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Kennedy and the Cold War

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Kennedy and the Cold War. A. Intro 1. John F. Kennedy was the first president born in the in the 20th century and brought art, sophistication, and wit to the White House. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Kennedy and the Cold War A. Intro 1. John F. Kennedy was the first president born in the in the 20th century and brought art, sophistication, and wit to the White House. 2. 1946: After returning from the Second World War (naval hero) he ran for a seat in the House of Reps. to represent Boston. Easily won and served three terms in the House. 3. Elected to the Senate in 1952. B. John Fitzgerald Kennedy 1. Kennedy was a Democrat and inherited the New Deal commitment to America’s social welfare system. 2. Avoided controversial issues such as civil rights. 3. Won a Pulitzer Prize for his Profiles in Courage in 1956. 4. Endorsed Cold War policy of containment and was reelected into the Senate in 1958. 5. Portrayed as happy, healthy family man but in reality was a womanizer and diagnosed with Addison’s disease.
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Page 1: Kennedy and the Cold War

Kennedy and the Cold WarA. Intro1. John F. Kennedy was the first president born in the in the 20th century and brought art,

sophistication, and wit to the White House.2. 1946: After returning from the Second World War (naval hero) he ran for a seat in the House of

Reps. to represent Boston. Easily won and served three terms in the House.3. Elected to the Senate in 1952.B. John Fitzgerald Kennedy1. Kennedy was a Democrat and inherited the New Deal commitment to America’s social welfare

system.2. Avoided controversial issues such as civil rights.3. Won a Pulitzer Prize for his Profiles in Courage in 1956.4. Endorsed Cold War policy of containment and was reelected into the Senate in 1958.5. Portrayed as happy, healthy family man but in reality was a womanizer and diagnosed with

Addison’s disease.

Page 2: Kennedy and the Cold War

Election of 1960 & Nation BuildingC. Election of 19601. Kennedy won the 1960 election over Richard Nixon by 118,000 votes out of 69 million cast.2. Kennedy received most votes from the Northeast and Midwest and mixed in the South; Nixon

became vice president.3. Kennedy surrounded himself with young, intelligent people as his cabinet members; known as

the “best and brightest”4. All favored foreign policy and the waging of the Cold War.D. Nation Building in the Third World1. Kennedy showed himself to be cautious and pragmatic in foreign policy and proved willing to

initiate dialogue with the Soviets using his brother Robert as a secret bank channel to Moscow occasionally.

2. Kennedy oversaw the creation of the multibillion-dollar Alliance for Progress in 1961 to spur economic development in Latin America.

3. 1961: created the Peace Corps as well.4. Peace Corps and the Alliance served as both Cold war tools to end communism and anti-

Americanism and genuine humanitarian efforts.5. The Alliance for Progress was only partly successful; infant mortality rates improved but Latin

American economies registered non impressive growth rates and class divisions continued to grow.

Page 3: Kennedy and the Cold War

Tensions with the Soviets

E. Soviet-American Tensions1. June 1961; summit meeting with Soviet leader Nikita Krushchev was held in Vienna and both

leaders disagreed over preconditions for peace and stability in the world.2. Kennedy feared other nations getting their hands on the nuclear weapons and favored a ban on

nuclear testing in the atmosphere or underground.3. Both superpowers continued testing and accelerated their arms productions.4. In 1961 the US military budget shot up 15% and by mid-1964 the US nuclear weapons

increased by 150%.5. Mid-1961: Krushchev demanded an end to western occupation of West Berlin and reunification

of East and West Germany. Kennedy replied that we would stand by its commitments to West Berlin and West Germany.

6. August: Soviets constructed the Berlin wall that divided the city to end the migration of East Germans into the more prosperous and politically free West Germany.

7. Wall spurred protests throughout the non communist world but Kennedy believed that the wall was better than a war.

Page 4: Kennedy and the Cold War

Bay of Pigs Invasion

F. Bay of Pigs Invasion1. Kennedy rankled at the Soviets’ assistance to Cuban Government of Fidel Castro.2. The Eisenhower administration gave the Kennedy administration a partially developed CIA plan

to overthrow Fidel Castro: CIA-trained Cuban exiles would land and secure a beachhead and then the Cuban people would rise up and defeat Castro and his government and then welcome a new government brought in from the United states.

