31
…and a brief summary of how the Cold War came to a close, 1975 - 1991 * The Vietnam War Matching Activity

The Vietnam War Matching Activity

  • Upload
    nibal

  • View
    36

  • Download
    0

Embed Size (px)

DESCRIPTION

The Vietnam War Matching Activity. …and a brief summary of how the Cold War came to a close, 1975 - 1991. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Citation preview

Page 1: The Vietnam War Matching Activity

…and a brief summary of how the Cold War came to a close, 1975 - 1991

*The Vietnam War Matching Activity

Page 2: The Vietnam War Matching Activity

*L. Guerrilla Warfare

* Because American soldiers were forced to contend not only with the North Vietnamese Army, but also with the Viet Cong – South Vietnamese soldiers who were opposed to American intervention in Vietnam – there was an ever-present threat of guerrilla warfare.

Page 3: The Vietnam War Matching Activity

*O. My Lai Massacre

While searching for members of the Viet Cong, soldiers led by Lt. William Calley came across a village of women and children who would not – or could not – help to locate the men of the community. Hundreds of Vietnamese women, children, and elderly were arbitrarily killed.

Page 4: The Vietnam War Matching Activity

*R. The Kent State Massacre

Students who were protesting against the Vietnam War – and particularly the bombings of Cambodia and Laos by Nixon – were shot at by National Guard members. Four students died.

Page 5: The Vietnam War Matching Activity

*I. The Tet Offensive

Page 6: The Vietnam War Matching Activity

*N. Napalm

Page 7: The Vietnam War Matching Activity

*M. Agent Orange

Page 8: The Vietnam War Matching Activity

*A. French IndochinaThe French controlled almost all of Southeast Asia before World War II. After the war, they attempted to re-establish themselves as colonial rulers of the region, but to no avail. The movement for Independence in Vietnam undermined their efforts to regain control over the region.

Page 9: The Vietnam War Matching Activity

*P. Richard Nixon

Richard Nixon explains his secret plan for “Vietnamization” of the war. Critics say he declared victory and left.

Page 10: The Vietnam War Matching Activity

*J. Hawks

Page 11: The Vietnam War Matching Activity

*K. Doves

Page 12: The Vietnam War Matching Activity

*B. Ho Chi Minh

Page 13: The Vietnam War Matching Activity

*E. Viet Cong

Page 14: The Vietnam War Matching Activity

*C. Containment

Page 15: The Vietnam War Matching Activity

*H. Lyndon Baines Johnson

Page 16: The Vietnam War Matching Activity

*Q. “Vietnamization”

Page 17: The Vietnam War Matching Activity

*G. The Gulf of Tonkin Resolution

The Gulf of Tonkin Resolution gave President Lyndon Baines Johnson the power to conduct the war in Vietnam. In this picture, Secretary of Defense Robert McNamara explains the details of the incident. He later admitted that the attack by a North Vietnamese gunboat may not have happened at all.

Page 18: The Vietnam War Matching Activity

*F. The Ho Chi Minh TrailThe Ho Chi Minh Trail was the supply line from North Vietnam to South Vietnam. Weapons from North Vietnam, food, supplies, and medicine were all brought along the secret, hidden trail. Americans attempted to find and bomb the Ho Chi Minh Trail throughout the war. Napalm and Agent Orange were both used with devastating consequences. Yet the supply lines remained open throughout the war.

Page 19: The Vietnam War Matching Activity

*D. The Domino Theory

Page 20: The Vietnam War Matching Activity

*The Conclusion of the Cold War

From Richard Nixon to the Collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991 – a short version of the Cold War’s Demise.

Page 21: The Vietnam War Matching Activity

*Nixon Visits ChinaIn an effort to calm down tensions during the Cold War, Richard Nixon made a visit to China, where he sat down to negotiate with Mao Zedong and Zhou Enlai. The meeting was not a perfect success, but the Soviet Union soon wanted to meet with Nixon as well – to calm down the rhetoric and peacefully coexist with the USA.

Page 22: The Vietnam War Matching Activity

*DetenteRichard Nixon became the first American President to ever visit Moscow to meet with Leonid Brezhnev in the early 1970s. The two men hoped to end the frightening rhetoric and posturing of the Cold War Era, so that the United States and the USSR could peacefully co-exist.

Page 23: The Vietnam War Matching Activity

*Strategic Arms Limitation Treat (SALT

I)

Page 24: The Vietnam War Matching Activity

*Nixon’s Watergate

Scandal

Page 25: The Vietnam War Matching Activity

*Jimmy Carter: The Cold War and Human Rights

Page 26: The Vietnam War Matching Activity

*Ronald Reagan Renews the Cold war

Page 27: The Vietnam War Matching Activity

*Mikhail Gorbachev –

Glasnost & Peresroika

Page 28: The Vietnam War Matching Activity

*Mikhail Gorbachev

Mikhail Gorbachev simply admitted that the communist system the Soviet Union had lived with for so long was not working as well as the American way. He did everything in is power to bring down tensions between his nation and the United States, and he ended the arms race for good.

Page 29: The Vietnam War Matching Activity

*“Tear Down This Wall!”http://

www.youtube.com/watch?v=WX00QkvK-mQ

Page 30: The Vietnam War Matching Activity

*Eastern European Revolutions

When Revolutions began in 1989, they were peaceful. New democratic governments were not challenged by the Soviet Union. The Cold War was ending.

Page 31: The Vietnam War Matching Activity

*The Collapse of the Soviet Union - 1991