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Cold War 1945-1991

The Cuban Missile Crisis: Thirteen Days on an Atomic Knife Edge, October 1962

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This gripping Cold War history chronicles the events that brough the world to the edge of nuclear war—and the political drama that averted disaster.The Cuban Missile Crisis of 1962 was the closest the world has yet come to nuclear war, a time when the hands of the Doomsday Clock really did inch towards the witching hour of midnight. By placing nuclear missiles on the Caribbean island of Cuba where, potentially, they were able to threaten the eastern seaboard of the USA, Nikita Khrushchev and the Soviet Union escalated the Cold War to a level that everyone feared but had never previously thought possible.In a desperate and dangerous game of brinkmanship, for thirteen nerve-wracking days Premier Khrushchev and President Kennedy held the fate of the world in their hands. Kennedy, in particular, wrestled with a range of options – allow the missiles to stay, launch an air strike on the sites, or invade Cuba. In the end, he did none of these. But the solution to one of the deadliest dilemmas of the twentieth century proved to be a brave and dramatic moment in human history.

251 pages, Kindle Edition

Published October 30, 2017

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Phil Carradice

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Profile Image for mark propp.
532 reviews4 followers
December 10, 2024
serviceable book. runs through the facts & the story in what i assume is a solid way. i came into this with minimal knowledge of the crisis, & the writer dutifully filled in the gaps for me.

i definitely found his nice attitudes to castro & guevara very offputting, & got the feeling at times that the author's sympathies would probably not align with my own.

regardless i appreciated the concise, steady way this laid out the facts. & it's short. i'm not a particularly fast reader, & i got through it in about 5 hours. yay for short books.
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