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953 nut

10-14-1962

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953 nut

                              10-14-1962

      The Cuban Missile Crisis begins

The Cuban Missile Crisis begins on October 14, 1962, bringing the United States and the Soviet Union to the brink of nuclear conflict. Photographs taken by a high-altitude U-2 spy plane offered incontrovertible evidence that Soviet-made medium-range missiles in Cuba—capable of carrying nuclear warheads—were now stationed 90 miles off the American coastline.

Tensions between the United States and the Soviet Union over Cuba had been steadily increasing since the failed April 1961 Bay of Pigs invasion, in which Cuban refugees, armed and trained by the United States, landed in Cuba and attempted to overthrow the government of Fidel Castro. Though the invasion did not succeed, Castro was convinced that the United States would try again, and set out to get more military assistance from the Soviet Union. During the next year, the number of Soviet advisors in Cuba rose to more than 20,000. Rumors began that Russia was also moving missiles and strategic bombers onto the island. Russian leader Nikita Khrushchev may have decided to so dramatically up the stakes in the Cold War for several reasons. He may have believed that the United States was indeed going to invade Cuba and provided the weapons as a deterrent. Facing criticism at home from more hard-line members of the Soviet communist hierarchy, he may have thought a tough stand might win him support. Khrushchev also had always resented that U.S. nuclear missiles were stationed near the Soviet Union (in Turkey, for example), and putting missiles in Cuba might have been his way of redressing the imbalance. Two days after the pictures were taken, after being developed and analyzed by intelligence officers, they were presented to President Kennedy. During the next two weeks, the United States and the Soviet Union would come as close to nuclear war as they ever had, and a fearful world awaited the outcome.

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Jerry77

We had all liberty and enlistments frozen and loaded equipment into C130's to go to Cuba - tense time - thankfully it was averted..that would have been a lose/lose for everybody...:flags-waveusa:

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shallowwatersailor

I remember being in sixth grade and going home for lunch that day. When we came back to school that afternoon the nun that was my teacher told us we could be at war by dinner time. It was a serious time in history. How many recall the "Duck and Cover" drills that went with that era?

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Ed Kennell
6 hours ago, shallowwatersailor said:

. How many recall the "Duck and Cover" drills that went with that era?

A lot of us John.   And the home made bomb shelter, the stock pile of canned food in the back corner of the basement, and waking up scared at the sound of a prop plane overhead at night.

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953 nut

We had "Career Days" at our high school a couple of days before this, my paper work from the Navy Recruiter was sitting on the dining room table at the time the announcement was made; my mom burned it! 

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Jerry77
5 hours ago, 953 nut said:

my mom burned it!    

:ROTF:    that is seriously funny.......

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