On January 17, Prime Minister Patrice Lumumba of Congo, who Kennedy favored, is murdered in Katanga. The CIA keeps this fact from Kennedy, since they

Similar documents
Aim: To understand why there was another Berlin crisis, how it was dealt with and how it affected international relations

The Cold War Begins. After WWII

Citation: vol. I Vietnam

Communism. Soviet Union government State (government) controls everything Opposite of democracy and capitalism (USA)

THE ELECTION OF 1960

Notes: LG: Analyze how the 1960s changed America.

Election of Who is next? The Election of Do Now: Place the Presidents in the correct chronological order. First Television Debate

The New Frontier and the Great Society

How did the United States respond to the threat of communist expansion? What are the origins of the Cold War?

Mini Lesson Part I: Reading

American History 11R

Chapter 28-1 /Chapter 28-2 Notes / Chapter Prepared for your enjoyment by Mr. Timothy Rhodes

1. How would you describe the new mood in Moscow in 1989? 2. What opposition did Gorbachev face in instituting his reforms?

EOC Test Preparation: The Cold War Era

The Cold War

3/2/2017. Dwight Eisenhower & The Cold War. Election of Adlai Stevenson Democratic Candidate. Dwight D. Eisenhower Ike Republican Candidate

Study Guide CHALLENGING SEGREGATION. Chapter 29, Section 2. Kennedy s Attempts to Support Civil Rights. Name Date Class

netw rks Where in the world? When did it happen? The Vietnam Era Lesson 1 Kennedy s Foreign Policy ESSENTIAL QUESTION Terms to Know GUIDING QUESTIONS

The New Frontier and the Great Society

Chapter 25 Cold War America, APUSH Mr. Muller

Name: Target Grade: Key Questions:

American History 11R

Early Cold War

The 1960s ****** Two young candidates, Democrat John F. Kennedy and Republican Richard M. Nixon ran for president in 1960.

Challenges to Soviet Control and the End of the Cold War I. Early Cold War A. Eastern European Soviet Control 1. In the early years of the Cold War,

International Model United Nations Conference 2014

Russian History. Lecture #1 Ancient History The Romanov s

Section 4: How did the Cold War develop?

The Confident Years The Confident Years A Decade of Affluence What s Good for General Motors Reshaping Urban America

» An easy way to remember the powers of the President is to remember the name Joel Carter.» What does that stand for?

The Cold War Expands

United Nations. Marshall Plan. Israel. Mao Zedong. South Korea

Republicans Richard Nixon Eisenhower s VP House Un-American Activities Committee (HUAC) From poor family; self-made Rode Eisenhower s coattails

Flexible Response Kennedy s policy that involved preparing for a variety of military responses to

Hi there I m (Name). You know by now that our president has a bunch of

Chapter 21 Section 4 Eisenhower s Policies. Click on a hyperlink to view the corresponding slides.

THE IRON CURTAIN. From Stettin in the Baltic to Trieste in the Adriatic an iron curtain has descended across the continent. - Winston Churchill

Eagle Forum Education Center Finding Aid

The Cold War TOWARD A GLOBAL COMMUNITY (1900 PRESENT)

Chapter 19: Going To war in Vietnam

The 1960s ****** Two young candidates, Senator John F. Kennedy (D) and Vice-President Richard M. Nixon (R), ran for president in 1960.

World History Détente Arms Race and Arms Controls The Reagan Era

Topic 5: The Cold War. Kissinger Chapter 23: Khrushchev s Ultimatum: The Berlin Crisis

The Stormy Sixties. Chapter 38

THE COLD WAR Part Two Teachers Notes by Paul Latham

World History Chapter 23 Page Reading Outline

Kennedy & Johnson. Chapters 38 & 39

Write 3 words you think of when you hear Cold War? THE COLD WAR ( )

World History (Survey) Restructuring the Postwar World, 1945 Present


Topic 5: The Cold War (Compiled from 10 Topic and 6 Topic Format) Revised 2012

Congo-Katanga Crisis in 1960, Belgian announced that it was giving the Congo its independence. five months to get itself ready clearly unprepared

The Vietnam War Why does the United States get involved in Vietnam?

