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The history of the Cuban Missile Crisis - Matthew A. Jordan

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    It's not hard to imagine a world
    where at any given moment,
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    you and everyone you know could be
    wiped out without warning
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    at the push of a button.
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    This was the reality for millions
    of people during the 45-year period
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    after World War II,
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    now known as the Cold War.
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    As the United States and Soviet Union
    faced off across the globe,
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    each knew that the other had nuclear
    weapons capable of destroying it.
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    And destruction never loomed closer
    than during the 13 days
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    of the Cuban Missile Crisis.
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    In 1961, the U.S. unsuccessfully tried to
    overthrow Cuba's new communist government.
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    That failed attempt was known
    as the Bay of Pigs,
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    and it convinced Cuba to seek help
    from the U.S.S.R.
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    Soviet premier Nikita Khrushchev
    was happy to comply
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    by secretly deploying nuclear
    missiles to Cuba,
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    not only to protect the island,
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    but to counteract the threat from
    U.S. missiles in Italy and Turkey.
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    By the time U.S. intelligence
    discovered the plan,
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    the materials to create the missiles
    were already in place.
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    At an emergency meeting on
    October 16, 1962,
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    military advisors urged an airstrike
    on missile sites
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    and invasion of the island.
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    But President John F. Kennedy chose
    a more careful approach.
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    On October 22, he announced that the
    the U.S. Navy
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    would intercept all shipments to Cuba.
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    There was just one problem:
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    a naval blockade was considered
    an act of war.
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    Although the President called it
    a quarantine
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    that did not block basic necessities,
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    the Soviets didn't appreciate
    the distinction.
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    In an outraged letter to Kennedy,
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    Khrushchev wrote, "The violation
    of freedom to use international waters
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    and international airspace
    is an act of aggression
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    which pushes mankind toward the abyss
    of world nuclear missile war."
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    Thus ensued the most intense
    six days of the Cold War.
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    While the U.S. demanded the removal
    of the missiles,
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    Cuba and the U.S.S.R insisted
    they were only defensive.
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    And as the weapons continued
    to be armed,
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    the U.S. prepared for a possible invasion.
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    On October 27, a spy plane piloted
    by Major Rudolph Anderson
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    was shot down by a Soviet missile.
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    The same day, a nuclear-armed Soviet
    submarine was hit by a small-depth charge
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    from a U.S. Navy vessel trying
    to signal it to come up.
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    The commanders on the sub,
    too deep to communicate with the surface,
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    thought war had begun
    and prepared to launch a nuclear torpedo.
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    That decision had to be made unanimously
    by three officers.
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    The captain and political officer
    both authorized the launch,
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    but Vasili Arkhipov,
    second in command, refused.
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    His decision saved the day
    and perhaps the world.
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    But the crisis wasn't over.
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    For the first time in history,
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    the U.S. Military set itself
    to DEFCON 2,
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    the defense readiness one step
    away from nuclear war.
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    With hundreds of nuclear missiles
    ready to launch,
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    the metaphorical Doomsday Clock
    stood at one minute to midnight.
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    But diplomacy carried on.
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    In Washington, D.C., Attorney General
    Robert Kennedy
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    secretly met with Soviet Ambassador
    Anatoly Dobrynin.
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    After intense negotiation,
    they reached the following proposal.
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    The U.S. would remove their missiles
    from Turkey and Italy
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    and promise to never invade Cuba
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    in exchange for the Soviet withdrawal
    from Cuba under U.N. inspection.
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    Once the meeting had concluded,
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    Dobrynin cabled Moscow saying
    time is of the essence
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    and we shouldn't miss the chance.
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    And at 9 a.m. the next day,
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    a message arrived from Khrushchev
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    announcing the Soviet missiles would be
    removed from Cuba.
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    The crisis was now over.
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    While criticized at the time by their
    respective governments
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    for bargaining with the enemy,
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    contemporary historical analysis
    shows great admiration
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    for Kennedy's and Khrushchev's ability
    to diplomatically solve the crisis.
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    But the disturbing lesson was that
    a slight communication error,
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    or split-second decision by a commander,
    could have thwarted all their efforts,
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    as it nearly did if not for
    Vasili Arkhipov's courageous choice.
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    The Cuban Missile Crisis revealed just how
    fragile human politics are
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    compared to the terrifying power
    they can unleash.
Title:
The history of the Cuban Missile Crisis - Matthew A. Jordan
Description:

View full lesson: http://ed.ted.com/lessons/the-history-of-the-cuban-missile-crisis-matthew-a-jordan

Imagine going about your life knowing that, at any given moment, you and everyone you know could be wiped out without warning at the push of a button. This was the reality for millions of people during the forty-five year period after World War II now known as the Cold War. Matthew A. Jordan explains the history behind the peak of all this panic — the thirteen days of the Cuban Missile Crisis.

Lesson by Mathew A. Jordan, animation by Patrick Smith.

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TED-Ed
Duration:
04:52

English subtitles

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