2. President John F. Kennedy
âAnd so, my fellow Americans
- ask not what your country can
do for you- ask what you can do
for your country.â Inaugural
Address Jan 1961
3. John F. Kennedy 1961-63
â˘35th president
â˘Kennedy
Mystique
âYoungest
elected president
âAddisonâs
disease
âwar hero
â˘1960 election was
first that featured
TV and Kennedy
used this visual
element to his
advantage
â˘Key events: Berlin
Wall, Aug. 1961;
Cuban Missile
Crisis, 1962
4. â˘Most who watched the televised debate felt JFK won. Those who listened on
the radio felt Nixon won.
â˘The most common influencer today in âelectabilityâ is âlooks presidentialâ
Nixon over
radio sounded
i n f o r m e d ,
e x p e r i e n c e
and confident
but on TV he
l o o k e d
uncomfortable
and nervous
5. Camelot
â˘Much of Kennedyâs fame is
wrapped up in his visual appeal to
many Americans.
â˘It was often said that the White
House was a new version of
Camelot
âThe Eisenhowerâs were old and
private. The Kennedyâs had young
children - they were a young family
in the era of young families.
â˘A hollywood family in the era of
television. TV allowed Americans
a medium to connect
6.
7.
8. Space Program
â˘Oct. 4,1957 - Sputnik launches from USSR
âonly 184 lbs but it orbited the globe every 92 mins.
â˘Nov, 1957 - Sputnik II (which weighed 1,120 lbs) carried
measuring equipment and Laika - the worldâs first astro-
mutt?
â˘The Kennedy Administration concentrated on trying to
close the aerospace gap that emerged during the 1950s
between the US and USSR. Funding for NASA would
establish the Apollo program with astronaut training
â˘1958 - NASA is formed
â˘1961 - Yuri Gagarin first person to orbit Earth
â˘1963 Apollo program started
â˘Results in six moon walks (starting 1969)
Oh little Sputnik
With made-in-Moscow beep,
You tell the world itâs a Commie sky
And Uncle Samâs asleep
9.
10. Space Program
⢠1961 - Alan Shepard Jr. first American in space
⢠1962 - John Glenn first American in orbit
⢠1969 - Armstrong and Aldrin first to land on the
Moon
ânot because
its easy but
because its
hardâ - Pres.
John Kennedy
11.
12. The Bay of Pigs Invasion
Cuba
âFidel Castro overthrows Fulgencio Batista,
Jan. 1959
âBay of Pigs plan is set into motion Fall of
1960 **(Eisenhower still President)
Kennedy
â April 17-20, 1961 CIA sponsored invasion
of Cuba
â˘1200 armed militants; poorly armed and
organized
â˘Failure embarrasses Kennedy Admin. and
emboldens USSR push in the West.
13. The Cuban Missile
Crisis
â˘Advisers recognized that Soviet
missiles on Cuba altered the
balance of power in the arms race
â1962 -
â˘U.S. had 140 ICBMâs
(intercontinental ballistic missiles)
â˘USSR had 40 ICBMâs
âWith missiles on Cuba, Soviets
could strike the U.S. with only a
few minutes warning
14. â˘Oct 22 - Evidence of missiles in
Cuba results in Kennedy ordering
a naval blockade or âquarantineâ
of Cuba. Spat with Krushchev
â˘Early Discussion - air strikes to
take out the missiles
âRuled out for a number of
reasons
1.Could not destroy all
missiles
2.Had not located all missile
sites
3.Death of Soviet troops =
WWIII
Decision = Blockade
The Cuban Missile Crisis
16. â˘While the Soviet Union honored the blockade, they refused to remove the already
existing missiles from Cuba
â˘Finally on October 26, Khrushchev promised to remove the missiles on three conditions:
âU.S. ended its blockade
âU.S. promised never to invade Cuba
âU.S. removed its missiles from Turkey
The Cuban Missile Crisis
17. â˘Publicly the U.S. honored all
except the last
â˘Secretly, JFK promised
Khrushchev he would remove
the missiles from Turkey
âJFK did not want to worry U.S.
allies in Europe
â˘Oct 28 - Crisis Ends with
Krushchevâs public
concession. In the public, the
Soviet Union loses. Soon after,
Krushchev is forced out of
power by Soviet led hardliners
The Cuban Missile Crisis
18.
19. â˘October 27 1962, was the most dangerous day in history.