3. Kennedy approved the plan and on April 17,1961 1,200 exiles landed at the swampy Bay of Pigs in Cuba but no discontented Cubans were there to greet them, only troops loyal to Castro.

4. The invaders were surrounded and captured.5. Kennedy tried to keep the US participation in the operation hidden but it became public and Anti-

American sentiment shot up throughout Latin America.6. Kennedy’s embarrassment led to his vow to bring Castro down and the CIA launched a plan

called Operation Mongoose to disrupt the island’s trade and support raids on Cuba from Miami and kill Castro.

7. The US undertook military maneuvers in the Caribbean and planned to give Castro cigars laced with poison and explosives.

8. The Joint Chiefs of Staff sketched plans to spark a rebellion in Cuba that would be followed by an invasion of US troops.

Page 5: Kennedy and the Cold War

Cuban Missile Crisis

A. Cuban Missile Crisis1. castro and Khrushchev believed an invasion was coming a. soviet leader deployed secret nuclear missiles to cuba in 1962 b. hoped presence of weapons would deter any attack c. soviet leader also wanted kennedy to resolve german problem once and for all d. also wanted to get the west out of germany2. mid october 1962, U-2 plane photographed the missiles on cuban missile sites a. president formed an ExComm, who decided what to do b. McNamara proposed a naval quarantine, president followed idea3. kennedy addressed the nation on October 22nd, demanded soviets retreat a. ships began swarming the caribbean, nuclear airplanes took the skies b. Khrushchev said the missiles would be withdrawn if US promised to never attack

cuba, and to withdraw jupiter missiles from turkey c. on October 28th, US agreed, proceeding went accordingly4. steps were small but lead to a mutual trust, and acceptance of a divided continent

Page 6: Kennedy and the Cold War

The March for Civil RightsA. Students and the Movement1. Woolworth’s lunch counter sit in by four freshmen from NC A&T marked a turning point for the

African American struggle for civil rights2. 1960, 6 years after the Brown decision had declared “separate but equal” unconstitutional, only

10% of southern public schools had begun desegregation3. only ¼ of african americans in the south could vote, water fountains still labeled4. one year after the lunch counter sit in, more than 70k americans, mostly college students, had

participated in a sit ina. protested Jim Crow segregation at lunch counters in south, protested at northern

branches of chains that practiced segregation in the south5. created the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC) in spring of 1960, committed

to nonviolence, would risk their lives for social justiceB. Freedom Rides and Voter Registration1. May 4th, 1961 13 members of congress CORE (congress of racial equality) purchase bus

tickets and went south to demonstrate despite Supreme Court Rulings, Jim Crow still ruled the south, called Freedom Riders

a. suffered from attacks, beatings, firebombing, never helped by local authoritiesb. the violence made headlines around the world, kennedy gave protection with federal

marshals2. 1961, SNCC volunteers began to walk the roads of the south, encouraging African Americans to

vote, most were students, the African Americans often poor, lived in poverty

Page 7: Kennedy and the Cold War

The Federal Government and Protest1. Kennedy and Civil Rightsa. kennedy realized civil rights was important, but was not committed to movementb. also understood that he needed to keep support of conservative southern democrats in congressc. delayed executive order forbidding segregation in fed. supported housing until 1962d. allowed FBI director J. Edgar Hoover to harass Martin Luther King and other civil rights leaderse. violence pushed Kennedy to send 500 U.S. marshals to protect James meredith, the first African American to attend

the university of MIf. the marshals were brutally attacked by whites, 160 marshals wounded, two men killed2. Birmingham and the Children’s Crusadea. 1961 Freedom Riders caught attention of world with Project Cb. started nonviolent protest in birmingham, the most violent and racist city in americac. they knew it would draw violence, but decided it was neededd. placed children on the front lines to up the stakese. Eugene “Bull” Connor, a police commissioner, ordered water guns (powerful enough to strip bark on trees 100ft

away) on the childrenf. kennedy demanded a negotiation, after violence was on TV3. Freedom Summera. summer of 1964, thousands of white students joined the voter mobilization project in MI, forming freedom schools to

teach literacyb. also formed the freedom democratic party, normal democratic party was white onlyc. not everything went smoothly, many were beaten, killed for their actions, Klan activities started again

