1. How did the Committee of Public Safety identify enemies of the state?

A: The Committee of Public Safety indentified enemies of the state by the people who were under suspicion of betraying France.

2. Did the French Revolution live up to the revolution's ideals of Liberty, Equality, and Fraternity?

A: The French Republic did not live up to the revolution's ideals of Liberty, Equality, and Fraternity. After the French Revolution ended, the French Republic broke into factions that turned violently against each other. Thousands who opposed the government were imprisoned, tortured, and murdered by the Committee of Public Safety. That which remained of the republic was then destroyed by Napoleon in a coup d'etat, a sudden overthrow of the government.

6 answers

1. The questions asks HOW. You didn't answer it.

2. is good.
1. The Committee of Public Safety indentified enemies of the state by beheading or executing the people who were under suspicion of betraying France by the guillotine.
The committee didn't identify the enemies by killing them.

The section "What was the Reign of Terror?" has a good explanation about how the committee identified these enemies.

https://www.classzone.com/net_explorations/U5/U5_article2.cfm
http://www.classzone.com/net_explorations/U5/U5_article2.cfm
1. The Committee of Public Safety identified enemies of the states by passing the Law of Suspects to protect the country from counterrevolutionaries.
Like any other dictatorship, political opponents were suspect. Informers squealed on their friends, family, and neighbors to tip off the Committee.