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This Day in History
Feb 9
Vietnam War
U.S. sends first combat troops to South Vietnam, 1965
A U.S. Marine Corps Hawk air defense missile battalion is deployed to Da Nang. President Johnson had ordered this deployment to provide protection for…
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J. William Fulbright
(born April 9, 1905, Sumner, Mo., U.S.—died Feb. 9, 1995, Washington, D.C.) American senator who initiated the international exchange program for scholars known as the Fulbright scholarship.
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Robert S. McNamara
Robert McNamara was U.S. secretary of defense from 1961 to 1968 and played a major role in the nation's military involvement in Vietnam.
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Stuart Symington
(born June 26, 1901, Amherst, Mass., U.S.—died Dec. 14, 1988, New Canaan, Conn.) U.S. senator from Missouri (1953–76) who was a staunch advocate of a strong national defense but became an outspoken critic of U.
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Henry A. Kissinger
(1923- ), foreign policy specialist, national security adviser, and secretary of state.
(Born Feb. 9, 1909, Cherokee county, Ga., U.S.died Dec. 20, 1994, Athens, Ga.) U.S. secretary of state during the John F. Kennedy and Lyndon Johnson administrations who became a target of antiwar hostility as he consistently defended the United States' participation in the Vietnam War.
After graduating from Davidson College in 1931, Rusk earned his master's degree at St. John's College, Oxford, as a Rhodes scholar. From 1934 to 1940 he taught political science at Mills College in Oakland, Calif., becoming dean of the faculty in 1938.
During World War II Rusk served Gen. Joseph W. Stilwell as deputy chief of staff for the China-Burma-India theatre. After the war he held positions in both the state and war departments. In March 1950 he became assistant secretary of state for Far Eastern affairs, a position in which he was involved in U.S. prosecution of the Korean War. Rusk supported the war, but he disagreed with Gen. Douglas MacArthur's advocacy of expanding the fighting into China.
Rusk was president of the Rockefeller Foundation from 1952 to 1960. In 1961 he became secretary of state under President Kennedy. Within a year he faced crises in Cuba, Indochina, and Berlin. Rusk's characteristically cool and reticent personality, however, contributed to the State Department's reduced role in national policy making.
Rusk was retained as secretary of state in the Johnson administration following Kennedy's assassination. From 1964 to 1968 he consistently defended the United States' military involvement in Vietnam, making himself a target of growing antiwar sentiment in the country. His longtime opposition to the diplomatic recognition of communist China confirmed his image as an inflexible stalwart of the Cold War.
Rusk retired after leaving office in January 1969, but he subsequently accepted a professorship in international law at the University of Georgia, which he held until his retirement in 1984.
Copyright © 1994-2011 Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc. For more information visit Britannica.com.
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