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New Frontier

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Title: New Frontier


1
New Frontier Great Society
  • Not all legislation on domestic issues during the
    1960s concerned civil rights. Kennedy's programs,
    known as the New Frontier, and Johnson's, known
    as the Great Society, continued and expanded upon
    traditions begun during Franklin Roosevelt's New
    Deal of the 1930s.

2
Kennedy
  • Following the successful launch of a Soviet
    cosmonaut in 1961, the first man in space,
    President Kennedy committed the nation to a space
    program with the goal of landing a person on the
    moon by the end of the 1960s.
  • In July 1969, six years after Kennedy's death,
    that goal was met when astronaut Neil Armstrong
    stepped onto the moon's surface.
  • The effort had cost some 25.4 billion.

3
Kennedy
  • The Peace Corps program sent thousands of
    American volunteers to developing nations where
    they trained local people in technical,
    educational, and health programs.
  • The Peace Corps program was intended to offset
    the growth of communism in such nations.
  • The program is still in existence.
  • . . . My fellow citizens of the world ask not
    what America will do for you, but what together
    we can do for the freedom of man. . . .-John F.
    Kennedy, Inaugural Address, 1961

4
Johnson
  • The Volunteers in Service to America (VISTA)
    program was meant as a domestic Peace Corps,
    aiding poor citizens in rural and impoverished
    areas.

5
Johnson
  • The Office of Economic Opportunity set up in
    1964, was a directing agency in President
    Johnson's War on Poverty.
  • Its branches included Project Head Start (to
    provide education for preschoolers from
    low-income families), Project Upward Bound (to
    assist high-school students from low-income
    families to attend college), and the Job Corps
    (to provide vocational training for high school
    dropouts)

6
Johnson
  • The Elementary and Secondary Education Act passed
    in 1965 was a measure that provided more than 1
    billion in federal aid to education, with the
    greatest share going to school districts with
    large numbers of students from low-income
    families.
  • Sections of the bill required that schools
    accepting the money be integrated.

7
Johnson
  • Medicare Amendments to the Social Security Act
    provided health insurance and some types of
    health care to those over the age of 65.
  • A Medicaid program provided states with funds to
    help the needy who were not covered by Medicare.

8
Johnson
  • The Department of Housing and Urban Development
    was a cabinet post that was meant to oversee
    federal efforts to improve housing and aid
    economic development of cities.
  • Its first head, Robert C. Weaver, was the first
    African American to hold a cabinet post.

9
Foreign Policy in the 1960s
  • United States foreign policy under Kennedy and
    Johnson continued Truman's cold war policy of
    containment of communism.
  • As you remember, the United States has been
    deeply involved in the affairs of Latin America
    since early in its history. Latin American
    nations often resented such intervention, and
    United States policies have left a legacy of
    anger and hostility.

10
Kennedy and Latin America
  • Kennedy hoped to improve relations with Latin
    America and stop the spread of communism there
    through the Alliance for Progress, which pledged
    20 billion to help economic development in the
    region.
  • However, funds often went to aid repressive
    governments simply because they were
    anticommunist.

11
Kennedy and Latin America
  • After President Kennedy took office, he approved
    a CIA plan to overthrow Fidel Castro, the
    communist leader of Cuba.
  • The plan called for Cuban exiles supplied with
    U.S. arms, material, and trainingto invade Cuba
    and set off a popular uprising against Castro.

12
Kennedy and Latin America
  • The invasion took place on April 17, 1961, at a
    location called the Bay of Pigs, about 90 miles
    from Havana.
  • No uprising followed, and Castro's troops quickly
    crushed the invading forces, to the embarrassment
    of Kennedy and the United States government.

13
Kennedy and Latin America
  • Fearing another U.S. invasion attempt, Castro
    agreed to a Soviet plan to base nuclear missiles
    aimed at the United States in Cuba. Kennedy
    learned of the plan while the bases were under
    construction.
  • On October 22, 1962, he announced a naval
    blockade of Cuba and demanded that the Soviets
    withdraw the missiles. The Cuban missile crisis
    brought the United States and the Soviet Union to
    the brink of war, but the Soviets backed down and
    withdrew their missiles.

