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Social Studies 10 Lessons
By:
Gen L
Lesson 5: PM Diefenbaker (1957-63)
The CF-105 Avro Arrow
The Avro Arrow was a fighter jet developed and built by A. V. Roe (hence Avro), a Canadian avionics company.
It was in the prototype stage, but had some problems:
Design Bugs
A. V. Roe's financial troubles
Over-budget
No foreign buyers
The End for the Arrow
20 Feb, 1959 (Black Friday): PM Diefenbaker cancels the Arrow & orders all prototypes destroyed & cut into scrap.
The Arrow would have made Canada a leader in aerospace technology, it was ahead of its time.
The Arrow became a symbol of "what could have been" & Canada's "missed chance" to become a leader.
The Bomarcs
1958: Dief agreed to deploy Bomarc missiles in Canada.
However, within months Canada was shopping for used US fighters; (
There's a reason jets survived into the modern era.
) and Dief refused Nuclear Warheads on the Bomarcs, making them pointless.
Dief was staunchly anti-Nuclear weaponry.
US Foreign Policy
Since Korea, Canada-US relationships were strained.
Although he was suspicious of US influence in Canada, Dief was very anti-Communist.
He had a respectful and positive relationship with US Pres. Eisenhower.
The respect made it easier to cancel the Arrow (felt he had support from the US,
sort of
.)
Cold War's Hottest Point (Preamble)
Cuba, 1959 - Fidel Castro lead a revolution against US-friendly dictator, Batista.
Castro was a nationalist & socialist.
US anti-Socialist reaction drove Castro toward the USSR.
1960: Eisenhower loses the US election to Kennedy.
Dief hated Kennedy. (young, rich, liberal)
Cold War's Hottest Point (1962)
1961: US supported a failed Cuban invasion.
Castro looked to the Soviets for protection.
Oct, 1962: US discovers Soviet missile sights in Cuba.
In response, the US sets up a naval blockade of Cuba.
The Convoy's Game of Chicken
A convoy of Soviet ships, steaming toward Cuba with missiles for the new sites.
The world waited to see who would blink first.
Would the Soviets turn around, or run the Blockade? (
Vote Now on your Phones
)
The Soviets, at the last minute, turned around.
Canada and the Cuban Missiles
NORAD was on high alert.
Dief didn't put Canadian sectors on alert, as requested by the US.
Instead, Dief questioned the US reaction
Kennedy was very upset by Canada's response.
1962: Dief's majority fell to a minority.
The End for Diefenbaker
1963: Following the Cuban Missile Crisis, the US called out Canada, claiming that Canada "has not yet proposed any significant contribution to the defense of North America."
Pearson (Liberal Leader,
remember him?
), said he would accept nuclear warheads as part of Canada's obligation.
April, 1963: Dief's gov't fell to Pearson's Liberals.
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