation upon the seas, outside territorial waters, alike in peace and in war, except as the seas may be closed in whole or in part by international action for the enforcement of international covenants" (point 4).

Although the plan was not unanimously accepted by the leaders of the victorious nations, it undoubtedly led to the signing of the armistice that put an end to the conflict on November 11, 1918. President Wilson was granted the Nobel Prize as a result of his efforts to bring peace to Europe and the rest of the world after World War I.