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Credibility gap
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==History== The term "credibility gap" came against a background of the use of the term "[[missile gap]]", which the ''[[Oxford English Dictionary]]'' lists as first being used by then-Senator [[John F. Kennedy]] on 14 August 1958, when he stated: "Our Nation could have afforded, and can afford now, the steps necessary to close the missile gap."<ref name=kennedy>{{cite journal|last1=Preble|first1=Christopher A.|title='Who Ever Believed in the "Missile Gap"?': John F. Kennedy and the Politics of National Security|journal=Presidential Studies Quarterly|date=December 2003|volume=33|issue=4|pages=801β826|doi=10.1046/j.0360-4918.2003.00085.x}}</ref> "Doomsday gap" and "mineshaft gap" were the imagined post-apocalyptic continuations of this paranoia in the 1964 Cold War satire ''[[Dr. Strangelove]]''. The term "credibility gap" was widely in use as early as 1963, according to ''Timetables of History''.<ref>{{cite book|title=The Timetables of History: A Horizontal Linkage of People and Events|last=Gunn|first=Bernard Grun|edition=4|publisher=Touchstone|year=2005|isbn=9780743270038 }}</ref> Prior to its association with the Vietnam War, in December 1962, at the annual meeting of the U.S. Inter-American Council, Republican US Senator for New York [[Kenneth B. Keating]] praised President John F. Kennedy's prompt action in the [[Cuban Missile Crisis]], but he said there was an urgent need for the United States to plug the "credibility gap" in U.S. policy on Cuba.<ref>Associated Press article dated December 10, 1962, available online at NewspaperArchive.com.</ref>{{fcn|date=June 2022}} It was popularized in 1966 by [[J. William Fulbright]], a Democratic Senator from Arkansas, when he could not get a straight answer from President Johnson's Administration regarding the war in Vietnam.<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.upi.com/Archives/Audio/1966/Vietnam-1966/|work=UPI|title=1966 Year in Review |year=1966|accessdate=April 16, 2013}}</ref> "Credibility gap" was first used in association with the Vietnam War in the ''[[New York Herald Tribune]]'' in March 1965, to describe then-president Lyndon Johnson's handling of the escalation of American involvement in the war. A number of events—particularly the surprise [[Tet Offensive]], and later the 1971 release of the ''[[Pentagon Papers]]''—helped to confirm public suspicion that there was a significant "gap" between the administration's declarations of controlled military and political resolution, and the reality. These were viewed as examples of Johnson's and later [[Richard Nixon]]'s duplicity. Throughout the war, Johnson worked with his officials to ensure that his public addresses would only disclose bare details of the war to the American public. During the war the country grew more and more aware of the credibility gap especially after Johnson's speech at [[Johns Hopkins University]] in April 1965.<ref>''Vietnam and America'', edited by [[Marvin Gettleman|Marvin E. Gettleman]], Jane Franklin, Marilyn Young and H. Bruce Franklin</ref>{{fcn|reason=Difficult to [[WP:V|verify]] when even the nature of the source is unclear|date=June 2022}} An example of public opinion appeared in ''[[The New York Times]]'' concerning the war. "The time has come to call a spade a bloody shovel. This country is in an undeclared and unexplained war in Vietnam. Our masters have a lot of long and fancy names for it, like escalation and retaliation, but it is a war just the same."<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.nytimes.com/1965/02/14/archives/washington-the-undeclared-and-unexplained-war.html|title=Washington: The Undeclared and Unexplained War|last=Reston|first=James|date=14 Feb 1965|website=[[The New York Times]]}}</ref> The advent of the presence of television journalists allowed by the military to report and photograph events of the war within hours or days of their actual occurrence in an uncensored manner drove the discrepancy widely referred to as "the credibility gap".
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