. Medical and Hospital News .




NUKEWARS
Cuba crisis pitted Kennedy against Khrushchev, Castro
by Staff Writers
Washington (AFP) Oct 9, 2012


The Cuban missile crisis unfolded like a life-and-death poker game pitting a young American president, John F. Kennedy, against the veteran Soviet leader Nikita Khrushchev and Cuba's fiery revolutionary leader, Fidel Castro.

+ John F. Kennedy

The 45-year-old Kennedy, born to privilege and power, had been in office less than two years when he was faced with the worst crisis of the Cold War.

His handling of the failed invasion of Cuba in April 1961 -- in which he refused additional American military support for anti-Castro forces -- convinced his Soviet counterpart that the US president was weak and indecisive, a view reinforced at a summit between the two leaders in Vienna.

Under intense stress, Kennedy was on numerous medications at the time, including steroids for his colitis, procaine for his back pain, testosterone to increase his weight and antibiotics to prevent the return of an old venereal infection.

When the missile crisis erupted, Kennedy had to navigate conflicting advice from his divided cabinet, with hawks pushing for an invasion of Cuba and more cautious aides advocating negotiation.

His generals recommended a massive bombing campaign and Air Force chief General Curtis LeMay told the president the decision to impose a naval blockade was akin to appeasing Hitler.

But Kennedy had grown skeptical of the military's advice after the Bay of Pigs fiasco, and despite pressure from lawmakers and a series of alarming incidents, he finally reached a compromise with Moscow.

Khrushchev's contempt turned to respect for his American rival. He later wrote in his memoirs that Kennedy had not "overestimated America's might" and had "left himself a way out of the crisis."

Kennedy's hagiographers would later mythologize his role, describing him as facing down the Soviets "eyeball to eyeball."

But the accounts glossed over the often confused atmosphere inside the US government and how plots Kennedy had authorized to sabotage and overthrow Castro's regime helped pave the way for Moscow's actions.

A relieved Kennedy displayed his characteristic black humor after the crisis. Referring to president Abraham Lincoln, who went to the theater to celebrate the triumphant end to the Civil War only to be assassinated, he told his brother: "This is the night I should go to the theater."

Kennedy was murdered a little more than than a year later, by an assassin who had belonged to a protest group called "Fair Play to Cuba."

+ Nikita Khrushchev

An uneducated peasant who clawed his way to the top of the Soviet leadership, Khrushchev was given to bold strokes and erratic moods.

His decision to station nuclear missiles in Cuba came out of anger over US warheads near his country's borders and an urge to punch back at the Americans.

But he made the gamble without a plan if the United States discovered the weapons before they were armed and operational.

As a result, he faced a stark choice -- pulling back the missiles or fighting a nuclear war.

The bald, rotund Khrushchev was known for his shoe-pounding antics and his threat to "bury" the capitalist system, but he was a far more multi-faceted character than his cartoonish image in the West.

The gentler side of the man known at home as Nikita Sergeyevich revealed a peasant who risked his life to denounce Stalin and who softened the edges of the Soviet system, opening the door to some Western-style products and freedoms.

His 11-year rule over the Warsaw Pact camp is remembered for his 1956 Party Congress speech condemning the cult around Stalin and a period known across Russia as "The Thaw."

Hitherto unseen books were published and jazz records filled store shelves. But -- far more importantly to Russians -- so did toilet paper and sausages.

The one-time miner was ousted in a well-coordinated conservative pushback in 1964, replaced by the no-nonsense Leonid Breshnev, and he lived out his days in obscurity at a Moscow dacha.

His handling of the Cuban missile crisis was cited by party leaders as one of the reasons for his removal from power. He died from heart failure at the age of 77 in 1971.

+ Fidel Castro

Castro came to power only three years before the missile crisis erupted, stunning the world by sweeping aside dictator Fulgencio Batista.

Khrushchev and the elderly men running the Soviet Union were enamored of the bearded revolutionary, who had defied the mighty United States and repulsed a botched invasion by Cuban emigres bankrolled by the CIA in April 1961.

Born August 13, 1926 to a prosperous Spanish immigrant landowner, Castro became a communist icon, an unrepentant anti-American leader who managed to hold on to power even after the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991.

He led a revolt in 1953 against the Batista regime but his attack on the Moncada barracks in Santiago de Cuba failed, landing him and his brother Raul in prison.

After two years, he was exiled to Mexico, where he built up a guerrilla force and rallied popular support in Cuba against Batista's corrupt rule.

One he toppled Batista, his sweeping Marxist land and economic reforms failed miserably. He turned to the Soviet Union for help and by buying up Cuba's sugar and other subsidies Moscow helped keep Castro's regime afloat despite a strict US embargo that is still in place to this day.

A survivor of numerous CIA plots and assassination attempts, the long-winded Castro tightly orchestrated public life from January 1959 until he suffered a health crisis in 2006 and delegated his duties to his brother Raul Castro.

"El Comandante," who now lives mostly out of public view due to his bad health, has never expressed regret for his his hardline stance during the missile crisis.

In a letter to Khrushchev, he advised Moscow to launch a nuclear attack on the United States before what he believed was an imminent invasion of Cuba.

When he learned of the compromise deal between Khrushchev and Kennedy that required Moscow to withdraw its nuclear missiles from the island, Castro was enraged.

