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Unit 7: Cold War to the Present Vietnam to Iraq

Unit 7: Cold War to the Present

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Unit 7: Cold War to the Present. Vietnam to Iraq. Vietnam. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Unit 7:  Cold War to the Present

Unit 7: Cold War to the Present

Vietnam to Iraq

Page 2: Unit 7:  Cold War to the Present

Vietnam

• Vietnam is part of a former French colony that in 1954 was divided into North and South Vietnam. North Vietnam was run by a communist government headed by Ho Chi Minh. South Vietnam was run by a noncommunist government headed by Ngo Dinh Diem.

Page 3: Unit 7:  Cold War to the Present

Vietnam

• The government of South Vietnam was corrupt and often repressive. However, the U.S. supported the government because it was anti-Communist, in fear that if South Vietnam fell to the communists, all of Southeast Asia might follow.

Page 4: Unit 7:  Cold War to the Present

Vietnam

• Throughout the early 1960s, communist-backed gorilla forces known as Vietcong fought against the South Vietnamese government. The U.S. sent aid and support to the government.

• By the summer of 1964, the U.S. had begun limited bombing of positions held by the Vietcong and supported limited commando raids on North Vietnam’s coast.

Page 5: Unit 7:  Cold War to the Present

Vietnam

• In August, 1964, President Johnson reported that the North Vietnamese had attacked two American ships in the Gulf of Tonkin. At the President’s request, Congress passed the Gulf of Tonkin Resolution, which allowed the President to carry out a war against the Vietcong and North Vietnam.

Page 6: Unit 7:  Cold War to the Present

• Johnson quickly began bombing military bases in North Vietnam. In February 1965, after the Vietcong attacked an American airbase in South Vietnam, Johnson ordered an escalation, or military expansion, of the war. In April 1965 he began sending U.S. troops to fight against the Vietcong.

Page 7: Unit 7:  Cold War to the Present

Vietnam

• American troops encountered difficulties in fighting the communist rebels. Vietcong guerrillas used hit-and-run tactics and booby traps. They launched small-scale attacks and then disappeared into the jungles or friendly villages. To counter such tactics, American troops adopted a search-and-destroy strategy. The troops destroyed jungles and villages in an attempt to force the Vietcong out into open combat.

Page 8: Unit 7:  Cold War to the Present

Vietnam

• The U.S. continued pouring troops into Vietnam. During the height of the conflict, more than 500,000 American soldiers were serving in the country. Despite the growing influx of U.S. troops and massive bombing of his country, Ho Chi Minh vowed to keep fighting, believing that his forces would outlast the U.S. in a war.

Page 9: Unit 7:  Cold War to the Present

Vietnam

• Once the U.S. had escalated the fighting, there seemed to be no way of leaving without damaging its international prestige. Between 1965 and 1967, American officials estimated that some 2,000 attempts were made to open direct negotiations, all unsuccessful.

Page 10: Unit 7:  Cold War to the Present

Vietnam

• By the end of 1967, U.S. military leaders assured the country that the end of the war was in sight.

Page 11: Unit 7:  Cold War to the Present

Vietnam

• January 30, 1968, marked a turning point of the war. That day, the Vietcong launched surprise attacks on numerous towns and bases in South Vietnam. Occurring on Tet, the Vietnamese lunar New Year, these attacks became known as the Tet Offensive. These attacks were quickly repelled. However, the American people were shocked that an enemy was supposedly near defeat could launch such a large-scale attack. After Tet, many citizens began to believe that the U.S. could not win the war.

Page 12: Unit 7:  Cold War to the Present

Vietnam

• In March, 1968, President Johnson announced that he would halt nearly all bombing of North Vietnam and try to begin negotiations. These peace negotiations proved fruitless, however, and the fighting continued.

Page 13: Unit 7:  Cold War to the Present

Vietnam

• Gradually, as the U.S. moved deeper into the Vietnam War, opposition grew. Americans divided into two groups. Those who supported the war were called “hawks;” those who opposed the war were called “doves.”

Page 14: Unit 7:  Cold War to the Present

Vietnam

• A - Many of those who opposed the war were students. The antiwar movement centered on college campuses.

• B - Many students protested the draft calling the system unfair because it offered a deferment to college students, which meant that a person who could not afford a higher education was more likely to be drafted. Many people protested the fact that Black Americans made up a disproportionately large number of American soldiers fighting overseas.

