OGT Benchmark: Analyze connections between World War II
Download
Report
Transcript OGT Benchmark: Analyze connections between World War II
OGT Benchmark: Analyze connections between World
War II, the Cold War, and contemporary conflicts.
Post World War II
President Harry S Truman
United Nations
Beginning of the Cold War with the Soviet Union
Containment/Truman Doctrine
The Marshall Plan
The Problem With Germany
The Berlin Blockade
NATO
The 2nd Red Scare
Joseph McCarthy
Arms Race
Korean War
Space Race
JFK: Election/Background, Bay of Pigs, Berlin Wall, arms race, Man on the
Moon, Cuban Missile Crisis, assassination
• Vietnam War
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
I. Postwar
A. United States:
1. Lost thousands during
the war
2. stronger than ever after
the war
3. capitalism
4. believed the rest of the
world should model us
5. want free elections,
free trade, and business
expansion all around
the world
• B. Soviet Union
• 1. Lost over 7 million
during the war
• 2. torn apart after the
war. Wanted to build a
strong country
• 3. communism
• 4. believed the rest of
the world should be
communist
Old world order gone. U.S. could no longer be isolated.
U.S. now relied on world trade to prosper!
Life in Post-WWII America (6:43)
II. President Harry S Truman
• A. Took over after FDR died
• B. Important decisions
• 1. Drop atomic bombs
• 2. United Nations
Harry S Truman
III. The United Nations
• A. April 12, 1944
•
1. San Francisco, California
•
2. 50 nations
•
3. United Nations formed
•
a. Not a peace conference (war still being
fought)
•
4. U.S. and S.U. disagreed on many things
•
5. U.S. Congress ratified on July 28, 1945
•
a. vote was 82-2
United Nations, continued
• B. General Assembly
•
1. All nations represented-each had one vote
•
2. Made recommendations to Security Council
•
3. Fixed budget and admitted new members
• C. Security Council
•
1. 11 members
•
a. 5 permanent(US, GB, SU, France, China)
•
--had right to veto
•
b. 6 rotating countries
•
--could not veto
•
2. Could act against any nation that
threatened peace
United Nations, cont.
• D. Secretary-General
•
1. ran the UN
•
2. 1st was Trygve Lie of Norway
• E. International Court of Justice
•
1. Court of the UN
• OVERALL GOAL: TO CREATE AN
INTERNATIONAL ORGANIZATION TO
PRESERVE PEACE
• Click on the link below to get a great
detailed chart of the United Nations.
http://images.google.com/imgres?imgurl=htt
p://www.newint.org/issue375/pics/un-mapbig.gif&imgrefurl=http://www.newint.org/is
sue375/unsystem.htm&h=1427&w=1024&sz=180&hl=e
n&start=13&tbnid=6zwUHvRka7Bj9M:&tbnh
=150&tbnw=108&prev=/images%3Fq=United
+Nations%26
UN Headquarters in New York
OGT Multiple Choice
• (Practice Test Booklet 2005) The
international organization created to
preserve the peace after World War II was
the
• A. United Nations
• B. League of Nations
• C. Organization of American States
• D. North Atlantic Treaty Organization
OGT Multiple Choice
• Which is true about the involvement of the United
States in the League of Nations (after World War I)
and the United Nations (after World War II)?
• A. The United States joined the United Nations, but
not the League of Nations
• B. The United States joined the League of Nations,
but not the United Nations
• C. The United States joined both organizations
• D. The United States did NOT join either
organization
OGT Multiple Choice
• The first meeting to build the United
Nations occurred on April 12, 1944 in
• A. Berlin, Germany
• B. Paris, France
• C. London, England
• D. San Francisco, California
IV. Beginning of the Cold War
• 1. Cold War = War with no fighting. Instead, used military threats,
espionage, propaganda, and politics.
• 2. NUCLEAR WEAPONS DEVELOPED!!!
• 3. The period right after World War II will begin 50 years of Cold
War between the US/SU.
• 4. U.S. and G.B. allies with S.U. for one reason--to beat Adolf Hitler
• 5. We did not trust Stalin. Did not tell him of the atomic bomb
• 6. Stalin expected entire world to become communist
• 7. U.S. and S.U. had very different views of the future
Beginning of Cold War, cont.