Page 8: Kennedy and the Cold War

Kennedy's Assassination, and Johnson's

Great Society

1. Kennedy Assassinationa. Nov. 22nd 1963 Kennedy was shot in the head while riding in an open

limousine in Dallasb. same day police capture Lee Harvey Oswald, former US marine, applied for

soviet citizenshipc. oswald shot dead two days later by Jack Rubyd. started conspiracies, but most important, the peoples man was dead2. Johnson and the Great Societya. Lyndon Johnson took over, different then kennedy, humble beginning, earthy,

prone to cursing, used size to advantageb. believed fed. gov. should work actively to improve lives of americansc. more concerned about quality of goals, then quantity of goodsd. this vision was called the “Great Society”

Page 9: Kennedy and the Cold War

Civil Rights Act

- July 1964 – Civil Rights Act – Ended legal discrimination of race - Federal programs, voting, employment, public accommodations- Gave government power to hold funds from public agencies- Ended legal discrimination of sex in employment- Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) took little notice- 1996 – National Organization of Women (NOW) formed against EEOC- Conservatives unhappy with federal power – promoted state’s rights- Arizona state senator Barry Goldwater – Republican conservative voice

Page 10: Kennedy and the Cold War

Election of 1964- Goldwater favored liberty over equality + stronger national military- “In your heart, you know he’s right,” to “In your heart, you know he might.”- Johnson campaigned w/ unemployment rate 4% + economic growth rate 6%- New Deal followers/supporters broken apart by Civil Rights Act- South = strong republicans after CRA- 1964 – Democratic National Convention – two delegations from MI - MI Freedom Democratic Party (MFDP) – racially mixed group - Racist southern whites threatened to walk out if MFDP seated - MFDP walked out – Johnson lost MFDP and Deep South- Johnson won election- Majority (61.1%) voted for Great Society- March 6, 1964 – SCLC planned march in AL to provoke federal action - State troopers used electric cattle prods, chains, + tear gas - Marchers crossing Edmund Pettus bridge to Montgomery- March 15, 1964 – Johnson proposed Voting Rights Act - Outlawed practices that prevented blacks from voting - 1964-1966 – MI black voting from 7% to 60%

Page 11: Kennedy and the Cold War

Improving American Life

- Johnson implemented student loan + grant programs for low/moderate-incomes

- Created National Endowment for the Arts/Humanities- 1965 – Immigration Act of 1965 – removed racist

immigration quotas- 1996 – NationalTraffic and Motor Vehicle Safety Act- Environmentalists allied w/ Johnson- Johnson made laws protecting wilderness + addressing

pollution

Page 12: Kennedy and the Cold War

War on Poverty

- 1964 – Johnson started passing of 20+ acts to resolve poverty- Offered opportunities to all – Head Start, Upward Bound, + Job Corps- Model Cities program put federal funds toward less fortunate communities - Funds toward employment, housing, education, + health- Established Medicare for those 65+ and Medicaid for the poor- 1965-1975 – WoP benefits noticeable - 600,000 to 17million eligible for food stamps - 40% to 16% elderly affected by poverty – Social Security/Medicare- 1959-1973 – 22.4% to 11% poverty- 1963-1973 – Female-headed household poverty – 11million – no change- 1960-1973 – Hospitals raised healthcare prices dramatically – 44% raise

Page 13: Kennedy and the Cold War

Johnson and Vietnam

- Johnson firmly against communism- Maintained as little international contact as possible- Not accustomed to foreigners1) Kennedy's Legacy in Vietnam - Kennedy increased aid dollars to Diem regime in Saigon - Increased airdrops of raiding teams into N. Vietnam - Destroyed crops with herbicides to expose Vietcongs - 1963 – 16,000+ military advisors in S. Vietnam - Fought with Army of the Republic of Vietnam (ARVN) - Opposition to Diem’s regime increased - November 1, 1963 – Kennedy sent US generals to murder Diem

