1 00:00:06,813 --> 00:00:10,363 It's not hard to imagine a world where at any given moment, 2 00:00:10,363 --> 00:00:14,503 you and everyone you know could be wiped out without warning 3 00:00:14,503 --> 00:00:17,253 at the push of a button. 4 00:00:17,253 --> 00:00:21,115 This was the reality for millions of people during the 45-year period 5 00:00:21,115 --> 00:00:22,843 after World War II, 6 00:00:22,843 --> 00:00:25,325 now known as the Cold War. 7 00:00:25,325 --> 00:00:28,974 As the United States and Soviet Union faced off across the globe, 8 00:00:28,974 --> 00:00:33,874 each knew that the other had nuclear weapons capable of destroying it. 9 00:00:33,874 --> 00:00:37,486 And destruction never loomed closer than during the 13 days 10 00:00:37,486 --> 00:00:40,215 of the Cuban Missile Crisis. 11 00:00:40,215 --> 00:00:46,586 In 1961, the U.S. unsuccessfully tried to overthrow Cuba's new communist government. 12 00:00:46,586 --> 00:00:49,704 That failed attempt was known as the Bay of Pigs, 13 00:00:49,704 --> 00:00:53,495 and it convinced Cuba to seek help from the U.S.S.R. 14 00:00:53,495 --> 00:00:57,067 Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev was happy to comply 15 00:00:57,067 --> 00:01:00,465 by secretly deploying nuclear missiles to Cuba, 16 00:01:00,465 --> 00:01:02,004 not only to protect the island, 17 00:01:02,004 --> 00:01:07,485 but to counteract the threat from U.S. missiles in Italy and Turkey. 18 00:01:07,485 --> 00:01:10,165 By the time U.S. intelligence discovered the plan, 19 00:01:10,165 --> 00:01:14,086 the materials to create the missiles were already in place. 20 00:01:14,086 --> 00:01:17,985 At an emergency meeting on October 16, 1962, 21 00:01:17,985 --> 00:01:21,405 military advisors urged an airstrike on missile sites 22 00:01:21,405 --> 00:01:24,036 and invasion of the island. 23 00:01:24,036 --> 00:01:27,495 But President John F. Kennedy chose a more careful approach. 24 00:01:27,495 --> 00:01:30,546 On October 22, he announced that the the U.S. Navy 25 00:01:30,546 --> 00:01:33,995 would intercept all shipments to Cuba. 26 00:01:33,995 --> 00:01:35,427 There was just one problem - 27 00:01:35,427 --> 00:01:39,436 a naval blockade was considered an act of war. 28 00:01:39,436 --> 00:01:41,986 Although the President called it a quarantine 29 00:01:41,986 --> 00:01:44,027 that did not block basic necessities, 30 00:01:44,027 --> 00:01:47,577 the Soviets didn't appreciate the distinction. 31 00:01:47,577 --> 00:01:49,398 In an outraged letter to Kennedy, 32 00:01:49,398 --> 00:01:53,297 Khrushchev wrote, "The violation of freedom to use international waters 33 00:01:53,297 --> 00:01:56,677 and international airspace is an act of aggression 34 00:01:56,677 --> 00:02:02,637 which pushes mankind toward the abyss of world nuclear missile war." 35 00:02:02,637 --> 00:02:07,217 Thus ensued the most intense six days of the Cold War. 36 00:02:07,217 --> 00:02:09,646 While the U.S. demanded the removal of the missiles, 37 00:02:09,646 --> 00:02:13,627 Cuba and the U.S.S.R insisted they were only defensive. 38 00:02:13,627 --> 00:02:16,758 And as the weapons continued to be armed, 39 00:02:16,758 --> 00:02:20,178 the U.S. prepared for a possible invasion. 40 00:02:20,178 --> 00:02:24,438 On October 27, a spy plane piloted by Major Rudolph Anderson 41 00:02:24,438 --> 00:02:27,299 was shot down by a Soviet missile. 42 00:02:27,299 --> 00:02:32,427 The same day, a nuclear-armed Soviet submarine was hit by a small-depth charge 43 00:02:32,427 --> 00:02:36,978 from a U.S. Navy vessel trying to signal it to come up. 44 00:02:36,978 --> 00:02:40,308 The commanders on the sub, too deep to communicate with the surface, 45 00:02:40,308 --> 00:02:45,759 thought war had begun and prepared to launch a nuclear torpedo. 46 00:02:45,759 --> 00:02:49,698 That decision had to be made unanimously by three officers. 47 00:02:49,698 --> 00:02:53,578 The captain and political officer both authorized the launch, 48 00:02:53,578 --> 00:02:58,069 but Vasili Arkhipov, second in command, refused. 49 00:02:58,069 --> 00:03:01,771 His decision saved the day, and perhaps the world. 50 00:03:01,771 --> 00:03:03,950 But the crisis wasn't over. 51 00:03:03,950 --> 00:03:05,610 For the first time in history, 52 00:03:05,610 --> 00:03:08,903 the U.S. Military set itself to DEFCON 2, 53 00:03:08,903 --> 00:03:12,839 the defense readiness one step away from nuclear war. 54 00:03:12,839 --> 00:03:15,230 With hundreds of nuclear missiles ready to launch, 55 00:03:15,230 --> 00:03:20,199 the metaphorical Doomsday Clock stood at one minute to midnight. 56 00:03:20,199 --> 00:03:22,278 But diplomacy carried on. 57 00:03:22,278 --> 00:03:25,363 In Washington, DC, Attorney General Robert Kennedy 58 00:03:25,363 --> 00:03:29,859 secretly met with Soviet Ambassador Anatoly Dobrynin. 59 00:03:29,859 --> 00:03:33,720 After intense negotiation, they reached the following proposal. 60 00:03:33,720 --> 00:03:36,839 The U.S. would remove their missiles from Turkey and Italy 61 00:03:36,839 --> 00:03:38,900 and promise to never invade Cuba 62 00:03:38,900 --> 00:03:43,649 in exchange for the Soviet withdrawal from Cuba under U.N. inspection. 63 00:03:43,649 --> 00:03:45,637 Once the meeting had concluded, 64 00:03:45,637 --> 00:03:48,982 Dobrynin cabled Moscow saying time is of the essence 65 00:03:48,982 --> 00:03:51,450 and we shouldn't miss the chance. 66 00:03:51,450 --> 00:03:53,139 And at 9 a.m. the next day, 67 00:03:53,139 --> 00:03:54,870 a message arrived from Khrushchev 68 00:03:54,870 --> 00:03:58,851 announcing the Soviet missiles would be removed from Cuba. 69 00:03:58,851 --> 00:04:01,240 The crisis was now over. 70 00:04:01,240 --> 00:04:04,107 While criticized at the time by their respective governments 71 00:04:04,107 --> 00:04:06,121 for bargaining with the enemy, 72 00:04:06,121 --> 00:04:09,429 contemporary historical analysis shows great admiration 73 00:04:09,429 --> 00:04:14,051 for Kennedy's and Khrushchev's ability to diplomatically solve the crisis. 74 00:04:14,051 --> 00:04:17,251 But the disturbing lesson was that a slight communication error, 75 00:04:17,251 --> 00:04:21,901 or split-second decisions by a commander could have thwarted all their efforts, 76 00:04:21,901 --> 00:04:27,360 as it nearly did if not for Vasili Arkhipov's courageous choice. 77 00:04:27,360 --> 00:04:31,311 The Cuban Missile Crisis revealed just how fragile human politics are 78 00:04:31,311 --> 00:04:35,231 compared to the terrifying power they can unleash.