Page 15: Unit 7:  Cold War to the Present

Vietnam

• C - Some protests turned violent. During a 1970 protest at Kent StateUniversity in Ohio, four students were killed when the Ohio National Guard fired on demonstrators. Two more students were killed by state police at Jackson State University in Mississippi.

Page 16: Unit 7:  Cold War to the Present

Vietnam

• During this tumultuous period in the U.S., some young people rebelled against established values and searched for a new set of beliefs. These people made up what was known as the counterculture because their values and practices conflicted with those of established society.

Page 17: Unit 7:  Cold War to the Present

Vietnam

• On the other side, a large number of conservative Americans were angered by riots, protests, and a war that seemed to be going nowhere. The deep anger these Americans felt against the protesters soon developed into a backlash against the antiwar movement.

Page 18: Unit 7:  Cold War to the Present

Vietnam

• By 1968, American society had reached a turning point. As a result of the Tet Offensive and the continuing protests, polls showed that the majority of Americans had turned against the President’s handling of the war.

Page 19: Unit 7:  Cold War to the Present

Vietnam

• A - The Democratic party also became split. Senators Eugene McCarthy and Robert Kennedy, both of whom opposed the war, announced they would challenge Johnson for the presidential nomination. In March 1968, Johnson stunned the nation by announcing that he would not run for reelection. Hubert Humphrey, Johnson’s Vice-President, became the administration candidate. As the election progressed, however, it appeared that Kennedy would gain the Democratic nomination. Then, Kennedy was assassinated in June 1968. In August, the Democrats

Page 20: Unit 7:  Cold War to the Present

Vietnam

• B - Meanwhile, the Republicans chose Richard Nixon as their candidate. During the campaign, Nixon promised to bring order to the nation and end the war in Vietnam. Nixon won a close victory and thus became President.

Page 21: Unit 7:  Cold War to the Present

Vietnam

• To help him handle foreign policy matters, Nixon appointed Henry Kissinger, a brilliant political scientist, as his national security adviser and later his secretary of state. Wanting to be remembered as a peacemaker, Nixon proclaimed a policy of détente, or relaxation of tensions between the United States and the communist block.

Page 22: Unit 7:  Cold War to the Present

Vietnam

• He also visited Moscow and began arms limitation talks with the Soviets that led to agreements by both sides to ban biological warfare and limit the growth of nuclear weapons. Nixon also worked to improve relations with China, lifting trade and travel restrictions, and in February 1972, he visited the country.

Page 23: Unit 7:  Cold War to the Present

Vietnam

• Despite a campaign promise to end the war in Vietnam, Nixon moved slowly. He did not want to withdraw U.S. troops without a peace agreement and thus become the nation’s first President to lose a war. In June 1971, the New York Times published a secret defense department study known as the Pentagon Papers, which indicated that the nation’s various administrations had misled Congress and the public about the war in Vietnam. The documents angered many Americans and increased protests against the war.

Page 24: Unit 7:  Cold War to the Present

Vietnam

• To quiet opposition to the war, Nixon announced a policy of “Vietnamization.” The policy consisted of withdrawing U.S. troops and replacing them with South Vietnamese soldiers. Nixon hoped that Vietnamization, combined with saturation bombing of North Vietnam, would allow the U.S. to withdraw from the war “with honor.”

Page 25: Unit 7:  Cold War to the Present

Vietnam

• In January 1973, the warring sides signed a cease-fire agreement ending the military presence of the United States in Vietnam. The war, however, continued. In 1975, Congress refused President Ford’s request for funds to aid South Vietnam in its continuing war. In January 1975, North Vietnam launched a major offensive against the South. In a few months, the communists conquered South Vietnam and united the country under communist rule.

Page 26: Unit 7:  Cold War to the Present

Vietnam Myths & Facts:

– Myth: The U.S. soldiers were very young and poorly educated.

– Fact: The average age was 23, and 79% of our troops were high school graduates.

Page 27: Unit 7:  Cold War to the Present

Vietnam Myths & Facts:

- Myth: The soldiers were mostly poor and from minorities.

– Fact: While 30% of the 58,000 killed came from the lowest third in income, 26% came from the highest third; 12.5% were black.

Page 28: Unit 7:  Cold War to the Present

Vietnam Myths & Facts:

- Myth: Many were jailed for draft-evasion during the Vietnam war.

– Fact: Though 500,000 did dodge the draft, only 9000 were convicted.

Page 29: Unit 7:  Cold War to the Present

Latin America

Page 30: Unit 7:  Cold War to the Present

Latin America

• Shortly after taking office, Kennedy implemented a program of aid to Latin America called the Alliance of Progress. Its purpose was to develop long-term economic growth among Latin American nations in order to prevent communist revolutions.

