220 likes | 497 Views
November 29, 2010. What political change did Fidel Castro undergo after taking power and how did this impact the U.S.? Cuba in crisis and the U.S. response Berlin Crisis Homework: 28 Section 2. The Election of 1960. Mood of Voters: Economy in recession USSR’s launch of Sputnik
E N D
November 29, 2010 • What political change did Fidel Castro undergo after taking power and how did this impact the U.S.? • Cuba in crisis and the U.S. response • Berlin Crisis • Homework: 28 Section 2
The Election of 1960 • Mood of Voters: • Economy in recession • USSR’s launch of Sputnik • USSR development of long range missiles • U-2 incident • Cuba aligns with Soviet Union • The Candidates had similar policies but Kennedy had two key factors on his side • Television • Civil Rights
Republican: Richard Nixon Democrat: John F. Kennedy The Candidates
Kennedy Well-organized Wealthy family background Handsome and charismatic 43 and inexperienced Roman Catholic Coached by TV producers Nixon Expert on foreign policy and hoping to expose opponent’s inexperience Current Vice President Televised Debate: Launching TV in Politics
Kennedy and Civil Rights • October 1960: Police Arrest Martin Luther King, Jr. in Atlanta, GA • 33 other demonstrators released • King sentenced to hard labor • Eisenhower (and Nixon) refused to do anything • Kennedy called King’s wife to express sympathy • Robert Kennedy persuaded judge to release King on bail. • African-American Voters heard of this
The Camelot Years: • Kennedy’s inauguration set tone of grace, elegance, and wit • He and his wife invited artists and celebrities to the White House • JFK’s Mystique: • Many took speed-reading classes • First ladies fashion sense • Family constantly televised and photgraphed
Kennedy’s Team: • McGeorge Bundy – Harvard Dean as National Security Advisor • Robert McNamara – Ford Motor Company President as Secretary of Defense • Dean Rusk – President of Rockefellor Foundation as Secretary of State • Robert Kennedy – brother as Attorney General
New Military Policy • Eisenhower – brinksmanship (edge of nuclear war) • Kennedy – Flexible Response • Strengthen ability to fight nonnuclear war • Increase defense spending to boost conventional military in order to create elite branch of the army (green berets) • Tripled nuclear capabilities across the U.S.
Crisis over Cuba: • Eisenhower cut off diplomatic ties with Cuba because of Fidel Castro • He gained power by promising democracy and toppled dictator Batista • Promised to eliminate poverty, inequality, & dictatorship • U.S. supported until he took over oil refineries
Castro broke up Commercial Farms and American Sugar Companies • Congress started a trade embargo • Castro relied on aid from Soviet Union • Some saw Castro as great while others saw him as tyrant • 10% Cuban population going into exile
Bay of Pigs • March 1960 – Eisenhower allowed CIA to train Cuban exiles for invasion • Hoped to trigger revolution • Kennedy learned of this 9 days after becoming president
What Went Down? • April 17, 1961 – Cuban rebels and U.S. military landed on the Bay of Pigs (Cuba) • What went wrong? • Air strike failed to take out Cuban air force • Small force sent to distract Castro’s forces did not reach the shore • When the commando landed they faced 25,000 Cuban soldiers backed by Soviet tanks and aircrafts
Thoughts? • Cuban media sensationalized the defeat of “North American mercenaries” • U.S. comments were that the U.S. “looked like fools to friends, rascals to enemies, and incompetent to the rest”
What Happened Afterwards? • Kennedy paid a ransom of $53 million in food and medical supplies for surviving commandos • Kennedy condemned communism in Western Hemisphere but Cuba continued with Soviet aid
Cuban Missile Crisis • Nikita Krushchev promised to protect Cuba with Soviet arms • Summer 1962 – flow of weapons to Cuba from the Soviet Union increased (including nuclear missiles) • Kennedy warned America won’t tolerate offensive weapons in Cuba • October 14 – photographs reveal Soviet missile bases in Cuba with missiles ready to launch • October 22 – Kennedy informed the nation of such missile sites and of plans to remove them • Any attack would result in war
Cuban Missile Crisis (cont’d) • The world faced the possibility nuclear war • How did we prepare? • Soviet ships in Atlantic • U.S. ships block Cuba • How did it end? • U.S. agreed not to invade Cuba & remove missiles from Turkey • USSR agreed to remove missiles from Cuba
Khrushchev Prestige in Soviet Union fading Kennedy Practiced brinksmanship not flexible response or diplomacy Others said he passed up chance of taking over Cuba Both World Leaders Criticized
Crisis over Berlin • The Berlin Wall – a concrete wall topped with barb wire that severed the city in two • East Germany proving to fail as people flee communism and enter West Berlin • Weakened the economy of East Germany
Summit Meeting in Vienna • Khrushchev threatens treaty with East Germany to close off all roads to West Berlin • U.S.n refuses to give up West Berlin • The threat of nuclear war prevented Khrushchev from closing roads to West Berlin • August 1961 – he began the construction of the wall separating East Germany from West Germany • The Wall ended the Berlin crisis but strengthened Cold War tensions
Searching for ways to ease Tensions • 1963 – Kennedy announced that the two nations had established a hot line between the two • Allowed communication between the two leaders • Limited test ban Treaty – barred nuclear testing in the atmosphere
Essay Question: • Explain how the Bay of Pigs invasion, the Cuban missile crisis, and the Berlin crisis each placed the U.S. in conflict with the Soviet Union. What happened in each event? How did Kennedy handle the event? How was Kennedy viewed after the event?