Page 14: Kennedy and the Cold War

Tonkin Gulf Incident and Resolution

A.) Resulting from Johnson wanted the president:1. Throughout 1964 election, there were plans to expand war to

North Vietnam.2. Never seriously considered negotiating a settlement.B.) Incident in the Gulf of Tonkin:1. Off the coast of North Vietnam.2. 2 out of 3 days U.S. destroyers repeatedly attacked by N.

Vietnamese patrol boats.3. Johnson ordered retaliatory air strikes against selected N.

Vietnam patrol boat bases and an oil depot.4. Vote of 416 to 0 in the House and 88 to 2 in the Senate, Congress

passed the Gulf of Tonkin Resolution. (Essentially Congress was giving powers to executive branch to President.)

Page 15: Kennedy and the Cold War

Decision for Escalation

A.) Political Opinions:1. President Johnson loved broad authority.2. After Tonkin affair his public ratings went up dramatically.3. Showed his force against Vietnam and he was strong.B.) The War:1. Vietcong continued to make gains.2. U.S. officials created secret plans increasing American involvement.3. February 1965, Johnson ordered Operation Rolling Thunder; a bombing program

planned the previous fall continuing until October 1968.4. March 8, the first U.S. combat battle near the shore of Danang.5. N. Vietnamese were very dogged in wining.C.) Statistics:1. By the end of 1965, more than 180,000 U.S. ground troops were in South Vietnam.2. In 1966, number increased to 385,000.3. In 1967, U.S. warplanes flew 108,000 sorties and dropped 226,000 tons of bombs

on North Vietnam.

Page 16: Kennedy and the Cold War

American Soldiers in Vietnam

A.) War Decisions:1. Johnson Americanized the Vietnam War.2. Sought to keep the publicity surrounding the action as low as possible.3. Rejects Joint Chiefs’ view that U.S. reserve forces should be

mobilized and a national emergency declared.4. Forced military to rely on the draft meaning, “young man’s war.”5. Average age of soldiers was 22.6. War of poor and working class.B.) American Soldiers:1. Infantrymen on maneuvers carried heavy rucksacks into think jungle.2. Booby traps and land mines were a constant threat.3. Insects and leeches were on rotted skin from the rains and suns.

Page 17: Kennedy and the Cold War

Divisions At Home

A.) Pro vs. Anti-War:1. Americans divided for those who supported the war to those

who didn’t.2. Television captured the intensity of war.3. Media lowered the support for the war.4. Pacifist groups:American Friends Service CommitteeWomen’s International League for Peace Were against the war and formed early protests.5. Johnson was pro war and very determined to be victorious

in Vietnam.

Page 18: Kennedy and the Cold War

Black Power

A.) Black Muslims:1. Malcolm X, pimp and street hustler became

leader.2. Converted to Nation of Islam while in prison.3. Offered African Americans a new direction of

leadership.4. This strengthened black pride and separatism

from the white race.5. The Religion emphasized the importance of

sobriety, thrift, and social responsibility.

Page 19: Kennedy and the Cold War

Youth and Politics

• By mid 1960’s 41% of American population was under 20• ¾ of youth graduated from high school and almost half went to

college • Young Americans for freedom was an organization started by

young conservative college students. • They endorsed cold war anticommunism and a vision of limited

government power directly opposed to new deal liberalism and its heritage.

• They planned to capture the Republican party and move it to the political right.

• The “New Left” soon joined conservative youth in rejecting liberalism.

• Conservatives believed that liberalism's activists government encroached on individual liberties, whereas these young Americans believed that liberalism could never offer true democracy and equality to the American people.

Page 20: Kennedy and the Cold War

Free Speech Movement and Student Activism

• The university of California, Berkeley banned political activity, including recruiting volunteers for civil rights work in Mississippi. The police were called about a CORE worker who defied the order and about 4000 students surrounded the police car.

