The Vietnam Era, 1954-1975

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The Vietnam Era, 1954-1975 American History (CHA3U1) Chapter 33

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The Vietnam Era, 1954-1975. American History (CHA3U1) Chapter 33. Introduction. The period 1954 – 1975 would see unprecedented change in all areas of American society Tremendous prosperity and power would both benefit and hurt American society. Sec. 1: Cold War Challenges (pgs. 924-29). - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of The Vietnam Era, 1954-1975

Page 1: The Vietnam Era, 1954-1975

The Vietnam Era, 1954-1975

American History (CHA3U1)

Chapter 33

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Introduction

The period 1954 – 1975 would see unprecedented change in all areas of American society

Tremendous prosperity and power would both benefit and hurt American society

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Sec. 1: Cold War Challenges (pgs. 924-29)Crises in Cuba – Castro took power 1959 The Bay of Pigs Invasion – 1,400 Cuban

exiles supported by the CIA invade Cuba in 1961 total failure

The Alliance for Progress - $20 billion pledged to 19 Latin American countries to aid development and curtail communism

The Cuban Missile Crisis – October 1962 Pres. Kennedy forced Soviet Union to remove missiles from Cuba

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Cuban Missile Crisis

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Sec. 1: Cold War Challenges

The Peace Corps – 1961 help stop poverty & disease stop communism

Peace Corps Volunteers – lived among local people and gave them practical help for their problems (e.g. sewage system, medical)

Nationalism in Africa – new nations in Africa had boundaries created by European colonial powers that didn’t take into account ethnic / tribal differences conflict (e.g. Congo)

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Sec. 1: Cold War Challenges

Challenges From the Soviet Union – Soviet leader Khrushchev thought he could intimidate Kennedy

The Berlin Wall – Soviets built a wall to keep East Germans from escaping into West Berlin

Quarrels over Nuclear Testing – Soviets resumed atmospheric nuclear testing in 1961 1963 treaty ended such testing

Dominican Intervention – 1965 20,000 US troops sent to put down Communist rebels

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Krushchev and Berlin Wall

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Sec. 1: Cold War Challenges

Israel and Korea – friction with Soviets Arab-Israeli War – 1967 - American backed

Israel quickly defeated Soviet backed Egypt, Syria & Jordan

The Pueblo Incident – January 1968 N. Korea seized US spy ship that was in international waters and kept them for 1 year

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Sec. 2: War in Vietnam (pg. 930-34)

Trouble in Southeast Asia – Soviets aided countries vying for national liberation

War in Laos – Kennedy and Khrushchev agreed to cease-fire in 1961

Kennedy and Vietnam – divided into Communist North and Non-communist South in 1954 after French defeated 1963 Kennedy had sent 16,000 advisers

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Sec. 2: War in Vietnam (pg. 930-34)

Johnson’s Choices

1. Admit defeat and pull out causing possible domino theory in SE Asia

2. Limited support that would end in defeat

3. Actively attack N. Vietnam with loss of American lives and high financial costs

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North and South Vietnam

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Sec. 2: War in Vietnam

Escalation Gulf of Tonkin Resolution – August 2, 1964 N.

Viet torpedo boats supposedly fire on US ships Congress gives Pres. Johnson unaccountable power to wage war

A Different Kind of War – guerrilla & terrorist warfare fought by VC against stronger US

Search and Destroy – heavy bombardment of suspected VC positions (e.g. napalm, agent orange)

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Victims of Napalm

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Sec. 2: War in Vietnam

Resistance to Peace – N. Viet resisted peace attempts believing they could outlast US who had over 500,000 troops in Vietnam

N. Vietnamese Leader Ho Chi Minh

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Sec. 2: War in Vietnam

Tet and Retreat – end of 1967 Gen. Westmoreland said end was in sight

Vietcong Attack Turns the Tide – Jan. 1968 VC attack all major S. Viet cities VC totally defeated but a propaganda victory

Peace Talks Begin – Mar. 31/ 68 US bombing stops peace talks in Paris May ’68 fail

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Sec. 3: Protest and Reaction(pgs. 936-40)

Growing Opposition to War – reasons for fighting began to be questioned

Senate Hearings on the War – televised hearings carried the senators’ doubts about the war to millions of American homes

Hawks and Doves – supporters and opposition to war

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Sec. 3: Protest and Reaction

Student Protests – antiwar protests centered on college campuses

Protests Against the Draft – student deferment allowed rich to avoid war by staying in school while poor drafted – some conscientious objectors, draft dodgers

Violence on Campus – 1970 Kent State & Jackson State University 4 & 2 students killed

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Sec. 3: Protest and Reaction

New Beliefs and Values – younger generation rejected parents conservative values long hair, communes, sex, drugs & rock music (Woodstock 1969)

A Conservative Backlash – resented lack of respect for established order by spoiled rich college kids

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Sec. 3: Protest and Reaction

1968: The Turning Point – majority of

Americans turned against war policy The Race for President – Pres. Johnson

drops out of race and Robert Kennedy is assassinated by Arab nationalist

The Candidates – Richard Nixon (Rep.), Hubert Humphrey (Dem.), George Wallace (I)

The Election of 1968 – Nixon wins narrowly

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R. Kennedy and R. Nixon

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Sec. 4: Secrecy and Summitry(pgs. 941-45)

A New Policy – focused on foreign policy Nixon Proclaims Détente – SALT (Strategic

Arms Limitation Treaty) with Russians (1972) Nixon and China – visits China in 1972 after

allowing trade & travel and moving Seventh Fleet from protecting Taiwan

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Sec. 4: Secrecy and Summitry

War in Vietnam – Nixon promised to end war, but didn’t want to lose or prolong protests

The Pentagon Papers – leaked secret gov’t documents which showed four presidents lied about American involvement in Vietnam

Nixon Announces Vietnamization – US troops replaced by S. Viet. cease fire agree. 1973

The End of the War – 1974 N. Viet attacks S. Viet Saigon captured April 1975

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Sec. 4: Secrecy and Summitry

War in the Middle East – Egypt & Syria attack Israel Oct 6, 1973 but USA helps Israel win

Arab countries retaliate by placing oil embargo on USA economic problems

Egypt and Israel resume diplomatic relations thanks to US Sec. of State Henry Kissinger

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Conclusion

Vietnam War would be the first war the United States loses WHY? because they lost home front support

The legacy of Vietnam would lead to a mistrust of government and less American military involvement throughout the world