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Eisenhower's 1st Inaugural Address: January 20, 1953. Religion distinguishes the United States from the USSRThe Cold War is a war between freedom
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1. The Eisenhower & Kennedy Administrations:Policies & Strategies
2. Eisenhowers 1st Inaugural Address:January 20, 1953 Religion distinguishes the United States from the USSR
The Cold War is a war between freedom & slavery
The worlds economies are interdependent
Guiding Principles of the U.S.
Love of Peace
Rejection of Appeasement
Maintenance of American power
Respect for each nation in the world
Economic prosperity necessary for military strength
Support of the United Nations
3. Eisenhower's Plan for Global Disarmament Eisenhower has 5 policies for the Developing World
Non-Interference in Africa
Help securing African security w/o wasteful armaments
Emergency Aid to the Congo
International Aid to promote long-term African development
U.N. aid for education
Arms Control
U.S. will submit to international inspection if other nations reciprocate
Purpose = to save future generations from the scourge of war
Need to forge bonds of a world community
U.N. should help build this world community
U.N. should not be abused as an instrument of propaganda of individual nations
4. Eisenhower's "Atoms for Peace" Speech to the U.N. (Dec. 8, 1953) United States' Atomic Stockpile exceeds the explosive equivalent of the total of all bombs used by every nation in all of the years of World War II
The USSR is quickly catching up
The U.S. & USSR must negotiate for peace
Atomic power should be used for peaceful purposes
Ikes proposals
Each nation should contribute atomic materials to the International Atomic Energy Commission
Cooperation must be done in good faith
The I.A.E.C should be responsible for handling atomic materials
Experts should find peaceful uses of atomic energy
5. Geneva Conference The conference met in 1955 in the city of Geneva, the countries attending included: United Kingdom, United States, France, and U.S.S.R.
The Representatives that attended at the conference are as follows
-U.S.S.R.~Bulganin -France~ Mendes-France -U.K.~Eden -U.S.A.~Eisenhower
The world leaders discussed issues on security, armaments, German unification, German unification, and stronger east west relationships
This treaty eventually lead to the Austrian peace treaty of 1955 resulting in the end of joint occupation of Austria.
This conference marked an era of renewed optimism in cold war relationships, however this was disrupted later by the Suez Crisis
Retrieved from "http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Geneva_Conference_%281955%29"
6. Hungarian Revolt Oct. 23-Nov 4, 1956
Anti-Soviet Revolt
Causes
Khrushchev de-Stalinization
Liberalization in the Eastern Bloc
Hungarians seized opportunity to throw off the Soviet yolk
Freedom Fighters hoped for American Support
American non-intervention was a de facto confirmation of Cold War boundaries
Revolt was brutally suppressed & Hungary remained in the Communist orbit
7. Nixon in Moscow July 1959 Vice-President Nixon visits Moscow for the opening of the American National Exhibition
During the visit, Khrushchev & Nixon had a heated debate
Know as the Kitchen Debate
For the exhibit, an entire house was built that the Americans claimed anyone in America could afford
Filled with luxury goods
The Debate took place in the house's kitchen
Khrushchev & Nixon debated the merits of Communism vs. Capitalism
Nixon tactfully tried to focus on household appliances such as the washing machine, rather than bombs or weapons
In the U.S., most believed that Nixon won the debate
8. U-2 Spy Plane Crisis U-2 = high-altitude U.S. spy plane
May 1, 1960, U-2 shot down over the USSR
U.S. denied the plane was a spy plane
Called it a weather plane
Khrushchev forced the U.S. to admit it he produced the living pilot and the plane to corroborate their claim of being spied on aerially
The incident worsened East-West relations and was a great embarrassment for the United States
The Paris Summit between Eisenhower and Khrushchev collapsed
9. Eisenhower's Farewell Address (January 17, 1961) The military establishment has changed dramatically since WW2
permanent armaments industry of vast proportions has been erected
More money is spent annually on the military than the incomes of every American corporation combined
U.S. must guard against military-industrial complex
International disarmament is the solution to the potential loss of liberties to the military industrial complex at home
10. Space Race The '''Space Race ''' was an informal competition between the US & USSR
lasted from 1957 to 1975.