Feeling betrayed and humiliated by his Soviet comrades, who did not consult him about the agreement beforehand, Castro unleashed a torrent of curses on hearing the news, kicking a wall and breaking a mirror, according to historical accounts.

Castro celebrated his 86th birthday in August, with official newspapers publishing congratulatory messages and youth concerts organized in his honor.

Related Links
Learn about nuclear weapons doctrine and defense at SpaceWar.com
Learn about missile defense at SpaceWar.com
All about missiles at SpaceWar.com
Learn about the Superpowers of the 21st Century at SpaceWar.com




.
.
Get Our Free Newsletters Via Email
...
Buy Advertising Editorial Enquiries


Cuban missile crisis gave rise to hot line with Moscow
Washington (AFP) Oct 9, 2012 - The Cold War "hotline" between the United States and the Soviet Union was borne out of the harrowing Cuban missile crisis, as leaders recognized the need for a direct channel of communication.

The tense days of October 1962 invited dangerous speculation on each side about their adversary's intentions, as messages from Moscow and Washington took hours to be translated and delivered.

A letter from October 26, 1962, in which the Soviets laid out a possible way out of the confrontation, was received by the US ambassador to Moscow at 9:42 am Washington time, but after being translated, transmitted and encrypted, it was after 9 pm by the time the note was in the hands of the State Department.

"World peace was hanging by a thread, but it took nearly 12 hours to deliver a message from one superpower to another," wrote Michael Dobbs in his seminal history of the crisis, "One Minute to Midnight."

Even when messages arrived, "they were couched in the opaque language of superpower diplomacy, which barred the writer form admitting weakness or conceding error."

To speed up communication and reduce the risk of nuclear war, the two governments put in place a "red phone" on August 30, 1963. In reality, it was neither red nor a telephone but a cable line that could transmit written messages.

In the 1970s, a satellite phone line was added, which also allowed for documents, maps or photos to be shared between the two governments.

The White House and the Pentagon have always kept secret exactly how many times the "red phone" has been used. Leaders employed the hotline during the Arab-Israeli wars of 1967 and 1973, and again with the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan in 1979.

Other lines of direct communication were later installed between Moscow and European capitals. In 1996, China established a "red phone" with Russia, then with the United States two years later. In 2005, India and Pakistan did the same.

In September 2011, the United States proposed opening a direct line with Iran to avoid a possible conflict erupting over the country's disputed nuclear program. Tehran declined the offer.



.

. Comment on this article via your Facebook, Yahoo, AOL, Hotmail login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle



NUKEWARS
Nukes must be eradicated, US ignoring the issue: Gorbachev
Vienna (AFP) Oct 08, 2012
Former Soviet president Mikhail Gorbachev called for the eradication of nuclear weapons and pointed a finger of blame at the United States for doing too little, in an interview published Monday. "When we talk about nuclear weapons and what's to be done about them, the answer is to get rid of them," he said in a video interview with the Vienna-based Preparatory Commission of the CTBTO, an org ... read more


NUKEWARS
Far, far beyond wrist radios

World leaders meet on disaster management in Japan

S. Korea labels chemical leak area 'disaster' zone

All 18 children confirmed dead in China landslide

NUKEWARS
City of Fayetteville Implements an All-in-One Fleet and Transit Management Solution

ATK Propulsion, Composite and Spacecraft Technologies Help Launch GPS IIF-3 Satellite

MundoGEO goes to Germany to participate in Intergeo

Boeing Modernizes GPS Network with 3rd GPS IIF Satellite

NUKEWARS
New human neurons from adult cells right there in the brain

Dating encounters between modern humans and Neandertals

Last speaker of 'fisherfolk' dialect dies

Compelling evidence that brain parts evolve independently

NUKEWARS
Nevada mountain lions moving into Calif.

Biodiversity meeting begins with funding plea

Homolog of mammalian neocortex found in bird brain

Ivory trade ban up for vote at UN wildlife summit

NUKEWARS
'Brain-eating' amoeba kills 10 in Pakistan: officials

Canada high court lowers bar for HIV disclosure

Chloroquine makes comeback to combat malaria

Saudi take steps to thwart epidemic at hajj: report

NUKEWARS
China vows graft fight in wake of Bo case

Calls to free China activist Liu two years

Bo's son 'suspected in plot to poison wife': report

Chinese actress sues US website over Bo link claims

NUKEWARS
Colombia hopes FARC deal will bring peace

Mexico captures Zetas cartel capo 'El Taliban': navy

Indian state in grip of a drug epidemic

Mexico captures Zetas cartel capo 'El Taliban': navy

NUKEWARS
IMF cuts Asian growth forecast as West's crises bite

Japan hosts IMF meet 50 years after economic miracle

IMF trims China 2012 growth forecast to 7.8%

As growth falters, analysts ask has Asia lost its mojo?


Memory Foam Mattress Review

Newsletters :: SpaceDaily Express :: SpaceWar Express :: TerraDaily Express :: Energy Daily
XML Feeds :: Space News :: Earth News :: War News :: Solar Energy News

.

The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2012 - Space Media Network. AFP, UPI and IANS news wire stories are copyright Agence France-Presse, United Press International and Indo-Asia News Service. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space Media Network on any Web page published or hosted by Space Media Network. Privacy Statement