A
Navy P-2H reconnaissance plane, the jet/prop hybrid capable of dual use
as a bomber, monitors a Soviet freighter with IL-28 bombers on deck during the
Cuban Missile Crisis.
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On October 22, 1962 President John F. Kennedy took the
airways to make a stunning announcement—The Soviet Union (USSR) was installing nuclear armed missiles in Cuba
which would be capable of striking targets virtually anywhere in the United States. Those of us alive and aware at the moment
knew that this was the most dangerous moment of our lives. The
Cuban Missile Crisis passed after a few days of breathless terror around
the world. Years later it was discovered
that an accidental trigger of nuclear war came even closer than we had
imagined.
Tensions between East and West had been building for sometime, particularly over the thorny
issue of Cuba. Early in his administration, Kennedy gave
the go-ahead to a CIA scheme hatched
under his predecessor to invade Fidel
Castro’s island with an army of Cuban exiles. Nervous about appearing to violate
international law with unprovoked military action, Kennedy had scrapped plans
to support the invasion with substantial U.S. air power. Predictably, the small invading force did not
excite the predicted public uprising on the island and was quickly
defeated. The U.S. was easily publicly
identified as the sponsor of the escapade and was publicly humiliated.
Sitting in Moscow Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev concluded that Kennedy was weak,
inexperienced, and indecisive. He
concluded the time was right to be much more aggressive either in Cuba or in Europe.
The Russian high command was also aware that despite Kennedy’s assertion
of a Missile Gap in the 1960
election, the Soviets were far behind the U.S. The Russian strategic offense still relied
heavily on long range bombers. Only a
relative handful of Inter-Continental
Ballistic Missiles (ICBM) were
operational and capable of striking the U.S. while America had hundreds. In addition American Thor Intermediate Range Ballistic Missiles (IRBM) had been based in Britain
since 1958. Then in 1961 Kennedy
authorized the placement of Jupiter
Medium Range Ballistic Missiles (MRBM)
in Italy and on the very border of
the USSR in Turkey. The Soviets were clearly more threatened by
the US nuclear arsenal than the other way around and were looking for a way to
rectify the imbalance.
Meanwhile Castro was convinced that the U.S. was preparing to invade his
island—with good reason. There was
significant pressure in Congress,
particularly the Senate, to take
military action against “the Communist
toe-hold” in the Western
Hemisphere. Kennedy kept up various CIA plots against Castro, including a number
of botched assassination ploys and the insertion of a number of agents to
prepare for an eventual invasion. He
declared an economic boycott of the island in February 1962. Meanwhile, the Joint Chiefs of Staff were actively preparing invasion plans with
the bellicose Air Force Chief of Staff
General Curtis LeMay advocating an all-out air strike.
In May, Khrushchev decided that he could defend Cuba, humiliate the U.S. and perhaps even win the withdrawal of the
missiles in Italy and Turkey by inserting Russian IRBMs, MRBMs, and Il-28 light bombers with nuclear arms
onto the island with the support and approval of the Cuban government. Final plans were approved in early July while
Soviet missile experts were already on the ground making preparations. Shipments of missiles and bomber began almost
immediately under great secrecy with a strong diplomatic cover of denying any
intent of providing offensive weapons to the Cubans.
In September, Congress passed a resolution authorizing the use of force
against Cuba in the event U.S. was threatened in any way. The Soviets countered that any action against
Cuba would be an act of war.
The first consignment of Soviet R-12
IRBMs arrived on September 8. More soon
followed. In addition R-14 MRBMs were on their way. By the end of the month the CIA was being
flooded with reports of missile activity in Cuba by its vast network of agents
and spies. These reports were not confirmed
because U-2 recognizance flights
over Cuba had been suspended since a Nationalist
Chinese U-2 had been shot down with a Surface
to Air (SAM) over the mainland
in August. It was known that the
Russians had already deployed SAMs to Cuba.
At the end of September, Navy
reconnaissance aircraft photographed a Soviet ship with large crates on its
deck the size and shape of Il-28 bombers. On October 12 the CIA transferred it U-2s to the Air Force. After the planes were re-painted, the first
surveillance flight over the Island in weeks took of on October 14. Among the more than 900 photos shot were a
series that clearly showed an SS-4
construction site at San Cristóbal, Pinar del RÃo Province, in western
Cuba.
At 8:30 in the morning of October 17 National
Security Advisor McGeorge Bundy briefed the President on the finding. That afternoon Kennedy convened the first
meeting of what would be designated Executive
Committee of the National Security Council (ECNSC) with which he would confer throughout the crisis. It included not only the Joint Chiefs,
Secretaries of Defense and State, head of the CIA, and Bundy but also the
President’s brother Attorney General
Robert Kennedy and Kennedy’s closest White
House aids. Reviewing a range of
options, the Joint Chiefs unanimously urged a full scale invasion of Cuba. Kennedy did not agree with their assertion
that the Russians would not act because it was within the U.S. sphere of influence. He did not believe that the Soviets would let
such a direct challenge go unanswered and that if they did not act in Cuba,
would surely do so in vulnerable Berlin. While no decision was reached at the
meeting, it was agreed to go ahead and make plans for several options.
