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Nixon: foreign affairs. Nixon ’ s right-hand man: Henry Kissinger National Security Advisor, 1969-73 Secretary of State, 1973-77 Master of “realpolitik:”

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Presentation on theme: "Nixon: foreign affairs. Nixon ’ s right-hand man: Henry Kissinger National Security Advisor, 1969-73 Secretary of State, 1973-77 Master of “realpolitik:”"— Presentation transcript:

1 Nixon: foreign affairs

2 Nixon ’ s right-hand man: Henry Kissinger National Security Advisor, 1969-73 Secretary of State, 1973-77 Master of “realpolitik:” pragmatic politics to advance the US national interest, check Soviet expansion Specialized in personal, top secret negotiations

3 The Vietnam War Finally Ends Vietnamization: more bombing, fewer U.S. troops (down to 30,000 by 1972) Nixon’s bombing continues through 1972; peace talks collapse in fall of 1972, followed by more bombings at Christmas Paris Peace Accords signed: January 27, 1973 Withdrawal of all US troops (only 50 left by Christmas) Return of US POWS N Vietnamese forces allowed to remain in S Vietnam April 1975: North Vietnamese take over Saigon, and unite the country as the Democratic Republic of Vietnam Communists took over neighboring Laos and Cambodia (new leader, Pol Pot, kills 2.5 million Cambodians)

4 Nixon ’ s most important contribution: Detente A period of relaxed of tensions with Communist countries (China, Soviet Union)

5 Nixon and China Nixon: "There is no place on this small planet for a billion of its potentially most able people to live in angry isolation.” Relations between the Soviet Union and China had been deteriorating since the 1950s and had erupted into open conflict with border clashes in 1969 Nixon officially recognizes the People’s Republic of China in 1970; stops calling it “Red China”

6 Nixon and China (cont.) China admitted to UN in 1971 April, 1971: “ping pong diplomacy” Nixon visits China for a week in February, 1972 In 1973, the two nations open offices in each other’s countries Nixon’s strategy: split up the two Communist powers and pit them against each other; force each side to develop better relations with the U.S.

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8 Nixon ’ s Visit to China

9 Nixon and the Soviet Union Nixon: “There must be room in this world for two great nations with different systems to live together and work together.” 1st U.S. President to visit Moscow; May, 1972 to negotiate the First Strategic Arms Limitation Treaty (SALT I) Limited the construction of anti-missile systems Each nation limits itself to existing number of ICBMs

10 Nixon and Latin America U.S. works to destroy Chile’s elected socialist leader, Salvador Allende Nixon secretly gave the CIA $10 million to fund opponents to Allende Nixon cuts aid to Chile, blocks banks from lending money to them New U.S. supported-military dictator General Augusto Pinochet overthrows government and kills Allende Allende supporters were rounded up and detained in Santiago's National Stadium; over 1,000 executed.

11 The Middle East In 1967, Israel launched a preemptive attack on Egypt, Syria, and Jordan: “6 Day War” Israel occupied Egypt-controlled Gaza Strip and Sinai, Jordanian-controlled West Bank and East Jerusalem, Syria’s Golan Heights Palestinian Liberation Organization (PLO): hijackings, murder of 11 Israeli athletes at 1972 Munich Olympics

12 1972 Olympics

13 Nixon and the Middle East (cont.) Yom Kippur War, October 6-25, 1973: Egypt and Syria attack Israel, invade Golan Heights and Sinai Peninsula Arab states embargo oil to the U.S. and its allies from October 1973- March 1974 Kissinger negotiates end to embargo, ceasefire between Egypt and Israel

14 “ Nixinger ”


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