Page 31: Unit 7:  Cold War to the Present

Middle East

Page 32: Unit 7:  Cold War to the Present

The Middle East

• When war broke out between Israel and its Arab neighbors, the U.S. supported Israel. The Soviet Union backed and armed the Arab states. Israel quickly won the Arab-Israeli War of 1967.

Page 33: Unit 7:  Cold War to the Present

The Middle East

• In 1973, during the Jewish holiday of Yom Kippur, Egyptian and Syrian forces launched a surprise attack against Israel in an attempt to regain land lost to Israel during a previous conflict. The U.S. supported Israel, while the Soviet Union aided the Arab states. The two superpowers, however, also worked to end the conflict. The combatants eventually agreed to a cease-fire

Page 34: Unit 7:  Cold War to the Present

The Middle East

• After the war, Secretary of State Henry Kissinger worked with Israel and Egypt to reduce tensions in the Middle East. He engaged in shuttle diplomacy-flying back and forth between the capitals of the two nations in an attempt to produce a lasting peace. Kissinger’s efforts resulted in improved relations between Egypt and Israel

Page 35: Unit 7:  Cold War to the Present

The Middle East

• On the world stage, President Jimmy Carter attempted to promote a foreign policy based on morality and truth rather than military or economic considerations. (When the Soviet Union invaded Afghanistan in 1979, Carter imposed a grain embargo on the Soviets and kept the United States out of the 1980 Olympic Games in Moscow.)

Page 36: Unit 7:  Cold War to the Present

The Middle East

• Carter’s greatest foreign policy triumph and his greatest failure involved the Middle East. – Carter helped to broker peace between long-

time enemies Egypt and Israel. The two sides signed a peace agreement known as the Camp David Accords in 1979

Page 37: Unit 7:  Cold War to the Present

The Middle East

– The Iranian hostage crisis-Also in 1979, an Islamic revolution toppled the monarchy in Iran. A group of rebels, angry over U.S. ties with the former rulers, seized the American embassy in November 1979 and took hostage more than 50 Americans. Throughout 1980, Carter worked to win the hostages’ release. Negotiations failed, however, as did a military rescue in which eight Americans died in a helicopter crash.

Page 38: Unit 7:  Cold War to the Present

The Middle East

• Election of 1980-pitted Democrat Jimmy Carter against Republican and former actor and governor Ronald Reagan of California. Reagan hammered at Carter’s lack of leadership and of his failure to obtain release of the hostages sealed his defeat. On Election Day, Reagan won handily. On January 20, 1981, just after Reagan was sworn in, Iran released the American hostages after 444 days in captivity.

Page 39: Unit 7:  Cold War to the Present

The Middle East

• Reagan adopted a “hands-off” attitude toward the day-to-day operations of the presidency, giving more responsibility to his staff. This practice aided what would become known as the Iran-Contra affair, a damaging scandal. In 1986, several of Reagan’s national security advisors arranged to sell weapons to Iranians in exchange for American hostages, then secretly used the profits to support anti-Communist rebels in Nicaragua in violation of a congressional ban on such financing.

Page 40: Unit 7:  Cold War to the Present

The Middle East

• Although investigators cleared Reagan of responsibility for the scheme, they faulted him for allowing aides to make policy decisions without his knowledge.

Page 41: Unit 7:  Cold War to the Present

Improved Relations with the Soviet Union

Page 42: Unit 7:  Cold War to the Present

Improved Relations with the Soviet Union

• In 1983, President Reagan announced his Strategic Defense Initiative (SDI), nicknamed “Star Wars.” The project involved creating a shield of new weapons designed to intercept and destroy nuclear missiles. In addition to Star Wars, Reagan promoted a giant military buildup costing about $1 trillion. This increased the debt and left less money for housing, education, and environmental programs. Congress responded in 1985 by passing the Gramm-Rudman Act, which put pressure on Congress and the President to reduce the deficit and balance the budget.

Page 43: Unit 7:  Cold War to the Present

Improved Relations with the Soviet Union

• Reagan’s desire for a strong defense was based on his belief that the Soviet Union was still a threat to the United States. U.S.-Soviet relations improved, however, when Mikhail Gorbachev became the new Soviet premier. Gorbachev opened up Soviet society (glasnost) and instituted democratic reforms (perestroika).