14
Kennedy and Latin America
  • Fearing another U.S. invasion attempt, Castro
    agreed to a Soviet plan to base nuclear missiles
    aimed at the United States in Cuba. Kennedy
    learned of the plan while the bases were under
    construction.
  • On October 22, 1962, he announced a naval
    blockade of Cuba and demanded that the Soviets
    withdraw the missiles. The Cuban missile crisis
    brought the United States and the Soviet Union to
    the brink of war, but the Soviets backed down and
    withdrew their missiles.

15
Kennedy and Latin America
  • Kennedy had clearly demonstrated that the United
    States would not tolerate a Soviet presence in
    the Western Hemisphere just 90 mile, from its
    shores.
  • By doing so, Kennedy also helped the nation
    recover some of the prestige it had lost in the
    failed Bay of Pigs invasion.

16
Kennedy and Latin America
  • In 1963, the United States, Soviet Union, and
    Great Britain signed a nuclear test ban treaty in
    which they agreed not to test nuclear weapons in
    the air, in outer space, or under the sea.
  • Underground testing was permitted.

17
Kennedy and Berlin
  • Since World War II, the division of Germany into
    a Communist East Germany and a democratic West
    Germany had added to cold war tensions.
  • President Kennedy and Soviet Premier Nikita
    Khrushchev met in Austria in June 1961 to discuss
    relations between the United States and the
    Soviet Union.

18
Kennedy and Berlin
  • Khrushchev thought that the Bay of Pigs disaster
    revealed American weakness, and he tried to
    threaten Kennedy into removing NATO troops from
    Europe. Instead, Kennedy increased U.S. military
    and financial commitment to West Germany.

19
Kennedy and Berlin
  • Response to the American moves came in August
    1961, when the East German government built a
    wall between East and West Berlin.
  • The Berlin Wall was meant to stop the flood of
    East Germans escaping to freedom in the West and
    quickly became a symbol of tyranny.

20
Kennedy and Berlin
  • In June 1963, Kennedy visited West Berlin,
    renewing the American commitment to defend that
    city and Western Europe.
  • In a famous speech, he said that he and all
    people who wanted freedom were citizens of Berlin.

21
Kennedy and Berlin
  • The Berlin Wall stood as a strong cold war symbol
    until 1989.
  • In that year, political change sweeping through
    Eastern Europe led East Germany to tear down the
    wall.
  • By October 1990, the rapid political changes in
    the region had led to the reunification of the
    two Germanys as a single nation for the first
    time since the end of World War II.

22
Kennedys Death
  • Kennedy's energetic voice for world democracy and
    his multilingual wife, Jacqueline, helped to make
    friends for the United States in many areas of
    the world.
  • His tragic and unexpected assassination in
    November 1963 caused an outpouring of grief from
    around the world as dozens of foreign heads of
    state came hurriedly to Washington, D.C., for
    Kennedy's funeral.

23
Vietnam War
  • Fear of communist expansion led the United States
    to become deeply involved in Southeast Asia.

24
Kennedy and Vietnam
  • President Kennedy shared Eisenhower's belief in
    the domino theory.
  • He, therefore, continued to support the Diem
    regime.
  • By 1963, the number of United States "advisers"
    in South Vietnam totaled about 17,000.
  • That year, 489 Americans died in the fighting in
    Vietnam.

25
Involvement
  • American advisers urged Diem to adopt reforms to
    broaden his support.
  • Diem, however, brutally suppressed all opponents
    and ruled as a dictator.
  • On November 2, 1963, the South Vietnamese
    military overthrew Diem, with the knowledge and
    approval of the United States.

26
Involvement
  • Around the same time, the White House announced
    that it intended to withdraw all United States
    military personnel from Vietnam by 1965.
  • Kennedy was unable to keep this promise, because
    he was assassinated in 1963.

27
Johnson and Escalation
  • Under the constitution, only Congress can declare
    war.
  • However, in 1964, three PresidentsEisenhower,
    Kennedy, and Johnsonhad sent United States aid
    and troops into Vietnam.
  • Each did so by acting as the
  • commander in chief of the nation's military
    forces.

28
Tonkin Gulf
  • On August 4, 1964, President Johnson escalated
    the war dramatically .
  • He announced on television that American
    destroyers had been the victim of an unprovoked
    attack by North Vietnamese gun boats. (It later
    appeared that the ships might have been
    protecting South Vietnamese boats headed into
    North Vietnamese waters.)

