Mounting tension between the United States and the Soviet Union, and war in
Vietnam determined U.S. foreign policy in the 1960s. In 1961, the Soviet Union
erected the most iconic image of the Cold War, the Berlin Wall, which physically
divided the Western and Eastern Blocs of Germany's city of Berlin.
Guards at the Berlin Wall
The following year, the Cuban Missile Crisis
brought the United States and the Soviet Union to the brink of armed conflict,
as U.S. ships blockaded Cuba preventing Soviet attempts to deliver nuclear
warheads to the island. On the other side of the world, burgeoning conflict in
Vietnam created a major dilemma for U.S. foreign policymakers. Determined not to
lose either the nation of South Vietnam or the broader region of Southeast Asia
to communism, U.S. officials committed the United States to military action to
stop North Vietnamese nationalist Ho Chi Minh. After President John F. Kennedy's
assassination on November 22, 1963, President Lyndon B. Johnson continued to
commit significant military expenditures to the conflict in Vietnam,
particularly after a 1964 Congressional resolution that gave the President
unprecedented power to increase the U.S. presence in Southeast Asia. This costly
foreign policy eventually influenced domestic politics as the war in Vietnam
grew increasingly unpopular with the American public.
1961-1968: Entangling Alliances
December 20, 2012
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