•
8. Problems with the Soviet Union
a. Stalin makes Poland Communist
b. Latvia, Lithuania, Estonia, Hungary,
Bulgaria, and Romania also under Soviet
control
•
•
***Stalin wants communist buffer
***Communism now threatened all of Europe
Joseph Stalin
OGT Multiple Choice
• (Practice Test Booklet 2005) The period after
World War II is referred o as the “Cold War.” It is
called this because the two superpowers, the
United States and the Soviet Union
• A. had several conflicts that never escalated into
a full-scale war
• B. used nuclear weapons that lowered the
temperature as they exploded
• C. has chilly but friendly relations during the is
time period
• D. fought a war in Siberia to determine control of
East Asia
OGT Multiple Choice
• During World War II, the United States was
an ally of this country. After World War II, the
United States became enemies with this
country.
• A. France
• B. Great Britain
• C. Soviet Union
• D. Spain
OGT Multiple Choice
•
•
•
•
•
The term ‘Cold War’ refers to
A. A war with a lot of battles.
B. Another name for the Korean War
C. A war with no fighting.
D. Another name given to World War II.
OGT Multiple Choice
• (Practice Test Booklet 2005) As World War
II was nearing an end and it was clear that
the Allies would be victorious, relations
between the United States and the Soviet
Union could be described as
• A. becoming increasingly suspicious of
each other’s motives
• B. good as both Harry Truman and
Joseph Stalin trusted each other
• C. never better as the two nations agreed
on postwar issues
• D. on the brink of going to war against
each other
OGT Multiple Choice
• (2005 Practice Test) Which factor helped lead to
the Cold War between the United States and the
Soviet Union?
• A. the lack of U.S. aid to the Soviet Union under
the Lend-Lease Program during World War II
• B. differing intentions between the two nations for
the political and economic rebuilding of Eastern
Europe after World War II
• C. both nations being members of the United
Nations Security Council after World War II
• D. uneven prosperity between the two nations
after the Great Depression
V. Containment and the
Truman Doctrine
• “It must be the policy of the United States, to
support free peoples who are resisting
attempted subjugation by armed minorities or
by outside pressure. We must assist free
people to work out their own destinies in their
own way.”
• ***In other words--U.S. must help free
states fight communism.
Containment, cont.
• Containment: U.S. wanted to contain
communism--don’t let it spread
• We would be willing to fight
VI. Marshall Plan
• A. Europe is in shambles
• B. We did NOT want Communism to spread
• Q: How could we stop it from spreading?
• A: Improve conditions in Europe!
Marshall Plan, cont.
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
A.
1.
2.
3.
4.
The plan: give aid to European countries
passed April 3, 1948
Gave $5.3 billion to Europe for recovery
U.S. wants to save West Europe
This plan worked
a. mostly helped GB, France, and W. Ger.
b. 25% more output
OGT Multiple Choice
•
(Practice Test Booklet 2005) The United States Marshall
Plan following World War II was an effort to provide
• A. military aid to its former enemies
• B. military aid to its allies
• C. economic aid to starving people
in Africa
• D. economic aid to war-torn Europe
OGT Short Answer
•
The Marshall Plan was a plan for European recovery after
World War II. How did the Marshall Plan prove that the
foreign policy of the United States was changing? (2 points)
VII. The Problem of Germany
• A. Germany--split into 4 (US, GB, France, SU)
• B. Berlin also split into 4 (surrounded by SU)
• C. Soviet Union:
• 1. Eventually, they took control of East Germany and East
Berlin
• 2. Forced their regime and communism on their new
territories, even though Stalin promised free and democratic
elections in these places.
• a. Eastern European nations
• b. East Germany
The Problem of Germany, cont.
• A. Distrust between US and SU grew
• B. Collision course: freedom vs. communism
• C. SU: stop trading with West and start to develop
atomic weapons
• D. This leads to: CONTAINMENT which leads to COLD
WAR
• E. Churchill famous speech on Eastern Europe:
• “an iron curtain has descended across the continent”
“Iron Curtain”
OGT Multiple Choice
• After World War II, Germany was split
into 4 zones of influence. Which
country DID NOT control a part of
Germany?
• A. Spain
• B. Soviet Union
• C. Great Britain
• D. the United States
OGT Multiple Choice
• (Base Test March 2005) At the end of World War II,
Soviet armies liberated the countries of Eastern
Europe from Nazi Germany. The occupation of
these countries by the Soviet Union contributed to
the development of the Cold War by
• A. contributing to conflict in the Middle East
• B. strengthening the authority of the United
Nations
• C. bringing about the reunification of Germany
• D. dividing Europe into communist and noncommunist spheres
VIII. The Berlin Blockade
• As Marshall Plan helped, US/SU relations got
worse
• US, France, and GB: want strong Germany
• SU felt threatened
• SU put a blockade around W. Berlin
• allowed nothing in; people were trapped
Berlin Blockade, cont.