29
Tonkin Gulf
  • The next day, Johnson asked Congress for the
    authority to order air strikes, against North
    Vietnam.
  • With only two dissenting votes, Congress passed
    the Gulf of Tonkin Resolution.
  • The resolution empowered "the President, as
    commander in chief, to take all necessary
    measures to repel any armed attack against the
    forces of the United States and to prevent
    further aggression.

30
Tonkin Gulf
  • Johnson used the resolution to justify expansion
    of the war.
  • By April 1965, U.S. planes regularly bombed North
    Vietnam.

31
War
  • At first, United States military leaders expected
    that the nation's superior technology would
    guarantee victory.
  • However, they soon found themselves bogged down
    in a guerrilla war fought in the jungles of
    Southeast Asia.
  • The enemy did not wear uniforms, and no clear
    battlefront emerged.

32
War
  • Thousands of Vietnamese casualties occurred each
    month as the United States dropped more bombs on
    Vietnam, an area about twice the size of New York
    State, than it had used on Nazi Germany during
    the heaviest months of fighting during World War
    II.
  • Laos shares a long border with North Vietnam.
  • During the Vietnam War, the dense jungle terrain
    made it difficult for U.S. and South Vietnamese
    forces to cut off the supply lines that ran
    between Laos and North Vietnam.

33
Reasons for War
  • The massive commitment in Vietnam raised
    questions in the minds of many Americans about
    why the United States got involved in Vietnam and
    why it stayed there.
  • The administration argued that the United States
    was involved in Vietnam to prevent the fall of
    Vietnam to communism, to stop the rise of
    aggressor governments, and to protect the
    nation's position as a superpower and defender of
    democracy.

34
Reasons for War
  • However, as the war dragged on, many Americans
    began to question these motives.

35
Resistance to War
  • By late 1965, an antiwar movement had begun to
    take shape in the United States.
  • In Congress, there were differences of opinion
    concerning the war. Some stood solidly behind the
    President and argued in favor of victory at any
    cost. These members were known as hawks.
  • Those who favored immediate withdrawal and an end
    to the war were known as doves.

36
Student Protests
  • College campuses became centers of political
    protest against the war.
  • Students organized a new form of protest called
    teach-ins, or meetings in which speakers, usually
    promoting unconditional American withdrawal from
    Vietnam, held study sessions and rallies.

37
Student Protests
  • The strongest antiwar group in the 1960s was
    Students for a Democratic Society (SDS), founded
    in 1960. SDS was antiestablishment, or against
    big business and government. It led
    demonstrations, sit-ins, draft-card burnings, and
    protests against universities with
    "pro-establishment" regulations.
  • By 1969, the organization had collapsed into a
    number of splinter groups. However, SDS's legacy
    of protest against authority remained a strong
    force into the 1970s.

38
Protest Marches
  • People of all ages joined in protest marches
    against the war. The first huge march took place
    in Washington, D.C., in 1965.
  • In 1967, some 300,000 Americans marched in New
    York City. That same year, another 50,000 tried
    to shut down the Pentagon.

39
Draft Resisters
  • By 1968, about 10,000 draft resisters, people
    unwilling to serve in the military after being
    drafted, had fled the country for Canada.
  • The nation's youth became increasingly divided as
    some chose to fight for the United States in
    Vietnam, while others sought deferments to go to
    college.

40
Draft Resisters
  • A large number of minorities, who could not
    afford the cost of college, responded to the
    draft and went to Vietnam.
  • The attitude of American youth became
    increasingly hostile toward the Johnson
    administration and all war-related issues.

41
1960s
  • Some political analysts who studied the events of
    1968 believed the nation had survived one of the
    biggest tests to its political institutions since
    the Civil War.
  • The 1960s had been shaped by two movements the
    civil rights movement and the antiwar movement.
    The political turmoil of the decade helped
    produce great social upheaval, especially among
    the nation's youth.

42
1960s
  • Some young people became disillusioned with
    traditional American values. For the first time
    in United States history, thousands of Americans
    flaunted the use of illegal drugs, often
    popularized in rock music.
  • Many young Americans referred to themselves as
    hippies or flower children. They claimed to be
    searching for a freer, simpler way of life.

43
1960s
  • Communal living attracted thousands of youths who
    adopted lifestyles foreign to older Americans.
    Some spoke of a generation gap between youth and
    people over 30.
  • The civil rights movement and the Vietnam War
    also divided Americans. The assassinations of
    Robert Kennedy and Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.,
    heightened emotions.
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