Page 44: Unit 7:  Cold War to the Present

Improved Relations with the Soviet Union

• In 1986, Gorbachev and Reagan met to discuss reducing their nuclear arsenals. They eventually signed a treaty calling for the removal of all intermediate-range nuclear weapons from Europe. The cold war was slowly coming to an end.

Page 45: Unit 7:  Cold War to the Present

Improved Relations with the Soviet Union

• After winning the election of 1988, President George H.W. Bush was confronted with a tidal wave of change around the world. Gorbachev’s new reform policies in the Soviet Union created even greater demands for freedom and independence in Eastern Europe. In 1989, several Eastern European nations overthrew their communist rulers and forced democratic elections.

Page 46: Unit 7:  Cold War to the Present

Improved Relations with the Soviet Union

• Demands for democracy then erupted in the Soviet Union itself. A failed coup left the power to govern in the hands of Boris Yeltsin, president of the Russian Republic, and Gorbachev resigned as Soviet president. By December 1991, the Soviet Union ceased to exist. In its place was a loose federation of self-governing nations made up of former Soviet republics, including Russia, known as the Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS).

Page 47: Unit 7:  Cold War to the Present

Improved Relations with the Soviet Union

• All the former Soviet and communist block states forced serious economic troubles as they attempted to convert state-run economies to capitalist systems. Shortages of essential goods such as food, fuel, medicine, and housing created severe hardships for large numbers of people. Ethnic rivalries flared in the newly independent nations, complicating their transition to self-government.

Page 48: Unit 7:  Cold War to the Present

Improved Relations with the Soviet Union

• On January 1, 2000, Vladimir Putin was inaugurated as the new president of Russia, succeeding Boris Yeltsin. While Russia is now an ally of the United States, there are still areas of major disagreement. In December of 2001, U.S. President George W. Bush announced that the United States will withdraw from the 1972 Antiballistic Missile Treaty mid-2002 in order to build up defensive weapons. Russia disagrees that this is the right thing to do.

Page 49: Unit 7:  Cold War to the Present

The Persian Gulf War

Page 50: Unit 7:  Cold War to the Present

The Persian Gulf War

• In August 1990, Iraqi President Saddam Hussein’s troops seized control of Kuwait, Iraq’s oil-rich neighbor. Following the invasion, Iraq controlled 20 percent of the world’s oil reserves. President Bush, with cooperation from more than 25 other nations, assembled a U.S.-led military coalition that drove Iraqi forces out of Kuwait. Saddam Hussein, however, remained a threat to the region’s peace and stability.

Page 51: Unit 7:  Cold War to the Present

The Persian Gulf War

• Observers feared that Iraq was working to develop chemical, biological, and nuclear weapons. The Persian Gulf War caused Americans to rethink the military role of the nation. Some leaders called for scaling down U.S. military forces, arguing that the real source of power in the “new world order” would be economic.

Page 52: Unit 7:  Cold War to the Present

The Persian Gulf War

• Other experts warned that the U.S. must maintain a strong military to guard against several remaining hostile and potentially dangerous nations. Recently, it is feared that Iraq is involved in sponsoring terrorism around the world, thus, some speculate that there will be more conflict between Iraq and the United States, among other nations of the west.

Page 53: Unit 7:  Cold War to the Present

Other ethnic conflicts

• Despite the decline of communism, wars arising from ethnic hatreds, political boundaries, and religion plagued nearly every world region throughout the 1990s.

Page 54: Unit 7:  Cold War to the Present

Other Ethnic Conflicts

Page 55: Unit 7:  Cold War to the Present

Other ethnic conflicts

• The first crisis to confront the administration of President Bill Clinton was civil war in the East African nation of Somalia. When Clinton took office, thousands of U.S. troops already were in Somalia protecting deliveries of food to those left starving by the war. As the U.S. troops became more involved in the conflict, President Clinton pulled them out in 1995 rather than risk American casualties.

Page 56: Unit 7:  Cold War to the Present

Other ethnic conflicts

• The U.S. and its allies also confronted violence in Europe’s Balkan region. In 1991, the multinational state of Yugoslavia disintegrated as several of the country’s ethnic groups broke away and claimed independence. Ethnic hatreds and renewed feelings of nationalism after decades of totalitarian rule fueled the wars in the Balkan region.

Page 57: Unit 7:  Cold War to the Present

Other ethnic conflicts

– Serbia, the region’s largest republic, fought against Slovenian, Croatian, Bosnian, and Macedonian Independence, and the region descended into years of war. As reports of Serb atrocities against various ethnic groups mounted, Western nations took action.