A. Berlin Airlift
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
US dropped supplies into Berlin
lasted 324 days
277,000 total flights
2 million tons of supplies
May 1949, Stalin cancels blockade
• B. Germany divided shortly after blockade concelled
•
•
•
•
1. May 12, 1949
a. German Federated Republic
2. Oct., 1949
a. German Democratic Republic
OGT Multiple Choice
• (2005 Practice Test) After World War II, Germany
was divided into two nations, East Germany and
West Germany. Though they remained politically
divided for over forty years, the people of these
two nations shared a common cultural heritage.
Which action was influenced by this cultural
influence?
• A. West Germany joined NATO in 1955
• B. East Germany joined the Warsaw Pact in 1955
• C. The people of East Germany supported
reunification with West Germany
• D. The people of West Germany supported
withdrawing from the United Nations
OGT Extended Response
• The Berlin Blockade was an event that helped to
start the Cold War between the United States and
the Soviet Union. (4 points)
•
What is a Cold War? (1 point)
•
Why did the Soviet Union want to deny
freedom to Berlin? (1 point)
• What were the results of the Berlin Blockade (2
points)
IX. NATO and Warsaw Pact
A. Throughout 40’s and 50’s Cold War
intensified
1. Aug. 1949 = SU detonates atomic bomb
2. End of 1949 = China becomes Communist
Communist leader is Mao Zedong.
NATO/Warsaw Pact, cont.
• B. The creation of NATO (MAP page 718)
•
1. North Atlantic Treaty Organization
•
a. U.S. + Canada join with 12 W. Eur.
countries
•
2. Later = Greece, Turkey, and W. Germany
•
3. Signed April 4, 1949
•
•
•
•
C. Alliance
1. Attack on one = attack on all
2. Senate passes (82-13) 1st Peacetime
alliance
3. DDE = commander of NATO
NATO/Warsaw Pact, cont.
• D. Warsaw Pact
•
•
•
•
1. 1955
2. Alliance formed by SU
3. Countered NATO
4. This increased fears during the Cold
War
OGT Multiple Choice
• The United States joined with Canada
and 12 Western European countries to
form our first peacetime alliance. This
organization was called:
• A. League of Nations
• B. United Nations
• C. OPEC
• D. NATO
OGT Multiple Choice
• When China became a Communist
country in 1949, who was their leader?
• A. Syngman Rhee
• B. Mao Zedong
• C. Joseph Stalin
• D. Chang Kai-shek
OGT Multiple Choice
• (Practice Test Booklet 2005) In the years
following World War II there emerged the
North Atlantic Treaty Organization and the
Warsaw Pact nations. These are examples
of
• A. regional economic cooperative efforts
• B. environmental impact studies
• C. military alliance systems
• D. international tribunals
X. 2nd Red Scare
• A. The second red scare
•
1. Russians detonate atomic bomb (1949) and
China becomes Communist (1949)
•
2. Possible Communist spies in Canada
•
3. Truman:
•
a. millions of federal employees questioned
•
b. organizations investigated and 200 fired
•
4. Reputations destroyed
•
a. black lists
2nd Red Scare, cont.
• B. Protecting the United States
•
1. McCarran Internal Security Act
•
a. Communist groups had to register with AG
•
b. Truman vetoes
•
c. Congress overrides
•
2. McCarran-Walter Act
•
a. immigration quotas
•
b. favor N and E Europe
•
c. Truman vetoes
•
d. Congress overrides
•
3. Julius and Ethel Rosenberg
•
a. suspected in passing atomic secrets to SU
•
b. Executed--no proof
•
(Like Sacco and Vanzetti in the 1920’s)
Julius and Ethel Rosenberg
OGT Multiple Choice
• The fear of communism in the United
States during the 1950’s was know as
the
• A. 2nd Red Scare
• B. 2nd Yellow Scare
• C. 2nd Green Scare
• D. 2nd Blue Scare
XI. Joseph McCarthy
• A. Joseph McCarthy--R-Wisconsin
•
1. Accused many in US gov. of bei ng
Communist
•
2. BIG LIST--Feb. 1950
•
3. many feared him
Joseph McCarthy, cont.
• The fall of McCarthy (Picture on page 737)
•
A. McCarthy goes too far
•
1. takes books out of libraries
•
2. accuses Secretary of Army of espionage
•
3. accuses army officer of protecting coms.
