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The Presidents Connect today's election issues with the past

 

Chapter:

The Korean War (5:29)
U.S. troops in Korea retreat until Douglas MacArthur's surprise attack on Inchon forces the North Koreans to pull back to the 38th Parallel.
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Truman
LBJ
Nixon
Carter
Reagan
G H W Bush

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LBJ, Chapter 23

No Surrender (6:22)
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Chapter 1

Introduction (2:58)
Part one of a biography of Harry Truman, the 33rd president.
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Chapter 2

Early Years (14:11)
Harry Truman grows up in Independence, Missouri. He gets his first taste of politics at the 1900 Democratic National Convention.
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Chapter 3

The Family Farm (10:22)
After working office jobs in Kansas City, Truman returns to the family farm to help his father. He woos Elizabeth Wallace.
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Chapter 4

Love and Death (10:23)
Bess Wallace rejects Truman. After his father dies, Truman leaves the farm to make his fortune, but fails in business.
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Chapter 5

World War I (9:52)
Truman shows leadership as the captain of Battery D, fighting in World War I's bloodiest battles.
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Chapter 6

Marriage and Politics (13:12)
After the war, Truman marries Bess Wallace and runs for public office.
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Chapter 7

Senator Truman, (6:45)
With the help of Kansas City political boss Tom Pendergast, Truman wins a seat in the U.S. Senate.
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Chapter 8

Truman Proves Himself (9:07)
Truman works hard to understand the workings of the Senate and finds sucess.
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Chapter 9

The 1944 Election (11:21)
Truman becomes the Democrats' compromise choice for vice president.
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Chapter 10

Vice President for 82 Days (5:25)
Roosevelt keeps Truman out of his inner circle. When the president dies, Truman is nervous and unprepared.
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Chapter 11

A Man of the People (10:27)
As president, Truman makes a show of energy and confidence. Americans warm to his straightforward manner.
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Chapter 12

Endgame in Japan (10:04)
After the war in Europe ends, Truman focuses on the bitter battle with Japan. Bess Truman is uncomfortable as first lady.
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Chapter 13

On the World Stage (10:27)
Truman meets with Winston Churchill and Joseph Stalin to decide the fate of Europe. In New Mexico the atomic bomb is successfully tested.
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Chapter 14

Nuclear Diplomacy (7:06)
Truman takes a tougher stance at Potsdam after receiving news of a successful atomic bomb test in New Mexico.
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Chapter 15

Hiroshima and Nagasaki (7:32)
The U.S. drops atomic bombs on two Japanese cities. The Japanese surrender and World War II ends.
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Chapter 16

CreditsProduction credits for part one of the television program.
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Chapter 17

CreditsHead credits for part two of the television program.
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Chapter 18

Introduction (2:16)
Part two of a biography of Harry Truman, the 33rd president.
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Chapter 19

The Post War Economy (10:59)
Truman faces domestic challenges. He takes a tough stance against striking railroad workers.
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Chapter 20

The Mid-Term Elections of 1946 (4:47)
The Republicans gain majorities in both houses of Congress.
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Chapter 21

The Truman Doctrine (9:04)
As the Soviets control Eastern Europe, Truman acts to stop Communism in Greece and Turkey.
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Chapter 22

American Power (6:50)
Truman establishes the Marshall Plan and prepares the country for a new kind of war -- the Cold War.
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Chapter 23

A Stand for Human Rights (11:21)
Before the election of 1948, Truman boldly calls for civil rights for African Americans and for Israel to be recognized.
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Chapter 24

The Conventions (6:41)
Despite Democrats' misgivings, President Truman is nominated at a dispirited Democratic Convention.
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Chapter 25

Truman Defeats Dewey (9:47)
Taking his "New Deal" message on a whistlestop campaign across the country, Truman defeats New York governor Thomas Dewey.
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Chapter 26

Fighting Communism (10:10)
Facing the Communist threat, Truman shows U.S. strength with an airlift to blockaded Berlin and air strikes and infantry in Korea.
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Chapter 27

The Korean War (5:29)
U.S. troops in Korea retreat until Douglas MacArthur's surprise attack on Inchon forces the North Koreans to pull back to the 38th Parallel.
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Chapter 28

Crossing the 38th Parallel (9:35)
MacArthur convinces Truman to fight the Chinese in Korea. Truman denies MacArthur's demand to use atomic weapons.
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Chapter 29

Under Pressure (6:22)
Truman persists with a "limited war." Pressure on him grows intense as casualties mount and U.S. troops are repelled by Chinese forces.
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Chapter 30

Dismissing MacArthur (6:58)
In a controversial move, Truman removes General Douglas MacArthur from his command for insubordination.
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Chapter 31

The Last Years (9:06)
With the lowest popularity rating in history, Truman decides not to seek re-election. He retires to Independence, Missouri.
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Chapter 32

