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The Eisenhower

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The Eisenhower & Kennedy Administrations: Policies & Strategies Eisenhower s 1st Inaugural Address: January 20, 1953 Religion distinguishes the United States from ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The Eisenhower


1
The Eisenhower Kennedy AdministrationsPolicies
Strategies
2
Eisenhowers 1st Inaugural AddressJanuary 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/Genev
    a_Conference_28195529"

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

13
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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/presi
    dents/inaugural/inaug_ike_1.jpg
  • Slide 3
  • Life Magazine http//www.2neatmagazines.com/cover
    s/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/pos
    twar/geneva.jpg
  • Slide 6
  • Time Magazine Cover http//www.pinetreeline.org/m
    etz/photos/metz487.jpg
  • Photo of Toppled Stalin Statue
    http//www.internationalist.org/hungarystalinwww.J
    PG
  • 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-Nixon20kitchen20Moscow.gif
  • Slide 8
  • U-2 Plane http//www.militaryfactory.com/aircraft
    /imgs/u2.jpg
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