•
B. Televison
•
1. hearings were televised--20 million watched
•
2. McCarthy was rude
•
3. Looked like a bully
•
4. people began to dislike him
•
5. his influence declined
•
6. Soon, his reign of terror ended
OGT Multiple Choice
• A Senator from Wisconsin who started
accusing many people of being Communist
and then put those names on a “Black List”
was
• A. Harry S Truman
• B. Julius Rosenberg
• C. Joseph McCarthy
• D. Alger Hiss
OGT Multiple Choice
•
•
•
•
•
(Practice Test Booklet 2005) McCarthyism during the early
1950’s was a result of American
A. reaction to the reforms of the New Deal
B. response to helping win World War II
C. fear of African-Americans gaining civil
rights
• D. fear of communism during the Cold War
OGT Multiple Choice
• Which of the following events helped cause
McCarthy’s fall from power?
• A. Eisenhower’s farewell address
• B. the Army-McCarthy hearings that were
televised to 20 million people
• C. Life magazines “Crisis In America” issue
• D. the Supreme Court decision in Brown vs.
Board of Education
XII. Arms Race
• A. Arms race between US/SU
• 1. occurred throughout Cold War
• 2. each side increased weapons
• 3. guarantee security
• 4. nuclear weapons
XIII. Korean War
Part of Containment Theory
• I. War in Korea
•
A. After WWII, Korea was split up into 2
•
1. North--controlled by Soviet Union
•
a. communist
•
b. had no free elections
•
2. South--controlled by the U.S.
•
a. could elect own government
•
B. U.S. and Soviets left Korea in 1949
•
C. North Korea invade South Korea in 1950
•
1. UN said this was wrong
•
2. Truman sent American troops to help
Korean War, cont.
• II. The Korean War Lasted Three Years
• A. The U.S. was the main country that
helped SK.
• B. Truman called it a ‘police action’ instead of
war
• C. Goal--drive North Koreans back out of S.
Korea
Korean War, cont.
•
•
•
•
•
•
III.
A.
B.
C.
MacArthur’s Counterattack
MacArthur was in charge of our troops
N. Korea had driven us almost out of Korea
MacArthur then counterattacks the rear of the
N. Korean army
D. We begin to win, and N. Korea was near defeat
General Douglas MacArthur
Korean War, cont.
• IV. China Enters the War
• A. China said that if the U.S. invaded N. Korea, they
would join the war on the side of N. Korea
• B. MacArthur did not believe they would
• C. We invaded N. Korea
• D. MacArthur was wrong--China entered the war
•
1. 300,000 Chinese attacked the U.S. in 1950
• E. The U.S. were pushed back into S. Korea
Korean War, cont.
• V. Truman Fires MacArthur
• A. General MacArthur asks Truman for
permission to bomb China
• B. Truman feared this would bring the Soviet
Union into the war--he said “no”
• C. MacArthur then asks Congress for
permission
• D. This angers Truman, so he fires
MacArthur in ‘51
Korean War, cont.
• VI. End of the war:
• A. Peace talks began in July of 1951
• B. Disagreement:
•
1. The UN wanted prisoners to be able to
choose which Korea they wanted to live in
• 2. The Communists wanted all prisoners to
•
return to their homeland
• C. Negotiations lasted two years
• D. Agreement reached July of 1953.
•
1. Prisoners could go where they choose
•
2. Two different countries formed
•
a. North Korea
•
b. South Korea
Korean War, cont.
• VII. Aftermath of the Korean War
• A. A 2 1/2 mile neutral zone formed
between N. and S. Korea
• B. U.S. troops stayed in S. Korea to
protect
• C. U.S. gave money to S. Korea
Korean War, cont.
• D. Ike promised to end Korea “police action”
• E. Panmunjom--peace negotiations
•
1. neither side gained much
•
2. border put back near 38th parallel
•
3. 35,000 U.S. killed
•
4. threat of nuclear war ends
OGT Multiple Choice
• The result of the Korean War was
• A. The North Koreans took control of South Korea
and made it communist
• B. The South Koreans took control of North Korea
and made it free
• C. China took control of both Koreas
• D. basically a tie, with neither side gaining much
land
OGT Multiple Choice
• The armistice that ended the Korean War
resulted in
• A. all of Korea becoming Communist
• B. Korea being divided near the 38th parallel
• C. all of Korea becoming free and democratic
• D. the Chinese gaining control of Korea
OGT Multiple Choice
• After World War II, Korea was divided into two. Which of
the following is true about Korea after World War II?
• A. North Korea was communist and controlled by the
Soviet Union and South Korea was free and controlled by
the United States.
• B. South Korea was communist and controlled by the
Soviet Union and North Korea was free and controlled by
the United States.
• C. North Korea was communist and controlled by the
United States and South Korea was free and controlled by
the Soviet Union.