– The U.S. and its NATO allies bombed Serb military sites in the first NATO military offensive ever. In 1995, the warring sides agreed to a cease-fire and signed an agreement known as the Dayton peace accords.

Page 58: Unit 7:  Cold War to the Present

Other ethnic conflicts

– In 1999, violence flared up again in the Balkans, as Kosovo, a province of Serbia, sought its independence. To put down the rebellion, Serbs marched into Kosovo, where again reports surfaced of atrocities against ethnic Albanians. Serb forces rounded up and executed more than 8,000 Muslim men and boys. After diplomatic relations failed, NATO launched air strikes against Serbia, which eventually agreed to remove its forces and permit NATO troops to restore order in Kosovo.

Page 59: Unit 7:  Cold War to the Present

Other ethnic conflicts

– Serbian President Slobodan Milosevic was forced from power in 2000 and was deemed a war criminal by Western leaders and the international war crimes tribunal in The Hague, the Netherlands. Prosecutors say Milosevic held ultimate responsibility for at least 900 ethnic Albanians and the eviction of 800,000 civilians from their homes.

Page 60: Unit 7:  Cold War to the Present

Other ethnic conflicts

• The United States played the role of peacemaker in Northern Ireland. For many years, sectarian violence between the Protestant majority and Roman Catholic minority had torn Northern Ireland apart. Roman Catholics wanted to reunite with the predominantly Catholic Irish Republic. Protestants insisted that Northern Ireland remain part of Great Britain. In 1997, the U.S. persuaded both sides to disarm and accept a cease-fire. A year later, Catholics and Protestants agreed to a peace plan.

Page 61: Unit 7:  Cold War to the Present

Other ethnic conflicts

• The U.S. also worked to end years of fighting between Israelis and Palestinians, an Arab people living under Israeli rule. Under a peace agreement reached in 1995, Israel agreed to significant Palestinian self-rule and the removal of Israeli forces from other Palestinian areas. Implementation of the plan, however, went slowly.

Page 62: Unit 7:  Cold War to the Present

Other ethnic conflicts

• In 1998, with Clinton’s help, both sides signed the Wye River Memorandum, which detailed the steps needed to implement the peace agreement. Unfortunately, a new round of conflict developed in 2000 and the two sides have never been more divided.

Page 63: Unit 7:  Cold War to the Present

Conflict with China

Page 64: Unit 7:  Cold War to the Present

Conflict with China

• In April of 2001, China held 24 Americans for a short period of time after a mid-air collision between a U.S. Air Force jet and a Chinese jet. The Chinese jet crashed killing the pilot and the Americans made an emergency landing on Chinese soil. Although the Chinese blamed the U.S. for the collision, the U.S. government has strongly rejected responsibility for the incident.

Page 65: Unit 7:  Cold War to the Present

Conflict with China

• President George W. Bush has been given credit for decisive leadership in the quick release of the Americans. Bush also pledged military aid for Taiwan in the event of aggressive force from China. Many suggest the Cold War continues between the U.S. and China.

Page 66: Unit 7:  Cold War to the Present

Peacemaker

• As 2000 began the United Nations was directing peacekeeping operations in 17 countries from Africa to the Middle East to Asia, at an estimated cost of around $900 million. Why is the United States, more than other countries, playing the role of peacemaker around the world? The U.S. is widely seen as the only remaining superpower, and as such, has the respect and authority needed to negotiate peace agreements.

Page 67: Unit 7:  Cold War to the Present

America’s War on Terror

Page 68: Unit 7:  Cold War to the Present

America’s New War on Terror; 9-11-2001

• On the beautiful morning of September 11, 2001, 4 planes left 3 major airports to begin what would be the deadliest single day in modern American history. At 7:59 a.m., American Airlines Flight 11 with 92 people left Boston’s Logan Airport for Los Angeles; at 8:01 a.m., United Flight 93 with 45 people left Newark Airport for San Francisco; at 8:10 a.m., American Flight 77 with 64 people left Washington’s Dulles Airport for Los Angeles; and, at 8:14 a.m., United Flight 175 with 65 people left Boston for L.A.

Page 69: Unit 7:  Cold War to the Present

• The next day, Attorney General John Ashcroft would say the planes “were hijacked by between three and six individuals per plane, using knives and box cutters, and in some cases making bomb threats.” He also says a number of suspected hijackers were trained as pilots in the United States.

Page 70: Unit 7:  Cold War to the Present

Sept. 11, 2001

• 8:48 a.m.-Hijacked American Airlines Flight 11 crashed into the north tower of the World Trade Center.

