1 / 23

Who is president after JFK is assassinated in 1963?

Who is president after JFK is assassinated in 1963?. VII. Cold War: Lyndon Baines Johnson (LBJ). Lyndon B. Johnson. *Military build-up in Vietnam intensified to 500,000 by 1967. What is the objective in Vietnam?. CONTAINMENT: Problem? U.S. sponsored gov’t not popular in democratic

egan
Download Presentation

Who is president after JFK is assassinated in 1963?

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Who is president after JFK is assassinated in 1963?

  2. VII. Cold War: Lyndon Baines Johnson (LBJ) Lyndon B. Johnson *Military build-up in Vietnam intensified to 500,000 by 1967 What is the objective in Vietnam? CONTAINMENT: Problem? U.S. sponsored gov’t not popular in democratic South

  3. Challenges U.S. soldiers face in Vietnam? Vietcong within civilian population (friend or foe???) Tunnels allow Vietcong to disappear Traps and land mines Vietcong supported by Soviets and China, and ready to pay any price for victory- independence How is fighting technique of Vietcong similar to Patriots during the American Revolution??

  4. U.S. approach in Vietnam? “Search and Destroy” missions: “Body Count-” (tracking Vietcong killed as progress) Problem(s) : U.S. wins in field, but cannot force defeat U.S. soldiers kill civilians in search for Vietcong- Unclear number of enemies? Napalm- gasoline based bombs Agent Orange- defoliate jungles

  5. Americans Protest War: Dodging draft America views Vietnam as Civil War- question morality of combat techniques **College Campuses

  6. Turning Point: Tet Offensive- January 30, 1968 Vietcong launch series of surprise attacks in South Vietnam during new year festivities (TET) U.S. takes back cities, kill 32,000 Vietcong….but Tet proves that enemy is not prepared to surrender. “Quagmire”

  7. What is happening in this picture?

  8. 1968, 60% of Americans disapprove of LBJ’s handling of Vietnam LBJ announces he will not seek another term as president.

  9. VII. Cold War: Richard Nixon Richard Nixon promises an “honorable end” to Vietnam How??? Vietnamization- withdrawing American troops while maintaining military aid to South Vietnam. Détente- policy of easing Cold War tensions 1972, Nixon visits China (takes advantage of rift between Soviets and Chinese)

  10. 1974 Nixon resigns after Watergate Scandal- covering up burglary of Democratic National Committee headquarters

  11. VIII. Cold War: Gerald Ford “My fellow Americans, our long national nightmare is over. Our Constitution works; our great Republic is a government of laws and not of men. Here the people rule.”

  12. “Vietnamization” fails (1975)- South Vietnam surrenders to North Vietnam. Communists unite Vietnam as one country, Saigon is renamed Ho Chi Minh city. Americans and Vietnamese flee as Saigon falls

  13. American Soldiers Return Home American Veterans return to face hostility from those who opposed Vietnam 15% soldiers who served continued to suffer post-traumatic stress- nightmares, headaches, memory lapses

  14. Vietnam Aftermath: Lessons to Remember People today question if U.S. learned the lessons of Vietnam (Vietnam Syndrome)

  15. 1982 Vietnam vets honored for service 58,000 names on “the Wall” in D.C. Designed by 21 yr old Maya Ying Lin

  16. 1995 U.S. extends full diplomatic Relations to Vietnam “Let this moment be a time to heal and a time to build.” Clinton Douglas Peterson named ambassador (former POW for 6 years in Hanoi prison)

  17. VIII. Cold War Ends: New Leadership Mikhail Gorbachev (1985) Internal Problems: -Increased military expense -Rise of nationalism -Fast paced reform (market economy) -Economic inefficiency

  18. Ronald Reagan: Puts pressure on Gorbachev to support democracy

  19. Gorbachev Plan-- Glosnost- “openness” Perestroika- restructuring of Soviet society. Less government control of economy, steps to democratic government.

  20. June 1987, “Mr. Gorbachev tear down this Wall” Ronald Reagan

  21. End of Cold War: Timeline (1989) --- (1990) --- (1991) Berlin Wall Free elections in 14 Soviet Republics is torn down East Berlin declare independence **Soviet Union collapses

  22. (1992) President George Bush and Russian president Boris Yeltsin issue formal statement declaring end to Cold War. Who “won” the Cold War?

  23. Vladimir Putin and George Bush, Jr.

More Related