US-Latin American Relations Part II In the Cold War 1946-1989.

41
US-Latin American Relations Part II In the Cold War 1946-1989
  • date post

    20-Jan-2016
  • Category

    Documents

  • view

    214
  • download

    0

Transcript of US-Latin American Relations Part II In the Cold War 1946-1989.

Page 1: US-Latin American Relations Part II In the Cold War 1946-1989.

US-Latin AmericanRelations

Part II

In the Cold War 1946-1989

Page 2: US-Latin American Relations Part II In the Cold War 1946-1989.

The Cold War was the continuing state of conflict, tension, and competition that existed after World War II between the Soviet Union and its satellites and the powers of the Western world under the leadership of the United States from the mid-1940s to the early 1990s. Throughout this period, the conflict was expressed through military coalitions, espionage, weapons development, invasions, propaganda, and competitive technological development, which included the space race.

Page 3: US-Latin American Relations Part II In the Cold War 1946-1989.

Why the Cold War?

Fear of CommunistExpansion

Page 4: US-Latin American Relations Part II In the Cold War 1946-1989.

US Policy Containment of Communism

Page 6: US-Latin American Relations Part II In the Cold War 1946-1989.

United Fruit

Page 8: US-Latin American Relations Part II In the Cold War 1946-1989.
Page 9: US-Latin American Relations Part II In the Cold War 1946-1989.
Page 10: US-Latin American Relations Part II In the Cold War 1946-1989.

Guatemalan Civil War 1960-1996

Page 11: US-Latin American Relations Part II In the Cold War 1946-1989.

Vice President

Nixon in

Venezuela, 1958

Page 12: US-Latin American Relations Part II In the Cold War 1946-1989.
Page 13: US-Latin American Relations Part II In the Cold War 1946-1989.

Cuba-The Batista Years

Page 14: US-Latin American Relations Part II In the Cold War 1946-1989.

Cuba and Fidel Castro

Page 15: US-Latin American Relations Part II In the Cold War 1946-1989.
Page 16: US-Latin American Relations Part II In the Cold War 1946-1989.
Page 17: US-Latin American Relations Part II In the Cold War 1946-1989.

Bay of Pigs Invasion

Page 18: US-Latin American Relations Part II In the Cold War 1946-1989.
Page 19: US-Latin American Relations Part II In the Cold War 1946-1989.

Cuban Missile Crisis

Page 20: US-Latin American Relations Part II In the Cold War 1946-1989.
Page 21: US-Latin American Relations Part II In the Cold War 1946-1989.
Page 22: US-Latin American Relations Part II In the Cold War 1946-1989.
Page 23: US-Latin American Relations Part II In the Cold War 1946-1989.

Dominican Republic, 1965

Page 24: US-Latin American Relations Part II In the Cold War 1946-1989.

Chile and Salvadore Allende, 1970-73

Page 25: US-Latin American Relations Part II In the Cold War 1946-1989.
Page 26: US-Latin American Relations Part II In the Cold War 1946-1989.

Richard Nixon and Henry Kissinger

Page 27: US-Latin American Relations Part II In the Cold War 1946-1989.

• "I don't see why we need to stand by and watch a country go communist due to the irresponsibility of its own people. The issues are much too important for the Chilean voters to be left to decide for themselves." — Henry Kissinger

• "Not a nut or bolt shall reach Chile under Allende. Once Allende comes to power we shall do all within our power to condemn Chile and all Chileans to utmost deprivation and poverty." — Edward M. Korry, U.S. Ambassador to Chile, upon hearing of Allende's election.

• "Make the economy scream [in Chile to] prevent Allende from coming to power or to unseat him" — Richard Nixon, orders to CIA director Richard Helms on September 15, 1970.

Page 28: US-Latin American Relations Part II In the Cold War 1946-1989.

This poster responds to the alliance between U.S. multinational corporations and the CIA, which gave the CIA the opportunity to manipulate Chilean politics. The featured corporation is the International Telephone and Telegraph Company, which in 1970 owned 70% of Chitelco, the Compania de Telefonos de Chile, (Telephone Company of Chile) or about $153 million.

Page 29: US-Latin American Relations Part II In the Cold War 1946-1989.
Page 30: US-Latin American Relations Part II In the Cold War 1946-1989.

"Class Struggle“ Cesar Olhagaray

(1983)

Page 31: US-Latin American Relations Part II In the Cold War 1946-1989.

General Augusto PinochetMilitary Coup and the

“Disappeared”

Page 32: US-Latin American Relations Part II In the Cold War 1946-1989.

Nicaragua and the Sandinista Revolution

Page 33: US-Latin American Relations Part II In the Cold War 1946-1989.

Contra War

Page 34: US-Latin American Relations Part II In the Cold War 1946-1989.
Page 35: US-Latin American Relations Part II In the Cold War 1946-1989.

Reagan and Contra Leaders

Page 36: US-Latin American Relations Part II In the Cold War 1946-1989.

El Salvador’s “Dirty War”

Page 37: US-Latin American Relations Part II In the Cold War 1946-1989.
Page 38: US-Latin American Relations Part II In the Cold War 1946-1989.
Page 39: US-Latin American Relations Part II In the Cold War 1946-1989.

Invasion of Grenada, 1983

Page 40: US-Latin American Relations Part II In the Cold War 1946-1989.
Page 41: US-Latin American Relations Part II In the Cold War 1946-1989.

US Interventions