Topic 5: The Cold War (Compiled from 10 Topic and 6 Topic Format) Revised 2014

Modern World History Spring Final Exam 09

The Cold War ( )

Objectives: CLASSROOM IDEAS: Research human rights violations since World War II and the United Nations response to them.

The Cold War An overview

General Certificate of Secondary Education History Unit 2: The Cold War Foundation Tier [GHY21] TUESDAY 12 JUNE, AFTERNOON

AMERICA: THE LAST BEST HOPE

8, 140 Dual Entente between France and Russia is dated as The agreement was made in 1893 but formally signed in January 1894.

THE COLD WAR ( )

Chapter 28: EISENHOWER REPUBLICANISM:

Citation: vol. VII Arms Control and Disarmament

Section 4: How did the Cold War develop?

D-Day Gives the Allies a Foothold in Europe

The Early Cold War: Written by Ms. Susan M. Pojer and modified by J. Christie

Alan Brinkley, AMERICAN HISTORY 13/e. Chapter Twenty-eight: The Affluent Society

Modern Republicanism,

How significant was the building of the Berlin Wall?

PAPERS OF JOHN F. KENNEDY PRESIDENT S OFFICE FILES PRESIDENTIAL RECORDINGS Introductory Note to Researchers

Chapter Two Superpowers Face Off

WINNING the WAR / PLANNING the PEACE The Allies: US, England, USSR, and China Feb 1945 Yalta Conference: US-USSR-England GERMANY must agree to

2014 Brain Wrinkles. Origins and Consequences

the Cold War The Cold War would dominate global affairs from 1945 until the breakup of the USSR in 1991

2. The State Department asked the American Embassy in Moscow to explain Soviet behavior.

Year 9 September to December.

Ch 28-3 Voting Rights

Name Period Date. Civil Rights Movement and Vietnam War Unit Test Review. Test Format- 50 questions 15 matching. 5 map, 3 reading a chart, 27 MC

Marshall Plan: A U.S. recovery plan that offered money to help European countries rebuild after WWII.

America at Midcentury. Ch 27

Conflict U.S. War

Ended French rule in Indo-China

4/8/2015. April nations met. US and USSR on same side in WW II. Cold War Feb FDR, Churchill, Stalin Postwar issues

Making of the Modern World 15. Lecture #10 The Cold War and the American Century

Politics of the Cold War

Chapter 17 Lesson 1: Two Superpowers Face Off. Essential Question: Why did tension between the U.S. and the U.S.S.R increase after WWII?

Unit 4 Take-Home Test Answer Sheet

Stalin died in He was hated all over eastern Europe and many people celebrated. After a short struggle for power, Nikita Khrushchev became the

The Nazi Retreat from the East

The Americans (Survey)

PRESIDENTIAL ROLES. Chief of State

Chapter 31 Lecture Outline

Harry Truman Dwight Eisenhower John F. Kennedy

1970S: THE NIXON PRESIDENCY ( )

OBJECTIVES. Describe and evaluate the events that led to the war between North Vietnam and South Vietnam.

World History Unit 08a and 08b: Global Conflicts & Issues _Edited

Vietnam & the Limits of Power I. Kennedy & the New Frontier A. Style & Promise 1. John F. Kennedy (JFK) a. wealthy son of Joseph b. c.

Italian Campaign June 10, 1943 May 02, 1945

Introduction to the Cold War

Transcription:

JFK at 100 presented by Kennedys and King May 2017

On January 17, Prime Minister Patrice Lumumba of Congo, who Kennedy favored, is murdered in Katanga. The CIA keeps this fact from Kennedy, since they had been involved in plots to kill him. On January 20, Kennedy is inaugurated. That evening he begins an informal affirmative action program because he felt there were not enough African Americans in that day s ceremony.

January 21: Robert Kennedy is confirmed as attorney general. JFK tells him to begin filing lawsuits in the south to attack voting discrimination. On February 2, and not knowing Lumumba is dead, Kennedy reverses Eisenhower s policy in Congo. He does not want Katanga split off, he supports the UN as an official force there and wants all political prisoners released. Twelve days later, Kennedy learns of Lumumba s death through Ambassador Adlai Stevenson at the United Nations. This moment is captured in a photo by Jacques Lowe which crystallizes Kennedy s anguish.