• D. South Korea was communist and controlled by the
United States and North Korea was free and controlled by
the Soviet Union.
OGT Multiple Choice
•
(Practice Test Booklet 2005) From 1950 to 1953, the United States
fought a “police action” in Asia to prevent communism from
spreading to
•
•
•
•
A.
B.
C.
D.
South Korea
South Vietnam
Japan
China
OGT Multiple Choice
• Who was the man in charge of our
troops during the Korean War?
• A. Dwight Eisenhower
• B. George Patton
• C. Douglas MacArthur
• D. Norman Schwartzkopf
OGT Short Answer
•
The Korean War was undeclared war between the United States and
North Korea. How did this war prove that the foreign policy of the
United States was changing? (2 points)
XIV. Space Race
A. US/SU have space race
B. Another part of Cold War
C. Sputnik launched by SU
•
•
•
•
•
•
1. 1st man-made satellite
2. Oct. 4, 1957
3. 3 months in orbit
D. Sputnik II
•
•
•
1. carried dog to outer space
2. Nov. 1957
Sputnik and Sputnik II
Space Race, cont.
• E. US reaction
• 1. Vanguard rocket
•
a. Dec 6, 1957
•
b. disaster
•
c. millions watched on TV
• 2. Explorer II
•
a. Feb. 1958
•
b. first American satellite
•
c. succeeded
Space Race, cont.
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
3 US afraid
4. We feel our schools are no good
4. National Defense Education Act of 1958
a. $1 billion for more scientists
5. NASA formed
a. National Aeronautics and Space Adm.
--. $4 billion to start
Space Race, cont.
• F. Putting men into space
• 1. 1st done by SU
• a. April 12, 1961
• b. Yari Gagarin
• c. circled globe 1 time
• 2. US
• a. 1st done May 5, 1961
• b. Alan Shepard
• c. lasted 15 minutes
• d. Feb. 20, 1962, John Glenn orbits
Earth
Space Race, cont.
• G. U.S. Moon Landing
• 1. JFK challenges nation in 1961
• a. put man on moon by 1970
• 2. Apollo
• a. space flight to the moon
• b. July 1969
• c. Neil Armstrong, Buzz Aldrin, and
Michael Collins
• d. Armstrong: “That’s one small
step for man, one giant leap for
mankind.”
OGT Multiple Choice
• _____ In 1961, this President made it a goal of the
U.S. to land on the moon by 1970.
• A. Dwight Eisenhower
• B. John F. Kennedy
• C. Lyndon B. Johnson
• D. Richard Nixon
OGT Multiple Choice
• Apollo 11 was the lunar landing that fulfilled JFK’s
promise. Who were the astronauts who were involved
in Apollo 11?
• A. Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin
• B. John Glenn and Ed White
• C. Neil Armstrong and John Glenn
• D. Virgil Grissom and Robert Chaffee
OGT Multiple Choice
•
•
•
•
•
The first man in space was
A. Yuri Gagarin
B. Neil Armstrong
C. John Glenn
D. Alan Shephard
OGT Multiple Choice
•
•
•
•
•
(Practice Test Booklet 2005) The first country to put a man in space was
A.
B.
C.
D.
China
France
Soviet Union
United States
OGT Multiple Choice
• As a result of the Soviet launching of Sputnik the
federal government
• A. passed the National Defense Education Act to
produce more scientists and science teachers
• B. appointed Robert Goddard to head the United
States space program
• C. created NASA to coordinate United States space
efforts
• D. both a and c
OGT Extended Response
•
•
Explain the major domestic developments that occurred in the United States
because of the space race.
A. Which two countries were involved in the space
race? (2 pts)
•
B. What was the name of the Russian’s first manmade satellite? (1 pts)
•
C. What was the Unites States’ reaction to launch
of that satellite? (1 pts)
XV. JFK
• I. Election of 1960
• A. 1st time campaign a lot on TV
• B. Candidates
•
1. Democrats
•
a. Richard Nixon--Sen. from Cal and
•
Henry Cabot Lodge--Sen. from Mass.
•
2. Republicans
•
a. JFK--Sen. from Mass and
•
LBJ--Sen. from Texas
•
C. “Great Debates” (Pic. on page 776)
•
1. 4 televised debates
•
2. Answer report questions--2 1/2 min.
•
3. 70 million watched
•
4. JFK--younger, poised, clever answers
•
D. The winner..........
•
1. JFK wins in a close race 303-219
•
2. Many states were very close
JFK, cont.