â˘An American spy plane had been shot down over Cuba
while another U2 was lost in Soviet airspace
â˘With tension already high an American destroyer, the
USS Beale, began to drop depth charges on the B-59, a
Soviet submarine armed with a nuclear weapon.
â˘The captain of the B-59, Valentin Savitsky, had no way
of knowing that the depth charges were non-lethal
"practice" rounds intended as warning shots to force the
B-59 to surface.
â˘The Beale was joined by other US destroyers who piled
in to pummel the submerged B-59 with more explosives.
â˘The exhausted Savitsky assumed that his submarine was
doomed and that WWIII had broken out. He ordered the
B-59's ten kiloton nuclear torpedo to be prepared for
firing.
â˘With no contact to the Kremlin it was the sub
commanders that decided whether or not to launch. In
the sweltering control room of a submarine, the launch
was approved by two of the three - Arkhipov was alone
in refusing permission.
The Man Who Saved the World:
Vasili Arkhipov
20. Foreign Policy: Flexible Response
â˘A shift to US expansion: flexible
response -
âKennedy moved away from Eisenhower
doctrine of massive retaliation
(brinkmanship) after Cuban Missile
Crisis
âUsed conventional troops instead of
nuclear assault
âUnfortunately, the first move is sending
US troops to South Vietnam, a decision
that troubled him.
21. Domestic Policy - New Frontier
â˘JFKâs Domestic Program was
centered around an ambitious civil
rights platform.
â˘Bobby Kennedy (attorney general)
repeatedly protected civil rights
protesters by using federal troops.
â˘Civil Rights Act of â64 was
negotiated primarily by Kennedyâs
staff.
â˘Growth of educational aid (FAFSA
programs and P.E. and AP/Honors
programs.)
â˘Also established the Peace Corps and
added additional funding for elderly
care.
22. JFK Assassination/Reaction â˘Campaigning for Re-
Election in the South.
â˘Death caught on film
and seen by countless
witnesses.
â˘Lee Harvey Oswald
shot Kennedy on
November 22, 1963
â˘Oswald is later killed by
Jack Ruby
â˘Conspiracy theories
about JFKâs murder
â˘Mafia? CIA? LBJ?
â˘Because of the TV news
reporting, people felt a
strong emotional
connection to his death.
23. â˘For many Americans
the death of Kennedy
struck close to home.
â˘A nation grieved -
newscasters broke
down on live TV.
Time stood still.
â˘âWhere were
youâŚâ
â˘His death was the
start of a tumultuous
decade that torn at
the fabric of
American Life.
29. Lyndon Baines Johnson
Early Life/Career
⢠Born in Texas and grew up with
significant financial hardship.
⢠Initially worked as a teacher near the
Texas/Mexico border in the 1930s.
⢠Worked his way up from every level in
government from: Congressional Aid, to
State Rep, to House of Rep, to Senate.
⢠Served and nearly killed in WWII
⢠A notorious workaholic who practically
lived in his office. Johnson gained a
reputation for bi-partisan negotiation
30. Election of 1964
Senator Barry Goldwater
â˘Goldwater attacks LBJ policies as
continuation of New Deal
â˘âIn your heart, you know heâs
right!â - slogan
LBJ
â˘Johnson portrays Goldwater as a
crazed war-monger
â˘âIn your guts, you know heâs
nuts!â
33. â˘LBJ wanted to be viewed as a
great reformer, like FDR.
⢠Was deeply affected by JFKâs
death and felt loyal to the civil
rights campaign that both had
worked hard to accomplish.
⢠âLet us continueâ and âWe
can do everything. We can
solve everythingâ - slogans,
1963 & â64
⢠In his State of the Union Address
in 1964 announces a âWar on
Povertyâ through his Great
Society program.
34. Domestic Policies Continued
⢠24th Amendment, January of 1964 banned the
use of poll taxes
⢠July 1964 signs the Civil Rights Act of â64
⢠a. He authorized the Attorney General to
bring suits against school districts not in
compliance with Brown v Board
⢠b. Outlaws race discrimination in
employment
⢠Post 1964 election, LBJ uses the landslide
victory as political leverage in his âwar against
povertyâ campaign.
35. Johnsonâs Great Society
Immigration Act of 1965
Civil Rights Act of 1964
Voting Rights Act of 1965
Housing Act of 1965
Thurgood Marshall to SC
â˘Medicare
â˘Medicaid
â˘Office of Economic Opportunity
(OEO)
â˘Head Start
â˘Food Stamps
â˘Department of Housing and Urban
Development (HUD)
â˘National Foundation for the Arts
and Humanities
â˘Public Broadcasting Corp.