• 9:06 a.m.-Hijacked United Airlines Flight 175 crashed into the south tower of the World Trade Center. Soon, the Federal Aviation Administration would shut down all New York City-area airports. The Port Authority of New York and New Jersey ordered all bridges and tunnels into Manhattan closed. The American Stock Exchange, the Nasdaq, and the New York Stock Exchange will close.

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Sept. 11, 2001

• 9:31 a.m.-President George W. Bush, speaking to elementary school children in Sarasota, Florida, is informed of the tragedy and says the country has suffered an “apparent terrorist attack.”

Page 72: Unit 7:  Cold War to the Present

Sept. 11, 2001

• 9:43 a.m.-Hijacked American Airlines Flight 77 crashed into the Pentagon; the U.S. Capitol and White House’s West Wing were evacuated. Eventually, all federal office buildings in Washington, D.C. would be evacuated. The FAA halts all flight operations at U.S. airports, the first time in U.S. history that national air traffic has been halted. All inbound transatlantic aircraft flying into the U.S. are being diverted to Canada.

Page 73: Unit 7:  Cold War to the Present

Sept. 11, 2001

• 9:55 a.m.-The south tower of the World Trade Center collapses. Soon after, President Bush departs from Florida.

• 10:10 a.m.-A portion of the Pentagon collapses. At the same time, Hijacked United Airlines Flight 93 crashes in a field in Somerset County, Pennsylvania, brought down by passengers who attempted to thwart the plans of the hijackers. Later, officials say this plane could have been headed for three possible targets: Camp David, the White House, or the U.S. Capitol Building.

Page 74: Unit 7:  Cold War to the Present

Sept. 11, 2001

• 10:29 a.m.-The north tower of the World Trade Center collapses.

• 10:57 a.m.-New York governor, George Pataki, announces that all state government offices are closed.

• 11:02 a.m.-New York City mayor, Rudolph “Rudy” Giuliani, urges New Yorkers to stay at home and orders an evacuation of the area south of Canal Street. Later in the day, Guiliani will urge New Yorkers to stay home Wednesday.

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Sept. 11, 2001

• 12:15 p.m.-The Immigration and Naturalization Service says U.S. borders with Canada and Mexico are on the highest state of alert.

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Sept. 11, 2001

• 1:04 p.m.-From Barksdale Air Force Base in Louisiana, President Bush announces U.S. military is on high alert worldwide, saying that all appropriate security measures are being taken. He asks for prayers for those killed or wounded in the attacks and says, “Make no mistake, the United States will hunt down and punish those responsible for these cowardly acts.” The president later leaves for the U.S. Strategic Command at Offutt Air Force Base in Nebraska. In ½ hours, he will leave to return to Washington, D.C. Air Force One is traveling with a three-fighter jet escort.

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Sept. 11, 2001

• 2:49 a.m.-At a news conference, Mayor Giuliani says that subway and bus service are partially restored in NYC. Asked about the number of people killed, the mayor says, “I don’t want to speculate about that—more than any of us can bear.” For his handling of this crisis, Guiliani will be awarded “Person of the Year” by Time magazine.

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Sept. 11, 2001

• 4:10 p.m.-Building 7 of the WTC complex is reported on fire.

• 5:25 p.m.-The 47-story Building 7 of the WTC complex collapses.

• 6:54 p.m.-President Bush arrives back at the White House.

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Sept. 11, 2001

• 7:45 p.m.-The New York Police Department says that at least 78 officers are missing. The city also says that as many as half of the first 400 firefighters on the scene were killed.

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Sept. 11, 2001

• 8:30 p.m.-President Bush addresses the nation, saying “thousands of lives were suddenly ended by evil” and asks for prayers for the families and friends of Tuesday’s victims. “These acts shattered steel, but they cannot dent the steel of American resolve,” he says. The president says the U.S. government will make no distinction between the terrorists who committed the acts and those who harbor them. He adds that government offices will reopen Wednesday.

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Sept. 12, 2001

• 9 survivors (3 policemen and 6 firefighters) are found amidst the rubble of the WTC.

• Mayor Giuliani warns the death toll will be in the thousands.

• President Bush labels the attacks “acts of war” and asks Congress to find $20 billion to help rebuild and recover.

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Sept. 12, 2001

• The North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) decides that Tuesday’s terror strikes in the United States constitute an attack against all 19 members, which commits them to respond militarily if they deem force is necessary to protect security.