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
II. Background
1. Youngest elected president--43 years old
(TR was younger, but not elected)
2. First Catholic
3. Naval officer during WWII
4. Senator for Massachusetts
5. “New Frontier”
a. make America better
b. energetic and young
c. athletic--sailed and played football
Quote from inaugural address: “Ask not what your
country can do for you--ask what you can do for your
country.”
JFK, cont.
III. Bay of Pigs
A. Cuba
1. Leader was Fidel Castro
a. At first, we supported him for
overthrowing previous dictator
b. He then announced he was a communist
2. Eisenhower stopped all trade with Cuba
3. Bay of Pigs invasion
a. Anti-Castro Cubans wanted to overthrow
Castro
b. JFK approved of this, but said the U.S.
would not help
JFK, cont.
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
c. April 1961--American supported Cubans
invaded the Bay of Pigs in Cuba
d. They thought the Cuban people would
support them
e. They were wrong
f. The invasion was a disaster
g. Many were taken prisoner or killed
h. JFK took full responsibility for it
i. Prisoners released for $50 million in food
and drugs and $3 million cash
JFK, cont.
• IV. The Berlin Wall
•
A. Khrushchev and Kennedy met in June 1961
•
1. Khrushchev felt JFK was to inexperienced
•
and weak
•
2. Khrushchev told JFK to get out of West
•
Berlin
•
3. JFK refused
•
4. Khrushchev threatened war
•
5. JFK got the army ready
•
B. The S.U. responded by building the Berlin Wall
•
1. Separated East and West Berlin
•
2. To keep people from crossing
Nikita Khrushchev
Berlin Wall
JFK, cont.
• V. Arms race
• A. continues during JFK
• B. JFK builds more and more nukes
• 1. “mutual assured destruction”
• 2. US is now far ahead of SU
JFK, cont.
• VI. Space Race
• A. JFK’s promise of putting man on moon
• 1. comes true
• 2. 1969
• 3. He’s not alive to se it
JFK, cont.
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
VII. Cuban Missile Crisis
A. October 1962--one of the most serious incidents
of the Cold War--the Cuban Missile Crisis
B. Almost led to a nuclear war between the U.S.
and the S.U.
C. We found out Cuba had missile bases
1. This threatened U.S. security
2. Kennedy told American people of the sit.
3. He ordered the navy to stop Soviet ships
from carrying missiles to Cuba
4. Next day: Soviet ships close to Cuba
a. Radio and TV kept Americans informed
b. War looked inevitable
5. October 24, 1962
a. Soviet ships suddenly turn around
b. They returned to S.U.
JFK, cont.
• D. October 26, 1962-Agreement between U.S. and S.U.
•
1. Missile bases removed if U.S. agreed not to
•
attack Cuba
•
2. Kennedy called Khrushchev a peacemaker
•
to make him save face
•
3. Soviets saw Khrushchev as weak
•
4. Khrushchev was removed one year later
•
5. Kennedy praised for being tough vs.
•
the communists and Khrushchev
JFK, cont.
• IX. Assassination
• A. Kennedy wanted to be re-elected
•
B. He went to campaign in Texas to get support
•
from the Democratic Party there
•
C. Nov. 22, 1963
•
1. JFK rode through Dallas
•
2. 3 people with him
•
a. his wife--Jackie Onassis Kennedy
•
b. governor of Texas--John Connally
•
c. Connally’s wife
•
3. VP Lyndon Johnson was in another car
•
4. Gov. Connally and JFK were both shot
•
5. No one knew where the shots came from
•
6. The car sped away to a hospital
•
D. Connally was seriously injured
•
E. JFK was dead
•
1. Johnson took over as President immediately
JFK, cont.
• F. Lee Harvey Oswald
•
1. He was arrested and accused of killing JFK
•
2. He denied the charge
•
3. Two days later, on live TV, Jack Ruby shot
•
and killed Oswald
•
4. Questions:
•
a. Why did Oswald kill Kennedy?
•
b. Did he act alone?
•
c. Why did Ruby kill Oswald?
• Warren Commission: One year later, they concluded Oswald
acted alone. This group was led by Chief Justice Earl
Warren. Many still question the conclusion of the Warren
Commission.
Lee Harvey Oswald and Jack Ruby
OGT Multiple Choice
• In dealing with the Cuban missile crisis,
Kennedy ordered
• A. an invasion of Cuba to seize the missiles
• B. a naval blockade on all military equipment
being shipped to Cuba
• C. an embargo on grain to the USSR
• D. a general air strike on targets in Cuba
OGT Multiple Choice
• Who was the leader of Cuba during the time of the
Bay of Pigs and the Cuban Missile Crisis?