CreditsProduction credits for part two of the television program.
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  • TRUMAN: Chapter 1
  • TRUMAN: Chapter 2
  • TRUMAN: Chapter 3
  • TRUMAN: Chapter 4
  • TRUMAN: Chapter 5
  • TRUMAN: Chapter 6
  • TRUMAN: Chapter 7
  • TRUMAN: Chapter 8
  • TRUMAN: Chapter 9
  • TRUMAN: Chapter 10
  • TRUMAN: Chapter 11
  • TRUMAN: Chapter 12
  • TRUMAN: Chapter 13
  • TRUMAN: Chapter 14
  • TRUMAN: Chapter 15
  • TRUMAN: Chapter 16
  • TRUMAN: Chapter 17
  • TRUMAN: Chapter 18
  • TRUMAN: Chapter 19
  • TRUMAN: Chapter 20
  • TRUMAN: Chapter 21
  • TRUMAN: Chapter 22
  • TRUMAN: Chapter 23
  • TRUMAN: Chapter 24
  • TRUMAN: Chapter 25
  • TRUMAN: Chapter 26
  • TRUMAN: Chapter 27
  • TRUMAN: Chapter 28
  • TRUMAN: Chapter 29
  • TRUMAN: Chapter 30
  • TRUMAN: Chapter 31
  • TRUMAN: Chapter 32
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TRUMAN
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Transcript: Chapter 27

ALONZO HAMBY: Truman hopes this is going to be a quick enterprise, and we can take care of it. Clearly, he and perhaps some of the people in his administration have underestimated the formidable character of the North Korean army.

NARRATOR: The first Americans thrown into action were green. Their enemy was not. Well-trained and combat hardened, the North Koreans pushed the Americans further and further South, across unknown terrain, through drenching downpours and punishing heat. Truman's cuts in the defense budget had left America unprepared for the war it now faced.

WALTER LAFEBER: By July and August of 1950, Korea was a full-fledged conventional war. Truman made the decision at this point to bust the defense budget. Harry Truman, who had opposed high defense budgets, had sent a $13-billion defense budget in '49. By the end of 1950, he is sending in a defense budget of $50 billion dollars. And the United States is now beginning to move into the period of the modern defense budget.

NARRATOR: While the massive re-armament of America began at home, news from the front remained grim. At the end of July, 4,000 Americans were dead, almost 14,000 wounded or missing.

GEORGE ELSEY: The North Koreans were so much stronger than we initially realized that they really practically pushed us right off into the sea.

NARRATOR: The United Nations army now clung to only a tiny corner of the southeastern tip of Korea. Truman had expected to overwhelm the Communists, to hurl them back above the 38th parallel into North Korea.

Instead, after just six weeks, the war seemed lost. With disaster looming, a daring plan was devised by the head of United Nations forces, the fabled hero of World War II, whose exploits in the Pacific had made his name a household word -- General Douglas MacArthur.

DAVID MCCULLOUGH: It's somewhat difficult, today, to imagine the aura around General Douglas MacArthur; the size of the shadow he cast. Americans looked upon him as a kind of god, an infallible god.

GENERAL EDWIN SIMMONS, Marine Corps Historian: He was only about five-foot-nine, but if you were in his presence, you would swear that he was about six-foot-six. He always dominated any group and he had all the props -- the open-collared shirt, the sunglasses, the crushed hat, the pipe. He made his own laws. He took unclear directives and interpreted them his own way. He was very much the American Caesar.

NARRATOR: To save his army trapped on the tip of Korea, MacArthur sent a message to Truman asking him to approve one of the most daring operations in American military history.

GENERAL VERNON WALTERS: I always remember this -- he said, "Tell the president I will land at Inchon on the 15th of September. And between the hammer of this landing and the anvil of the Eighth Army, I will smash and destroy the armies of North Korea." And the hair stood up on the back of my neck.

NARRATOR: On September 15, 1950, with Truman's full support, MacArthur struck without warning at the port of Inchon, 30 miles from Seoul.

The risks were enormous. Dangerous 30 foot tides... enemy guns trained on mine-infested waters. One Pentagon strategist called it a 5,000 to one shot. But MacArthur's gamble paid off. The North Koreans were caught completely by surprise. Inchon fell in less than a day.

"I salute you all," Truman cabled MacArthur, "and say to all of you from all of us at home, 'Well and nobly done.'

Thirteen days later Seoul was retaken. At the same time, UN armies in the South were fighting their way North with the enemy in full retreat.

DAVID MCCULLOUGH: And, suddenly, the North Koreans, instead of being this invincible invading army, were caught in a giant pincer.

NARRATOR: In less than two weeks, MacArthur had turned the war around. "General MacArthur," Life magazine wrote, "is a great soldier and a great American."

By late September, UN forces had pushed the Communists back above the 38th parallel, the line separating the two armies before the war began. There, MacArthur's army halted.

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