• The United Nations pulls its staff out of Afghanistan.

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Sept. 13, 2001

• Military recruiting skyrockets as patriotic Americans prepare for battle.

• A “national day of unity and mourning” is approved 100 to 0 by the Senate. The House later approves the resolution 408 to 0.

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Sept. 13, 2001

• Secretary of Transportation, Norman Y. Mineta, announces new security precautions which airports and airlines will be required to implement. Security is increased to its highest level since the 1991 Gulf War.

• Bond trading and futures activity resume. Stock markets remain closed for the longest stretch since World War II.

Page 85: Unit 7:  Cold War to the Present

Sept. 13, 2001

• Defense Departments says about 190 people died in the attack at the Pentagon, including 64 aboard the hijacked plane.

• The New York mayor announces that 4,763 people are missing.

• Investigators find data recorder for United Flight 93 in Pennsylvania. Later, officials say they will not release the audio or a transcript in order to protect grieving families.

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Sept. 13, 2001

• Secretary of State Colin Powell says Osama bin Laden is the prime suspect.

• White House Press Secretary Ari Fleischer cites “real and credible information” that the plane which slammed into the Pentagon was originally intended to hit the White House.

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Sept. 14, 2001

• President Bush declares a National Day of Prayer and Remembrance.

• U.S. airlines resume operations and face difficulty with strict security rules, frightened passengers, and rapidly mounting financial problems.

• NFL, Collegiate, and high school football games, as well as other major sports events, are canceled in the U.S.

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Sept. 14, 2001

• Congress and White House officials give consent to military action in response to Tuesday’s terrorist attacks and provide $40 billion package to aid retaliation and rebuilding, twice the amount President Bush had requested.

• Americans of many faiths hold services and vigils to honor the victims. Bush and other dignitaries gather for service at National Cathedral in Washington.

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Sept. 14, 2001

• Searchers find flight data and voice recorders of hijacked plane that crashed into the Pentagon.

• Authorities make their first arrest in the investigation: one of the men detained at New York’s Kennedy Airport is arrested as a material witness.

• President Bush arrives in New York City to see the site of the former World Trade Center.

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Sept. 15, 2001

• President Bush meets with his national security advisers at Camp David and afterward, for the first time, singles out suspected terrorist Osama bin Laden as a “prime suspect” in Tuesday’s attacks.

• Coast Guard cutters patrol ports and waterways at unprecedented levels from New York harbor to San Diego.

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Sept. 15, 2001

• F-15 Eagles and F-16 Fighting Falcons fly combat patrols over Washington, New York, and other major cities. The patrols over Washington and New York will continue into 2002.

• President Bush signs an order authorizing Pentagon officials to call up 35,000 Reserves.

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Sept. 16, 2001

• Funeral and memorial services begin for firefighters and individuals who died in Tuesday’s attack.

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Sept. 17, 2001

• Wall Street reopens for the first time since the previous week’s terrorist attacks.

• The Federal Reserve cuts interest rates by half a percentage point.

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Sept. 18, 2001

• One week after the attack, the nation pauses at 8:45 A.M. EST for a moment of silence in honor of the victims.

• Media reports that over 50 countries lost citizens in the World Trade Center attack.

• Warplanes begin flying overseas from U.S. bases as the Pentagon ordered dozens of fighters, bombers, and other aircraft to the Persian Gulf, Indian Ocean, and—in an unprecedented move—the two former Soviet republics of Uzbekistan and Tajikistan.

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Sept. 19, 2001

• The USS Theodore Roosevelt aircraft carrier leaves from the pier at Naval Station Norfolk headed to the Mediterranean, then to the Persian Gulf.

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Sept. 20, 2001

• President Bush gives a very successful address to Congress and the nation outlining the goals in the new war on terrorism. In a difficult time, Bush gave the nation what it needed in a Commander in Chief—simple in his speech, clear in is vision, and confident in his ultimate success

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Sept. 20, 2001

• The president has warned the nation to be patient. Some officials are envisioning a war that could last 50 years in order to build intelligence networks to infiltrate and bust up terror cells worldwide. As a model for fashioning a long-term game plan, Bush aides examined old cold-war national-security documents, such as NSC-68, a plan the Truman Administration drafted in 1950 to contain the Soviets.

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• As of December 5, 2001, there were 6 U.S. military fatalities in Operation Enduring Freedom; the number of people missing or dead in the World Trade Center attacks was listed at 3,047. By December 19, the number of fatalities was revised to 2,992. 8 journalists were killed covering the war in Afghanistan.