• A. Nikita Khrushchev
• B. Joseph Stalin
• C. Fidel Castro
• D. Ho Chi Minh
OGT Multiple Choice
• Kennedy’s assassination was investigated by
the
• A. Southern Christian Leadership Conference
• B. Warren Commission
• C. RAND Corporation
• D. Joint Chiefs of Staff
OGT Multiple Choice
• The Bay of Pigs invasion was defeated mainly
because
• A. Castro hid and no one could find him
• B. the Soviet Union threatened nuclear retaliation
• C. Kennedy refused to support the invasion
• D. the Cuban people did not join in on the revolt as
was expected
OGT Multiple Choice
• The biggest question mark in Kennedy’s
chances for election in 1960 was
• A. his religion
• B. his performance in the “great debates.”
• C. his choice of a running mate
• D. his competition from Hubert Humphrey
OGT Extended Response
• You have just learned about the events of the Cuban Missile
Crisis.
•
How did this event show that the U.S. was taking a
strong stance against Communism?
•
What do you feel would have been the result if the
Soviet ships did not turn around?
•
(2 pts for each)
XVI. Vietnam War
• The Vietnam War is another part of the
Containment--DO NOT ALLOW
COMMUNISM TO SPREAD!
• This War stretches across the 40’s,
50’s, 60’s, and 70’s--only part of which
the United States is a participant.
UH-1D helicopters airlift members of the 2nd Battalion, 14th
Infantry Regiment from the Filhol Rubber Plantation area to a
new staging area, during Operation "Wahiawa," a search and
destroy mission conducted by the 25th Infantry Division,
northeast of Cu Chi, Vietnam.
• I.
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
1940’s
Background: War in Indochina
A. Indochina
1. Vietnam, Laos, and Cambodia
B. Vietnam liberated from Japan in 1945
1. Ho Chi Minh--Communist
2. Democratic Republic of Vietnam
C. French
1. sent 15,000 troops to Vietnam
2. wanted to control Vietnam
D. United States
1. containment
2. gave millions to French
3. fight war on communism
Ho Chi Minh
• E. China
•
1. helped Ho Chi Minh
• F. Dienbienphu
•
1. Vietnmamese surround French
•
2. large French defeat
• G. May 8, 1954
•
1. Meeting in Geneva, Switzerland
•
2. France, GB, SU, China, and US
•
3. Vietnam split into two
•
a. North--Communist (Ho Chi Minh)
•
b. South--free (Bao-Dai)
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
II. 1950’s: Problems in Vietnam
A. Deal from Geneva, 1954
1. Vietnam united and free elections by July ‘56
B. South Vietnam--Ngo Dinh Diem
1. did not want this
2. U.S. agreed with him
3. South Vietnam refuses elections
4. Viet Minh & Communists attack S. Vietnam
C. U.S.
1. gave South Vietnam millions
2. now sent advisors to help
Geneva Conference
• D. National Liberation Front (NLF)
•
1. want to overthrow Diem
•
2. reunite Vietnam
•
3. Diem calls them the Viet Cong
•
a. means “Vietnamese Communists”
• E. JFK
•
1. sends more advisors--16,000 of them
• F. Diem overthrown
•
1. Nov. 2, 1963
•
2. Diem murdered
•
3. Things look bad for South Vietnam
•
***JFK does not live to make next move.
G. Viet Cong--another pro communist group.
•
1. They began to invade South Vietnam
•
2. U.S gives support & weapons to S.
Vietnam
• H. South Vietnam could not handle the Viet
Cong,so the U.S. changed from ADVISOR to
PARTICIPANT
• III. 1960’s: The Vietnam War
• A. History
•
1. Eisenhower: military weapons and
economic help to South Vietnam
•
2. Kennedy: sent military advisors to SV
•
3. Johnson: Sent only non-combat troops
• B. Gulf of Tonkin Resolution
•
1. August 1964--two U.S. ships attacked off
•
coast of North Vietnam
•
2. Gulf of Tonkin Resolution--”the right to take
all necessary steps to protect American
forces in Vietnam”
•
3. Johnson used it to increase troops
•
4. By 1966, there were 400,000 troops there
•
5. U.S. starts aerial bombs
•
6. Congress never declared war
• C. Viet Cong reeked havoc in south
•
1. they were easily defeated
•
2. however, they were replenished by North
•
Vietnamese
• D. 1968--Obvious the war would last long and we
•
might not win
•
1. Johnson stops bombing North Vietnam
•
2. Sets up meeting:
•
a. North Vietnam
•
b. South Vietnam
•
c. the United States
•
•
3. Meeting held in Paris, France in 1968
4. Meeting did little to end the war
• IV. The Tet Offensive
• A. Tet is the Vietnamese New Year
•
1. They launched surprise attack
•
2. they did not win the battle militarily
•
3. this surprise attack made Americans
further question why we were in Vietnam
• V. 1970’s: The Politics of Protest
• A. People wondered why we were in Vietnam
•
1. reports of large U.S. victory
•
2. same day, reports of U.S. loss
•
3. T.V. brought home the horrors of war
•
4. people didn’t know who to believe
•
5. anti-war movement became more vocal
Award winning Photograph
Officer shoots man (An execution of a Vietcong
prisoner) February 1, 1968
• VI. Leaving Vietnam
• A. Jan. 27, 1973--cease-fire between N.