• Student political groups came together to create the Free Speech Movement, which helped to win back the right to political speech, but not before 800 protesters were arrested

• Many student protestors sought more control over their lives as students.

• They wanted more relevant class offerings, more freedom in selecting their courses of study, and a greater voice in the running of universities.

Page 21: Kennedy and the Cold War

Youth and the War

• The war in Vietnam mobilized a nationwide student movement. • They felt it was their duty as citizens to learn about and speak out

on important issues. • Students and faculty held “teach-ins” about the U.S. involvement in

Vietnam as the war escalated in 1965. • Students from the democratic party sponsored the first major anti

war march that year, where 20,000 protesters marched to Washington D.C.

• Local SDS chapters grew steadily as opposition to the war increased.

• Despite the visibility of antiwar protests, not that many college students were against the war in 1967, only 30 % of males declared themselves “ doves” while 67% declared themselves “hawks”

• As the war continued however an increasing number of the American Youth began to distrust the government.

Page 22: Kennedy and the Cold War

Youth Culture and Counterculture

• The baby-boom generation would change the nation's culture more than its politics.

• There were many different cultural styles between Black, White and the Latino youth.

• They had different music, different cloths, and different versions of youth dialect, sometimes incomprehensible to adults.

• The unifying element was music • Some huge musicians of the time were The Beatles, Bob Dylan,

Janis Joplin, James Brown, Aretha Franklin, Jefferson Airplane, and the Grateful Dead.

• Some musicians of this time were on hallucinogenic drugs and redefined realty for the youth.

• Woodstock was a festival in upstate New York where more than 400,000 people reveled in the music and a world of their own making.

Page 23: Kennedy and the Cold War

Counterculture

• Some young people at this time rebelled against the consumer lifestyle and celebrated the legitimacy of pleasure. “sex, drugs, and rock ‘n’ roll” became the mantra for these “hippies.” This was their Counterculture.

• The counterculture was first brought to the public in the summer of 1967 in San Francisco, during the “Summer of Love”

• The youth stopped wearing ties, bras, and tights, and many boys grew their hair long. Parents throughout the nations complained that they couldn't tell the boys from the girls.

• Millions of them used marijuana and hallucinogenic drugs, read underground newspapers, and thought of themselves as alienated form the “straight” society, even though many of them still went to high school or college.

• The most lasting cultural change was about sex. The mass media was fascinated by “free love”

• birth control was being distributed and 900% more unmarried couples lived together.

Page 24: Kennedy and the Cold War

The Tet Offensive and Johnson's Exit

• 1968 opened with a major attack in Vietnam. It took place on the Vietnamese New Year, and they captured provincial capitals.

• The Saigon Airport, the presidential palace, and the ARVN headquarters also came under attack.

• The U.S. and South Vietnamese eventually regained much of the ground they had lost, inflicting heavy casualties and damaging many villages.

• Controversy over the war had split the Democratic Party right before the November elections in 1968.

• Eugene McCarthy and Robert Kennedy were both strong opponents to Johnson’s war policies, and forcefully challenged the president in early primaries.

• Johnson, exhausted with the war, changed his strategies. He stopped the bombing and asked Hanoi to begin negotiations.

• Peace talks began in May in Paris, but the war continued.

Page 25: Kennedy and the Cold War

Chicago Democratic National Convention and Nixon's Election

• Thousands of protesters converged on the city streets. Students had cut their hair and wore respectable clothing to go “clean for gene”, gene being Eugene McCarthy.

• Mayor Daley stated that no one would interrupt his convention, and assigned 12,000 police on 12 hour shifts, and 12,000 army troops with bazookas, rifles, and flamethrowers. Many innocent protestors were beat and the Nation was once again horrified.

• After a long year of protest the election of 1968 did little to heal the nation.

• Nixon called for "Law and Order" which was a phrase understood as racial code words. It was to appeal to those upset about racial violence and social unrest.

• Nixon vowed to "end the war and win the peace"

• Nixon was elected on slim margins and the divisions among americans deepened


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