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• In December, 2001, an American was taken into military custody in Afghanistan after fighting with the Taliban regime. John Walker-Lindh converted to Islam four years earlier after reading The Autobiography of Malcolm X, left the United States in 2000 to train at al-Qaeda camps in Afghanistan, and had taken the name of Sulayman Al-Lindh. Walker-Lindh was brought back in January, 2002 to face trial in the United States, since he was an American citizen.

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• In an amateur videotape released by the Pentagon (Dec. 13, 2001-it had been found earlier in a house overtaken by anti-Taliban forces), Osama bin Laden was shown discussing the events leading up to September 11th, saying the event “benefited Islam greatly.” In the tape, bin Laden discussed some of the planning that led to the attacks, and recalled tuning in to the radio to hear American news broadcasts of the attack. “They were overjoyed when the first plane hit the building,” he said of others listening with him that day. “So I said to them: Be patient.

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• At the end of the newscast, they reported that a plane just hit the World Trade Center.” Another man in the tape said, “Allah be praised.” bin Laden recalled, “After a little while, they announced that another plane had hit the World Trade Center; the brothers who heard the news were overjoyed by it.” References to jihad (holy war) were made throughout the tape. bin Laden made references to the planning: “We calculated in advance the number of casualties who would be killed based on the position of the tower.

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• We calculated that the floors that would be hit would be three or four. I was the most optimistic of them all. Due to my experience in this field, I was thinking that the fire from the gas in the plane would melt the iron structure of the building and collapse the area where the plane hit, and all the floors above it only. This is all that we had hoped for,” as he gestured with one hand horizontal striking his other hand, held vertically, as if a plane hitting a building

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• The most viewed photo from the September, 2001 tragedy was of three New York City firefighters displaying a U.S. flag amid the rubble of the World Trade Center. George Johnson, Dan McWilliams and Billy Eisengrein were the firefighters who were the object of photographer Thomas Franklin of The Record in Bergen County, New Jersey.

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• The photo echoed the famous World War II image of U.S. Marines raising the U.S. flag atop Mount Suribachi on Iwo Jima. The photo became a testament to America’s enduring resolve. In January, 2002, a statue of the photo was unveiled, creating controversy because instead of the 3 firefighters being portrayed accurately, the images of the firefighters included one white man, a Hispanic, and a Black American.

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• December 22, 2001-Richard C. Reid, believed to be linked to al-Qaeda, is apprehended by other passengers on a flight from Paris to Miami after he is spotted trying to ignite explosives in his shoes.

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• January, 2002-158 suspected terrorists, described as the most hard-core al-Qaida terrorists and Taliban fighters, are brought to Guantanamo Bay Naval Base, Cuba to be held in a makeshift detainment center at Camp X-Ray.

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• The United States was critized for holding prisoners of war, but President Bush and Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld considers the captured fighters to be “unlawful combatants” and “detainees” rather than “prisoners of war,” since they do not represent a nation or foreign government. A delegation of U.S. Congressmen toured the detention facility and said conditions were very humane.

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• January 29, 2002-In his State of the Union address, President George W. Bush in a vital act of world leadership declared a declaration against the “axis of evil” referring to 3 nations where there are weapons of mass destruction in hostile hands.

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Iraq

• After the 1991 Persian Gulf War, dictator Saddam Hussein was discovered to be only months away from producing an atomic bomb and had already done tests on a radiological “dirty bomb.” His program was closed, but “his pool of trained scientists remained, and he might have a nuclear device within a few years.” When United Nations weapons inspectors were banished, they were convinced that Saddam had hidden an arsenal of VX nerve gas and “a whole range of biological agents and toxins.”

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Iran

• According to the Monterey Center for Nonproliferation Studies, Iran, under the leadership of Ayatullah Ali Khamenei, had an arsenal of chemical weapons and, according to the U.S. government, had been secretly producing biological weapons. It is getting Russian help on nuclear power and assistance on missiles from Russia and China.

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North Korea

• Caught in 1992 producing more plutonium than it admitted to making, North Korean president Kim Jong II agreed in 1994 to stop producing it in exchange for Western nations’ help with less-dangerous nuclear technology. But it blocked implementation of the agreement. North Korea has large stocks of chemical weapons and a well-developed biological weapons program. It is also developing a missile capable of reaching the United States.

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• The three countries don’t constitute a cooperative “axis” as Germany, Italy, and Japan did in World War II, but there is no question that they are “evil.” They have a history of menacing their own people.