Vietnam and United States.
•
1. U.S. agreed to take all troops out of SV
•
2. NV agreed to release all POW’s
• B. “Vietnamization” did not work
•
1. South Vietnam was too weak
•
2. they could not stand alone
•
3. army fell apart
•
4. Communist NV took over SV in April of
1975
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
VII. Summary of the Vietnam War
A. longest war in U.S. history
B. 58,000 Americans killed; 365,000 were wounded
C. Total cost was $150 billion
D. The war lessened U.S citizens’ respect for their
government
E. The war caused confusion about the nation’s role
in world affairs
F. War Powers Act passed--requires the President
to explain to Congress within 48 hours
whenever American troops were to be sent
into a foreign country
OGT Multiple Choice
• As a result of the 1954 Geneva conference,
Vietnam
• A. was returned to French control.
• B. was turned over to the control of Ho Chi
Minh.
• C. was divided into a northern Communist
section and a southern free section.
• D. was occupied by a United Nations
peacekeeping force
OGT Multiple Choice
• These 2 countries were west of Vietnam and were a part of
Indochina.
• A. China and Hong Kong
• B. Japan and Korea
• C. Laos and Cambodia
• D. Manchuria and Singapore
OGT Multiple Choice
• As a result of their defeat in the battle of
Dienbienphu, the
• A. Russians withdrew from Austria
• B. United States withdrew from Egypt
• C. Japanese withdrew from Taiwan
• D. French withdrew from Vietnam
OGT Multiple Choice
• Which is true about the Tet Offensive?
• A. The battle was not a surprise to the United States.
• B. The attack was a military victory by the
Vietnamese.
• C. The attack made Americans further question why
we were in Vietnam.
• D. The attack was not made on a Vietnamese holiday
OGT Multiple Choice
• He was a Vietnamese Communist who led the
Viet Minh troops to victory. He was
• A. Bao-Dai
• B. Ho Chi Minh
• C. Mao Zedong
• D. Mossadegh
OGT Multiple Choice
• The leader of South Vietnam who was overthrown in
1963 was
• A. Ngo Dinh Diem
• B. Mao Tse-tung
• C. Viet Minh
• D. Ho Chi Minh
OGT Multiple Choice
• There was a major shift in American public opinion
against the Vietnam War as a result of
• A. the Tonkin Gulf Resolution
• B. sending U.S. advisors to help the South
Vietnamese army
• C. the 1968 Tet Offensive
• D. the 1965 peace offensive
OGT Multiple Choice
• Kennedy’s response to the civil war in Vietnam was to
• A. call for elections throughout Vietnam
• B. Send in American combat troops to help the South
Vietnamese
• C. support the Viet Cong
• D. send in advisors to train the South Vietnamese
army
OGT Multiple Choice
• (The incident that prompted Congress to pass the
•
•
•
•
Tonkin Gulf Resolution was
A. the first American bombing raids against North
Vietnam
B. the assassination of Ngo Dinh Diem
C. the invasion of South Vietnam by the North
D. an attack by North Vietnamese gunboats on two
U.S. destroyers
OGT Multiple Choice
• In regard to Vietnam in the 1950’s, the United
States
• A. supported the existing government
• B. declared its neutrality
• C. sent American forces to put down guerrilla
fighting
• D. sent millions of dollars to aid France
•
OGT
Short
Answer
(2005 Practice Test) During times of war or perceived danger to the
United States, groups of Americans have been singled out as
potentially disloyal to the country. For example, during World War
I, patriotic support for the war led to a distrust and persecution of
German-Americans. In some places, German language instruction
was forbidden, and German culture and heritage were subject to
discrimination.
•
Identify a group of Americans that was
targeted as potentially disloyal in the years
between 1940 and 1985. (1 point)
•
Explain why this group was targeted. (1
point)