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PowerPoint by Mr. Hataway Created February 26, 2003 Revised March 16, 2011 JFK and the Cold War

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Page 1: PowerPoint by Mr. Hataway Created February 26, 2003 Revised March 16, 2011 JFK and the Cold War
Page 2: PowerPoint by Mr. Hataway Created February 26, 2003 Revised March 16, 2011 JFK and the Cold War

PowerPoint by Mr. HatawayCreated February 26, 2003

Revised March 16, 2011

JFK and the Cold War

Page 3: PowerPoint by Mr. Hataway Created February 26, 2003 Revised March 16, 2011 JFK and the Cold War

continued on next slide

Page 4: PowerPoint by Mr. Hataway Created February 26, 2003 Revised March 16, 2011 JFK and the Cold War
Page 5: PowerPoint by Mr. Hataway Created February 26, 2003 Revised March 16, 2011 JFK and the Cold War

The New Frontier

Kennedy’s Inaugural Speech “ask not what your country can do for you –

ask what you can do for your country.” Promised a landing on moon by end of decade. Challenge the Soviet bloc to respect human

rights.

Page 6: PowerPoint by Mr. Hataway Created February 26, 2003 Revised March 16, 2011 JFK and the Cold War
Page 7: PowerPoint by Mr. Hataway Created February 26, 2003 Revised March 16, 2011 JFK and the Cold War
Page 8: PowerPoint by Mr. Hataway Created February 26, 2003 Revised March 16, 2011 JFK and the Cold War

Bay of Pigs Invasion, April 1961

Cuban Leader Fidel Castro made alliance with Soviet leader, Nikita Khrushchev

La Brigada– Eisenhower had CIA train

and arm Cuban exiles.– Kennedy approves Cuban

invasion by the exiles.

Page 9: PowerPoint by Mr. Hataway Created February 26, 2003 Revised March 16, 2011 JFK and the Cold War

Bay of Pigs Invasion, April 1961

Kennedy canceled air support. Most of La Brigada were either

captured or killed.

Page 10: PowerPoint by Mr. Hataway Created February 26, 2003 Revised March 16, 2011 JFK and the Cold War

The Berlin Wall

Kennedy met Khrushchev in June 1961

Kennedy refused to recognize East Germany or withdraw from Berlin.

Khrushchev commented “It will be a cold winter”

Page 11: PowerPoint by Mr. Hataway Created February 26, 2003 Revised March 16, 2011 JFK and the Cold War

The Berlin Wall

In 1961, the Soviet-backed East German government (GDR) began constructing a fence to halt the flow of “human resources” from the East to the West.

Page 12: PowerPoint by Mr. Hataway Created February 26, 2003 Revised March 16, 2011 JFK and the Cold War

The Berlin Wall

The Wall was a symbol of the division of East and West for the remainder of the Cold War until it was taken down in 1989.

Page 13: PowerPoint by Mr. Hataway Created February 26, 2003 Revised March 16, 2011 JFK and the Cold War

Fall of The Berlin Wall 1989

Page 14: PowerPoint by Mr. Hataway Created February 26, 2003 Revised March 16, 2011 JFK and the Cold War

Cuban Missile Crisis, 1962

Soviets placed nuclear missiles in Cuba in summer of 1962.

Page 15: PowerPoint by Mr. Hataway Created February 26, 2003 Revised March 16, 2011 JFK and the Cold War

Cuban Missile Crisis, 1962

In October 1962, President John F. Kennedy warned Soviet leader Nikita Khrushchev that an attack launched on the United States from missiles based in Cuba would be considered an attack from the Soviet Union.

Page 16: PowerPoint by Mr. Hataway Created February 26, 2003 Revised March 16, 2011 JFK and the Cold War

Cuban Missile Crisis, 1962

EX-COM gave Kennedy two Options– Air strikes– Air strike followed by invasion

Kennedy demanded 3rd option– “quarantine” of Cuba emerged.

Page 17: PowerPoint by Mr. Hataway Created February 26, 2003 Revised March 16, 2011 JFK and the Cold War

Cuban Missile Crisis, 1962

A Tense Thirteen Days– Khrushchev agreed to remove the

missiles.– Kennedy promised not to invade Cuba.– Secretly Kennedy removed American

missiles from Turkey.

Page 18: PowerPoint by Mr. Hataway Created February 26, 2003 Revised March 16, 2011 JFK and the Cold War

Kennedy’s “Flexible Response”

A growing “Missile Gap,” with Soviets.

Kennedy asked Congress to increase defense appropriations by 1/3.

Page 19: PowerPoint by Mr. Hataway Created February 26, 2003 Revised March 16, 2011 JFK and the Cold War

Kennedy’s “Flexible Response”

Built up conventional troops and weapons to fight a limited war.

Supported special forces such as the “Green Berets” for covert operations.

Page 20: PowerPoint by Mr. Hataway Created February 26, 2003 Revised March 16, 2011 JFK and the Cold War

Kennedy’s “Flexible Response”

Fear of annihilation, led the U.S. and Soviets to to sign the Test Ban Treaty (1963) that prohibited atmospheric tests.

Page 21: PowerPoint by Mr. Hataway Created February 26, 2003 Revised March 16, 2011 JFK and the Cold War

Kennedy’s “Flexible Response”

White House/Kremlin Hotline– August 1930, direct

communication between the White House and the Kremlin.

– the new hotline would "help reduce the risk of war occurring by accident or miscalculation."

Page 22: PowerPoint by Mr. Hataway Created February 26, 2003 Revised March 16, 2011 JFK and the Cold War

Space Race

Kennedy proposing America put a man on the moon by 1969.

JFK put LBJ in charge of NASA.

Mercury program put Alan Shepherd in Space (1961) & John Glenn in orbit (1962).

Page 23: PowerPoint by Mr. Hataway Created February 26, 2003 Revised March 16, 2011 JFK and the Cold War

The Vietnam Quagmire

JFK continued Eisenhower’s policy of support for anticommunist forces in Southeast Asia to prevent the “domino effect.”

JFK increased US involvement in Vietnam by sending 16,000 military advisors over (1963).

Page 24: PowerPoint by Mr. Hataway Created February 26, 2003 Revised March 16, 2011 JFK and the Cold War

End of Slide Show