THE MAKING OF A NATION 220 - Gerald Ford(在线收听

THE MAKING OF A NATION -November 21, 2002: Gerald Ford

By Jeri Watson


VOICE ONE:

This is Mary Tillotson.

VOICE TWO:

And this is Steve Ember with THE MAKING OF A NATION, a VOA Special English program about the history
of the United States.

(THEME)

Today, we tell about the administration of the thirty-eighth president of the United
States, Gerald Ford.

VOICE ONE:

Gerald Ford was sworn-in as president on August ninth, nineteen-seventy-four. The
day before, President Richard Nixon had announced that he would resign.

If he had not resigned, he probably would have been removed from office. A
Congressional investigation had found evidence that Nixon violated the
Constitutional rights of the American people during the Watergate case.

The new president spoke about Watergate, and what it meant to America, on the day
he was sworn-in.

FORD: "Our long national nightmare is over. Our Constitution works. Our great
republic is a government of laws and not of men. Here the people rule. ... As we
bind up the internal wounds of Watergate -- more painful and more poisonous than

those of foreign wars -- let us restore the 'Golden Rule' to our political process and let brotherly love purge our
hearts of suspicion and of hate."

VOICE TWO:

Gerald Ford became the only president in American history to serve as vice president and president without being
elected.

Richard Nixon nominated him for vice president in October, Nineteen-Seventy-Three. That was when Nixon's
vice president, Spiro Agnew, resigned. When Nixon himself resigned, Ford became president.

Ford was a long-time Congressman from the state of Michigan. He was well-liked. He had been a good student
and a good athlete. He studied economics and political science at the University of Michigan. The he studied law
at Yale University. During World War Two, he served as a Navy officer in the Pacific battle area.

VOICE ONE:

After the war, Ford entered politics. He was a member of the Republican Party. He was first elected to Congress
in Nineteen-Forty-Eight. He won re-election twelve times. Other Republican members of the House of
Representatives elected him minority leader during the presidential administration of Democrat Lyndon Johnson.

Ford was still minority leader when Republican Richard Nixon was elected president in Nineteen-Sixty-Eight. In
his leadership position, he helped win approval of a number of Nixon's proposals. He became known for his
strong loyalty to the president. It was no surprise, then, that Nixon named Ford vice president.


Chief Justice Warren Burger
gives the oath of office as
Betty Ford watches.
(Photo - Ford Library)

VOICE TWO:

Gerald Ford became president suddenly. Almost as suddenly, he had to decide what to do about former president
Nixon. After Nixon left office, he could have been charged with crimes for his part in the Watergate case.
Instead, one month after Nixon resigned, President Ford settled the question. He pardoned Nixon of any crimes
for which he might have been responsible.

The pardon made many Americans angry. Some believed Nixon should have been put on trial. They thought he
might have answered more questions about Watergate if he had not been pardoned.

The new president did what he thought was right. He said he pardoned Nixon to end divisions in the country. For
a while, owever, his action seemed to increase the divisions.

VOICE ONE:

Anger about the pardon was still strong when President Ford took another highly disputed action. He pardoned
the men who illegally escaped military service in the Vietnam War. Most were not sent to prison. Instead, they
were permitted to perform work for their communities. Many of the men did not accept the president's offer,
however. They remained in hiding in the United States. Or they remained in other countries where they had fled.

President Ford received much better public support when he asked Congress to control and limit the activities of
the nation's intelligence agencies. He hoped this would prevent future administrations from interfering with the
Constitutional rights of citizens.

VOICE TWO:

Other problems also caused trouble for President Ford. As vice president, he had described inflation as America's
'public enemy number one'. He proposed several measures to fight it. As president, he was forced to cancel some
of these measures because there was an economic recession.

During the recession, inflation decreased. But fewer Americans had jobs. Unemployment in Nineteen-Seventy-
Five was at its highest rate since the great economic depression of the Nineteen-Thirties.

VOICE ONE:

In foreign policy, Ford usually took the advice of Henry Kissinger. Kissinger served as President Nixon's
assistant for national security and as secretary of state. He kept those jobs under President Ford.

Kissinger won much praise for his service to Richard Nixon. Yet he received much criticism, too. He was
accused of interfering with civil liberties in the name of national security. And he was accused of supporting the
overthrow of the leftist government of Salvador Allende in Chile.

Still, President Ford was pleased that Kissinger would remain in the administration. Even Kissinger's worst critics
admitted that he was excellent negotiator.

VOICE TWO:

At the time Ford became president, America's situation in the world was generally hopeful. Former President
Nixon and Soviet leader Leonid Brezhnev had signed two agreements to limit the spread of nuclear weapons.
Also, relations with China were less tense than before.

However, American policy in parts of southeast Asia had failed completely.

VOICE ONE:

American involvement in the Vietnam war officially ended the year before Ford became president. But fighting
continued between South Vietnam and communist forces from North Vietnam. The peace agreement signed by
the United States and North Vietnam in Nineteen-Seventy-Three left South Vietnam to defend itself. By
Nineteen-Seventy-Five, it became clear that South Vietnamese forces were in danger of defeat.


President Ford tried to prevent a total communist take-over of the south. He asked Congress to approve seven-
hundred-million dollars in military aid for South Vietnam. The American people, owever, were tired of paying
for the war. Their representatives in Congress said no.

VOICE TWO:

What happened in Vietnam was like a bad dream. Communist forces moved into Saigon, capital of the south.
Ford ordered the rescue of American citizens and of Vietnamese who had supported American efforts. Few who
saw people trying to escape Saigon will ever forget the day.

It was April Thirtieth, Nineteen-Seventy-Five. Terrified Vietnamese were screaming for help at the American
embassy. Everyone was pushing, trying to escape. Some who reached the embassy's roof passed their children
forward. At least, they hoped, they could get the children to safety on American military helicopters. Others held
on to the helicopters from the outside as the overloaded aircraft tried to take off.

((MUSIC BRIDGE))

VOICE ONE:

The Ford administration also faced trouble in the Middle East. Israel and an alliance of Arab nations had fought
two wars in about ten years. After the war of Nineteen-Seventy-Three, Henry Kissinger led negotiations to settle
some issues.

Israel agreed to give up some of the territory it had seized during the fighting. In return, the United States made a
promise. It would not recognize or deal with the Palestine Liberation Organization as long as the P-L-O failed to
meet certain conditions. In September, Nineteen-Seventy-Five, Israel and Egypt signed a ceasefire agreement.
They also agreed to permit American civilians to act as observers along the ceasefire lines.

Henry Kissinger received widespread praise for his peacemaking efforts. Yet the situation in the Middle East
remained tense.

VOICE TWO:

The Ford administration could not fix all the problems of the world. Still, as the presidential election campaign of
Nineteen-Seventy-Six began, things seemed better. The United States was not fighting any wars. Unemployment
was high. But inflation had improved a little. Most important, erald Ford had led the country through the difficult
days after Watergate.

The election will be our story next time.

(THEME)

VOICE ONE:

This program of THE MAKING OF A NATION was written by Jeri Watson and produced by Cynthia Kirk. This
is Mary Tillotson.

VOICE TWO:

And this is Steve Ember. Join us again next week for another VOA Special English program about the history of
the United States.


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