It involved the parallel efforts by each of those countries to explore space with artificial satellites, to send humans into space, and to land people on the Moon
The Space Race effectively began after the Soviet launch of Sputnik 1 on October 4, 1957.
the Sputnik satellite = 1st ever satellite in orbit
11. Soviet Space Program Soviets had early success in space
Serge Korolyov = the head of the Soviet space program
First animal to enter Earth orbit, Laika on Sputnik 2 (1957)
April 12, 1961, Yuri Gagarin, a Soviet Cosmonaut, became the 1st man in space
August 1962, the Soviets put two men into space simultaneously
First woman in space, Valentina Tereshkova, Vostok 6 (1963)
March 1965, the Soviets demonstrated the 1st successful space walk
12. JFK & the Space Program Early Soviet successes in space made many Americans believe that the U.S. was lagging too far behind
JFK established the goal of beating the Soviets to the moon
Research began for the Apollo Program
Goal = to land a man on the moon by the end of the decade
14. JFK Acceptance of the Democratic Nomination (July 15, 1960) JFK is the first Catholic nominated by the Democrats since 1928
Faith should not determine for whom one votes
His religious beliefs will not determine what he thinks is best for the country
JFK is appealing to the disenchanted
The balance of power across the world is changing
Communist influence is spreading
There are changes in the urban & rural areas
A vibrant new generation not bound to the past is coming into power
America stands on the edge of a New Frontier
15. JFK's Inaugural Speech (Jan. 20, 1961) Democratic Principles are at stake around the world
America is committed to Human Rights & Liberty
We must cooperate with our allies
We must negotiate with our foes
The poor in the developing nations must be helped
ask not what your country can do for you, but what you can do for your country.
16. Kennedy & the Peace Corps. Corps =a pool of trained American men and women sent overseas by the U.S. Government to help developing countries
JFKs proposal was enthusiastically received by Americas youth
Claims that the Peace Corps is not designed as an instrument of diplomacy or propaganda
Life in the Peace Corps
Difficult
Low salary
Expected to live with native population
The organization is designed to further the cause of peace throughout the world
17. Kennedys Berlin Speech The Berlin Wall was erected on August 13, 1961
To prevent people in the East from fleeing to the West
Berlin represents the differences between the East & West
The West has never built a wall to keep its citizens in
Berlin shows the failure of Communism
Berlin is on the front line in the battle for freedom
All free men, wherever they may live, are citizens of Berlin, and, therefore, as a free man, I take pride in the words "Ich bin ein Berliner."
18. Bibliography Slide #1
Ike Photo: http://www.homeofheroes.com/presidents/inaugural/pres_eisenhower.jpg
JFK Photo: http://www.fiftiesweb.com/kennedy/john-f-kennedy-2.jpg
Slide #2
Ike swearing in: http://www.homeofheroes.com/presidents/inaugural/inaug_ike_1.jpg
Slide #3
Life Magazine: http://www.2neatmagazines.com/covers/1960cover/1960-Oct-3.jpg
Slide #4
Atomic Bomb: http://www.sbac.edu/~palmergw/A-Bomb.jpg
Slide #5
Ike & Khruschev: http://www.historycentral.com/postwar/geneva.jpg
Slide #6
Time Magazine Cover: http://www.pinetreeline.org/metz/photos/metz487.jpg
Photo of Toppled Stalin Statue: http://www.internationalist.org/hungarystalinwww.JPG
Photo of Hungarians on Soviet Tank: http://newsimg.bbc.co.uk/media/images/38809000/jpg/_38809447_tank_ap_238.jpg
Slide #7
Nixon & Khruschev: http://www.oldenziel.com/images/Khrushev-Nixon%20kitchen%20Moscow.gif
Slide #8
U-2 Plane: http://www.militaryfactory.com/aircraft/imgs/u2.jpg
Khruschev inspecting the U-2: http://www.cia.gov/csi/studies/winter98_99/page12.gif
Francis Gary Powers on Trial: http://history.acusd.edu/gen/filmnotes/images/trial18.jpg
Slide #9
Eisenhower: http://www.ioncinema.com/beta/posters/2006_whywefight2.jpg
Slide #10
Sputnik: http://mek.kosmo.cz/druzice/rusko/sputnik/sp1_01.jpg
Russian Stamp: http://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bild:Sputnik-stamp-ussr.jpg
Slide #11
Russian Stamp: http://www.enchantedlearning.com/lgifs/Laikastamp.GIF
Russian Rocket: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image:Soyuz_rocket.jpg
Yuri Gagarin: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image:Yuri_Gagarin_official_portrait.jpg
Slide #12
JFK inspecting Mercury Capsule: http://www.romfart.no/Sitater/Bilder/KennedyJohnGlennJohnMercury.jpg
Slide #13
Chart of Space Launches: http://www.fas.org/irp/dia/product/88_space_launch.jpg
Slide #14
JFK Campaign Poster: http://scriptorium.lib.duke.edu/americavotes/jfk-sticker.jpeg
Slide #15
JFK Photo: http://www.photographicimage.com/prodimg/TLF-268862.jpg
Slide #16
Peace Corps. Logo: http://www.gvsu.edu/images/hauenstein/peace_corps.jpg
JFK with Volunteers: http://www.archives.gov/education/lessons/peace-corps/images/volunteers-1961.gif
Slide #17
Berlin Crowd: http://www.aref.de/kalenderblatt/2003/pics/kennedy-rede-berlin63.jpg
JFK Brandenburg Gate: http://www.medaloffreedom.com/JohnFKennedy_Germany.jpg