â˘Elementary and Secondary
Education Act 1965
36. âThe Johnson Treatmentâ
⢠LBJ was notorious for his methods of
intimidation. He used his physical size,
vulgarity and lack of shame to gain leverage.
⢠Took great pleasure from othersâ discomfort
and had a need to dominate mostly other men
in competitive situations.
⢠Was a flasher
⢠FDR wading pool
⢠Car in the water trick
⢠Lady Bird Johnson - was mostly oblivious to
his actions due to the Secret Service covering
it all up.
37.
38.
39. Containment leads to Vietnam
â˘French Indochina consisted of Vietnam,
Cambodia and Laos
â˘1940 with the fall of France, the colony is
turned over to Japan.
â˘The US proceeded to aide anti-Japanese groups
in Vietnam, including the Nationalist group the
Vietminh and their leader Ho Chi Minh
40. Containment Fails and Leads to War
â˘Dec. 1946, French try to reclaim French Indochina
â˘Initially US against, however opts to assist
financially
â˘In 1950 Bao Dei (Vietnamese royal family)
recognized by US
â˘By 1954, US paying for 80% of the war
â˘Dien Bien Phu falls in May, 1954
â˘Geneva Accords, May, 1954
â˘17th parallel and DMZ
â˘Ngo Dinh Diem (1956-63)
â˘assassination of Diem leads to direct military
involvement
41. Escalation of the war â64 to â68
â˘Gulf of Tonkin, Aug.7, 1964
â˘Privately, LBJ did not believe that
the war was winnable
â˘âI donât think itâs worth fighting
for and I donât think we can get
outâ- LBJ
⢠âquagmireâ of Vietnam
â˘Two part military strategy, 1965
⢠Air power âOperation Rolling
Thunderâ
⢠Ground troops
â˘Gen. William C. Westmoreland
42. Escalation of the war â64
to â68
â˘Domino Theory was at the
center of LBJâs rationale for the
war.
â˘âIf we should lose in South
Vietnam, we would lose
Southeast Asia. Country after
country on the peripheryâ
â˘By late 1967, Johnson had
increased troop numbers to over
550,000
â˘âCredibility Gapâ leads to a rise
in anti-war protests at home
43.
44. nEarly years (1960-1966)âprofessional soldiers and volunteers.
nLater years (1966-1973)âthe Draft. (Selective Service SystemâWWI)
nBy December 1966, the draft call was up to 40,000 men each month.
nBy 1973, 2.15 million (total had served)
45. Which young men* were drafted?
nLower income
nNo college degree
nAfrican Americans and Latino
Americans made up 31% of all
combat troops at the beginning
of the war.
qThey were much more likely to
see heavy combat throughout
the war.
nOver half of the 234 sons of
Congressmen and Senators received
deferments, only 28 were sent to
Vietnam â none were killed
n*10,000 women served as nurses and
other support roles.
46. Tet Offensive
nâWe have got our opponent
almost on the ropes. We are
confident that we are winning
the war...â - Westmoreland Nov.
1967
nJanuary-June of 1968
nhighly coordinated attack by
Viet Cong on 36/44
strongholds
nEnds as military victory for
U.S., but psychological victory
for North Vietnamese
nAmerican public begins to
doubt U.S. can win war.
49. My Lai Massacre
⢠March 16, 1968
⢠American squad
led by Lt. William
Calley rounded
up and beat, raped
and executed
local villagers.
⢠Approx. 350
killed
⢠A soldier present
happened to work
for a news source
and pictures later
leaked
worldwide.
50. My Lai Massacre, March 1968
Bodies on Roadside after My Lai
Massacre
51. Napalm
nNapalmâan incendiary liquid made of jellied gasoline that sticks to
surfaces while burning.
nCountless people were badly burned or completely incinerated by
Napalm runs.
52.
53. Phan Tháť Kim PhĂşc, age 9
She would later move to
Canada and currently is a
U.N. Goodwill
Ambassador to help
victims of war receive
medical and psychological
assistance.
54.
55. Agent Orange
⢠Operation Ranch Hand,
1962-1971
⢠19 million gallons of herbicide
were sprayed
⢠Agent Orange was a defoliant
used by the government to clear
brush areas of Vietnam. The after
effects have been traumatizing for
people in Vietnam and the US.