On the morning of October 14, 1962, U-2 pilot Major Richard Heyser flew a long arc over western Cuba. The photographs he brought back — processed overnight and examined at the National Photographic Interpretation Center — showed the early stages of Soviet medium-range ballistic missile sites, weapons capable of reaching Washington and New York in minutes. McGeorge Bundy waited until morning to wake the president. What followed were thirteen days that brought the United States and the Soviet Union closer to thermonuclear war than the world has come before or since.
Peter Edmund Carrington's Cuban Missile Crisis narrative traces the full arc across twenty-four chapters, from Castro's revolution, the Bay of Pigs disaster, and Khrushchev's missile gamble through ExComm's secret deliberations, the naval quarantine, and the pivotal decisions of Black Saturday — October 27, 1962, when a U-2 was shot down over Cuba, a Soviet submarine was forced to surface with a nuclear torpedo aboard, and Kennedy told his brother he estimated the odds of nuclear war at one in three. The book names every key figure: Kennedy and Khrushchev, Robert Kennedy and Ambassador Dobrynin, Dean Rusk and Robert McNamara, and the local Soviet officers whose unauthorized decisions nearly ended civilization.
Kennedy estimated even odds of nuclear war on the evening of October 27. His refusal to retaliate for Anderson's shoot-down — against unanimous Joint Chiefs pressure — was the decision that kept the diplomatic track open. Carrington's Cuban Missile Crisis history shows exactly how close the rational pursuit of national interest came to irrational catastrophe, and what it took to pull back.
For readers of Martin Walker's THE COLD WAR and Michael Dobbs's ONE MINUTE TO MIDNIGHT.
Publication : 2 juin 2026
Intérieur : Noir & blanc
Support(s) : eBook [ePub]
Contenu(s) : ePub
Protection(s) : Aucune (ePub)
Taille(s) : 1,06 Mo (ePub)
Langue(s) : Anglais
EAN13 eBook [ePub] : 9798905168451