March 6: Kennedy signs an executive order to eliminate discrimination in government employee hiring and contracting. This law will eventually establish the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission. On March 15, and due to resignations, Kennedy appoints two seats to the Civil Rights Commission and also a new staff director. This tilts the commission from being moderate to progressive.

March 20: The Kennedy administration intercedes in the New Orleans School District desegregation case on behalf of integrationist Judge J. Skelly Wright. JFK later appoints Judge Wright to the D.C. Court of Appeals.

April 12: After rumors of a U.S. operation against Cuba surface in the press, Kennedy pledges no American troops under any conditions will intervene in Cuba. On April 16, and with Kennedy s knowledge, the Bay of Pigs assault force leaves Guatemala. JFK does not exercise his option to cancel within 24 hours of departure. On April 19, the amphibious force is defeated on the beach at Playa Giron. The Pentagon asks for American intervention with jet fighters. Kennedy refuses.

April 21: Kennedy accepts responsibility for the Bay of Pigs disaster in public. But he suspects the CIA lied to him about its chances of success. He privately commissions a White House study of what went wrong. So does the CIA.

On May 7, astronaut Alan Shepard becomes the first American to achieve human spaceflight. On May 25, Kennedy gives a speech before a joint session of Congress calling for an ambitious space exploration program that includes not just missions to put astronauts on the moon, but also a Rover nuclear rocket, weather satellites, and other space projects.

May 14: Freedom Riders arrive in Anniston, then Montgomery, Alabama. They are pulled off buses and beaten up with baseball bats. Double-crossed by the governor, and with the FBI doing nothing, Kennedy sends in 500 U.S. Marshals to rescue them. On May 29, and in his first reaction to the Bay of Pigs, Kennedy wires all embassies abroad that the ambassador in that nation makes all decisions about U.S. policy, not the CIA.

June 4: The Vienna summit with Khrushchev begins. The Russian leader is very aggressive about all of Berlin becoming part of East Germany. On July 20, the CIA and Pentagon propose to Kennedy a first strike nuclear attack on Russia for the fall of 1963. Kennedy asks a few questions, walks out, and comments to Dean Rusk, And we call ourselves the human race.

August 14: East Germany closes down its border with West Berlin and the construction of the Berlin Wall begins. On August 17, Kennedy s plan to extend loans and aid to Latin America, the Alliance for Progress, is signed in Punta del Este, Uruguay.

September 14: Peace Corps Act passes the House and will be signed by the president in one week. Kennedy s brother-in-law, Sargent Shriver, becomes its first director. Four days later, Dag Hammarksjold is killed when his plane is sabotaged. JFK calls him the greatest statesman of the 20th century, and vows to continue their policies for an independent, neutral Congo and freeing of West Irian from the Netherlands.

September 22: At the urging of RFK, the Interstate Commerce Commission passes laws to integrate all travel facilities. Through the enforcement of this law, by the end of 1962, the Freedom Riders have triumphed. On September 25, Kennedy addresses the United Nations, urging them not to forsake Hammarskjold s mission in Congo. Edmund Gullion now goes to Congo as Kennedy s ambassador.

October 16: Lyman Kirkpatrick finishes the CIA report on the Bay of Pigs. With this, and Gen. Maxwell Taylor s White House report, Kennedy asks for the resignations of Director Allen Dulles, his deputy Charles Cabell, and Director of Plans Dick Bissell. On October 28, U.S. and Soviet tanks face each other at Brandenburg Gate in Berlin over rights of diplomatic passage through the wall. Kennedy and Khrushchev negotiate a solution through proxies. Kennedy concludes, Better a wall than a war.

November 2: Maxwell Taylor and Walt Rostow return from Vietnam. They recommend Kennedy commit combat troops to the conflict. On November 21, and on a secret mission to Saigon, India Ambassador John K. Galbraith wires JFK there should be no more U.S. involvement and he should plan to withdraw. On November 22, during a twoweek debate, Kennedy blocks all attempts to commit troops to Vietnam. He signs NSAM 111, which sends 15,000 advisors instead.

I can make a strong case against intervening in an area 10,000 miles away against 16,000 guerillas, with a native army of 200,000, where millions have been spent for years with no success. John F. Kennedy November 15, 1961