Come October 15 it will be 50 years since the start of the Cuban
missile crisis, when the U.S. and the Soviets were on the brink of
nuclear annihilation for 13 days as a result of the Soviets trying to
build missile bases on the island of Cuba.
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JFK and McNamara [Photo credit: Wikipedia] |
The standoff ended when the two countries agreed that the Soviets would not install missile bases and the U.S. would not invade Cuba, thus avoiding catastrophe. (Two years later, Stanley Kubrick’s Dr. Strangelove, Or: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb,
came out in movie theaters, giving viewers a hilarious vision of
nuclear holocaust. Peter Sellers starred in the title role, as well as
playing the somewhat vague U.S. President. George C. Scott is priceless
as General Buck Turgidson. The movie never gets old. I recommend
watching it with a six-pack in your fallout shelter sometime between
Oct. 15 and 28.)
President John F. Kennedy summed up his and America’s resolve in an
address to the nation on Oct. 22, 1962, when he announced a blockade of
Cuba:
The path we have chosen for the present is full of hazards,
as all paths are. The cost of freedom is always high, but Americans
have always paid it. And one path we shall never choose, and that is the
path of surrender, or submission.”
Fidel Castro, on the other side of the nuclear chessboard from
Kennedy, gave a revealing look many years later about what had happened:
It would have been the easiest thing in the world for us to
build those emplacements under the guise of something totally different
and they would have never been discovered. The amazing thing was that
they weren’t discovered earlier. It was a question of carelessness, lack
of foresight.”
One wonders what would have happened if the Soviets and
Cuba had been better at camouflaging the bases. Castro’s benefactor at
that time, Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev, had this to say about those
dramatic 13 days:
The two most powerful nations
of the world had been squared off against each other, each with its
finger on the button. You’d have thought that war was inevitable. But
both sides showed that if the desire to avoid war is strong enough, even
the most pressing dispute can be solved by compromise. And a compromise
over Cuba was indeed found.”
Secretary of State Dean Rusk, who served under Kennedy and Lyndon Johnson, appraised the situation succinctly:
We were eyeball-to-eyeball and the other fellow just blinked.”
Another former Secretary of State, Colin Powell, had this to add:
President Kennedy didn’t
negotiate out of the Cuban missile crisis simply because he and
Khrushchev got along well. Khrushchev didn’t have the cards.”
Roger Hilsman, director of the U.S. Dept. of State bureau of
intelligence and research (how’s that for a long title?) under Kennedy,
had this to say about the U.S.’s successful use of aerial
reconnaissance:
Presidential assistant McGeorge Bundy, appearing on
ABC-TV’s Issues and Answers on Sunday, October 14 [1962], denied that
the Soviets had any offensive weapons in Cuba just as a U-2 was taking
the first pictures of them.”
Ray Cline, who served under Kennedy as CIA deputy director for
intelligence, was perhaps tooting the firm’s horn a bit in giving this
historic appraisal of the intelligence gathering during the crisis:
After the Cuban missile crisis I asked both McGeorge Bundy
and Robert Kennedy if they would tell me how much that single evaluated
piece of photographic evidence was worth, and they each said it fully
justified all that the CIA had cost the country in all its preceding
years.”
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