Heather Cox Richardson
The Cuban Missile Crisis lasted for thirteen tense days in October 1962. During those days, the USSR faced off against the U.S. over the placement of Soviet missiles in Cuba. President Kennedy vowed not to permit missiles so close to America; Premier Krushchev vowed to put them in Cuba
anyway. The two week standoff was the closest the Cold War ever came to erupting into a hot war.
And with nuclear weapons widespread, it would have been a hot war, indeed.
The J.F.K. Library has put together a website that enables a viewer to experience each day of that crisis.
United States Department of Defense graphic in the John F. Kennedy Presidential Library and Museum, Boston. |
The Cuban Missile Crisis lasted for thirteen tense days in October 1962. During those days, the USSR faced off against the U.S. over the placement of Soviet missiles in Cuba. President Kennedy vowed not to permit missiles so close to America; Premier Krushchev vowed to put them in Cuba
anyway. The two week standoff was the closest the Cold War ever came to erupting into a hot war.
And with nuclear weapons widespread, it would have been a hot war, indeed.
The J.F.K. Library has put together a website that enables a viewer to experience each day of that crisis.
A Tense October
Reviewed by Joseph Landis
on
October 18, 2013
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