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History 17C The American People, World War I to the Present 1
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Mutual Assured Destruction 2
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Themes From the mid-1950s to the early 1960s, both the United States and the Soviet Union made genuine, and to some extent successful, efforts to ease Cold War tensions 3
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Themes But advances in military technology introduced a dangerous new dimension; disagreements over how to use new technologies threatened to derail US-Soviet relations and even to plunge the world into global war 4
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Nikita Khrushchev General Secretary of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union, 1953-1964 5
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... succeeding Joseph Stalin 6
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Nikita Khrushchev General Secretary of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union, 1953-1964 7
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Khrushchev’s dilemmas Wanted to ease tensions with West, but also needed to shore up revolutionary credentials in communist world 14
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Khrushchev’s dilemmas Wanted the USSR to be recognized as military equal of US, but knew USSR was much weaker 15
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Mid- to late 1950s— Khrushchev conceded US superiority in bombers and concentrated instead on developing intercontinental ballistic missiles (ICMBs) 16
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Summer 1957—USSR tested first ICBM 17
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October 1957—USSR Launched Sputnik, causing panic in US 18
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October 1957—USSR Launched Sputnik, causing panic in US 20
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From U-2 spy flights, Eisenhower knew how weak USSR was, but because U-2 was secret he couldn’t reassure American people 21
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Post-Sputnik investments in education and scientific research 22
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In wake of Sputnik, Democrats accused Eisenhower administration of failing to meet Soviet challenge; also accused Eisenhower of failing to win over Third World countries Eisenhower and John F. Kennedy 23
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VP Richard Nixon in South America, 1958 24
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US-Cuban relations Prerevolutionary Cuba 25
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Fulgencio Batista Cuban President 1940-1944, 1952-1959 26
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January 1959—Fidel Castro overthrew Batista and took over Cuban government 27
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1960—Castro aligned with Moscow 28
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July 1959—VP Richard Nixon visited Moscow, engaged in “Kitchen Debate” with Khrushchev 30
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September 1959— Khrushchev visited United States 31
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September 1959— Khrushchev visited United States 33
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September 1959— Khrushchev visited United States 34
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Eisenhower agreed to visit USSR in following year 35
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U-2 Affair, 1960 36
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May 1960—Soviets shot down U-2 plane and captured Francis Gary Powers 37
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Khrushchev with wreckage of Powers’s spy plane 38
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Powers on trial in Moscow 39
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U-2 Affair derailed plans for Moscow summit 40
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In 1960 presidential election, John F. Kennedy accused Eisenhower administration of “losing” Cuba, and of allowing “missile gap” favoring USSR Nixon-Kennedy presidential debate 41
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November 1960—Kennedy narrowly elected 42
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April 1961—Kennedy launched “Bay of Pigs” invasion, which ended in fiasco 43
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After Bay of Pigs Kennedy administration stepped up efforts to assassinate Castro (Operation Mongoose) 44
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After Bay of Pigs Kennedy administration stepped up efforts to assassinate Castro (Operation Mongoose) 45
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After Bay of Pigs Kennedy administration stepped up efforts to assassinate Castro (Operation Mongoose) 46
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After Bay of Pigs Kennedy administration stepped up efforts to assassinate Castro (Operation Mongoose) 47
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June 1961—Khrushchev and Kennedy met in Vienna; Khrushchev unimpressed 49
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Summer 1961— Khrushchev issued ultimatum on Berlin: Four Powers must make it a “free city,” or else USSR will turn over access routes to East Germany 50
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Kennedy responded by activating reservists, conducting massive military buildup, and encouraging Americans to build fallout shelters 51
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August 1961—East German authorities erected barbed wire barrier between East and West Berlin; later became Berlin Wall 52
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August 1961—East German authorities erected barbed wire barrier between East and West Berlin; later became Berlin Wall 53
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October 1961— Kennedy administration revealed extent of Soviet nuclear inferiority Secretary of Defense Robert McNamara with Deputy Defense Secretary Roswell Gilpatrick 54
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1962—Khrushchev secretly arranged to deploy intermediate range ballistic missiles, (IRBMs) and medium range ballistic missiles (MRBMs) in Cuba 55
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Intermediate range ballistic missiles (MRBMs) Medium range ballistic missiles (IRBMs) 56
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October 1962—US discovered missile sites in Cuba 57
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58 October 1962—JFK set up Executive Committee (ExComm) to decide what to do
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October 1962—US imposed blockade against Cuba; JFK publicly demanded removal of missiles 59
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Khrushchev offered to remove missiles if US pledged not to invade Cuba and dismantled Jupiter missiles in Turkey 60
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US Jupiter missiles in Turkey 61
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JFK essentially accepted deal but kept Jupiter part secret—made it seem as if Khrushchev had backed down 62
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JFK’s secret assurances via U Thant 63
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JFK essentially accepted deal but kept Jupiter part secret—made it seem as if Khrushchev had backed down 64
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US-Soviet “Hotline” 66
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Limited Nuclear Test Ban Treaty, 1963 67
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Kennedy’s American University Speech, June 1963 68
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