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| Press releases, selected documents,
photographs, audio clips and other material from the
historic conference in Havana. | |
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| Documents, naval charts and other declassified
records on the U.S. hunt for Soviet submarines during the most
dangerous days of the crisis. |
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| Read the analysis of contemporary historians
as they sift through the historiography and more recent
evidence to learn the lessons of
history. |
The
Declassified History. At midday,
and again in the early evening of October 16, 1962, John F.
Kennedy called together a group of his closest advisers at
the White House. Late the night before, the CIA had produced
detailed photo intelligence identifying Soviet nuclear
missile installations under construction on the island of
Cuba, some ninety miles off the Florida coast; now the
president and his men confronted the dangerous decision of
how the United States should respond . . . [More] |
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The
Most Dangerous Moment. If the
Cuban Missile Crisis was the most dangerous passage of the
Cold War, the most dangerous moment of the Cuban Missile
Crisis was the evening of Saturday, 27 October 1962, when
the resolution of the crisis—war or peace— appeared to hang
in the balance . . . [More] |
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Annals
of Blinksmanship. Now that the
Cold War is over, its history has become a growth industry,
though in truth there was no great shortage of historical
analysis even while the war was going on. Today, however,
one finds a certain generational divide as perhaps the
salient characteristic of the enterprise . . . [More] |
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Turning
History on Its Head. For nearly
forty years most American accounts of the Cuban Missile
Crisis of have left Cuba out of the story. With the
blockbuster film "Thirteen Days" the story now ignores the
Soviet Union as well. The film turns history on its head and
drums into our heads exactly the wrong lessons of the
crisis. . . [More] |
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Read original Washington
Post coverage of the Cuban Missile Crisis as it unfolded
40 years ago this week |
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