On October 18, Kennedy met with the Soviet Foreign Affairs Minister Andrei Gromyko who denied shipping any
offensive weapons. Not wanting to tip
his hand that he knew differently, Kennedy only asked Gromyko to relay a stern
warning to Moscow.
New information from additional U-2 flyovers revealed at least four bases
under construction. The military was
placed on high alert, the 1st Armored
Division was sent to Georgia,
and five Army divisions were alerted
for a possible invasion. The Navy was
concentrating forces for a full scale blockade of the island and LeMay’s Strategic Air Command (SAC) dispatched nuclear armed
intermediate B-47 bombers to Florida and put the fleet of heavy B-52’s into the air.
Options were pared to two operational plans dubbed OPLAN
316 and OPLAN 312. The first was for a heavy air assault and
naval bombardment followed a full scale invasion by the Army and Marine Corps. There were significant logistical problems to
moving quickly to an invasion, including a critical shortage of amphibious
assault capacity and an inability to effectively move enough heavy armor to
counter the numerous—and superior—tanks provided by the Soviets to the
Cubans. The second plan envisioned an
air campaign starting with strikes at the missile facilities and flexible
enough to escalate up to and including the use of tactical nuclear weapons or
support of an invasion. Just about
everyone was convinced that some kind of solution by arms was inevitable.
ECNSC began to consider a full naval blockade as yet another option short
of initiating a shooting war. But the
State Department pointed out that under international law, a blockade itself
was an act of war. Kennedy doubted that
the Soviets would press against a blockade, however. While hawks on the council still pressed for
military action, Kennedy withheld a final decision. Chief
of Naval Operations Admiral George
Anderson presented an opinion that quarantine of offensive weapons only
instead of a blanket blockade would fall within acceptable international law,
particularly if it were undertaken as part of an international response. The Organization
of American States (OAS) had
already announced support of some kind of action against Cuba and Argentina and other nations had pledged
Naval forces for action at sea. By the
afternoon most members of the ECNSC, LeMay notably in dissent, were leaning to
the blockade/quarantine action.
The afternoon of October 22 Kennedy met with top Congressional leaders and
outlined the blockade action. To his
chagrin, he was met with demands for more direct military action and warned
that the administration could loose support of Congress if the country looked
weak. At the same time the American
ambassador to the USSR Foy Kohler,
informed the Soviets of intentions to announce and enforce a quarantine. U.S.
Allies around the world were also notified before the President took to the
American air ways at 7 PM Eastern
Standard Time.
Kennedy told the American people that, “It shall be the policy of this
nation to regard any nuclear missile launched from Cuba against any nation in
the Western Hemisphere as an attack on the United States, requiring a full
retaliatory response upon the Soviet Union.”
Then he outlined his plan:
To halt this offensive buildup, a strict
quarantine on all offensive military equipment under shipment to Cuba is being
initiated. All ships of any kind bound for Cuba from whatever nation and port
will, if found to contain cargoes of offensive weapons, be turned back. This
quarantine will be extended, if needed, to other types of cargo and carriers.
We are not at this time, however, denying the necessities of life as the
Soviets attempted to do in their Berlin blockade of 1948.”
During the speech American armed forces around the
globe were placed on Defense Readiness Condition (DEFCON) 3 status, an elevated state of
readiness.
It took the Soviets two days to formally respond
with a bellicose telegram from Khrushchev to Kennedy calling the naval embargo
a pirate action that would lead to
war. The cable was publicly released by
the TASS news agency.
On October 25 U.S. Ambassador to the U.N. Adlai Stevenson confronted Soviet Ambassador Valerian Zorin in an
emergency meeting of the Security
Council and Zorin refused to admit that his country was indeed sending
missiles and bombers to Cuba.
Readiness levels were raised to DEFCON 2 that afternoon for the first
time in history, meaning that one eighth of SAC’s heavy bombers were in the air
all times for an immediate strike and the rest were to be ready for take off
within 15 minutes. After learning from
intelligence reports that work was still being done on the missile
instillations, Kennedy ordered that bombers designated for use against the
Soviet Union itself be loaded with nuclear weapons. Kennedy was becoming convinced that a
shooting war was inevitable.
But that same day, as yet unknown to the Americas,
the Soviets turned around 24 ships headed for Cuba well ahead of the embargo line. They also initiated back channel negotiations
through ABC News reporter John Scali who met Aleksandr Fomin, the KGB (Soviet
security and spy service) chief in the U.S.
Fromin asked Scali to transmit an informal feeler on whether the U.S.
would be willing to reach a diplomatic solution that would trade a U.S. pledge
not to invade Cuba for a Soviet withdrawal of offensive weapons. The U.S. allowed the Brazilian government to pass word to the Soviets that an invasion
would be “unlikely” if the weapons were removed.
Later that day a long, emotional letter from Khrushchev
to Kennedy began to come over the wire to the State Department from
Moscow. After a delay in translation it
was presented to the president. The
letter re-confirmed the general offer relayed by Scali, “I propose: we, for our
part, will declare that our ships bound for Cuba are not carrying any
armaments. You will declare that the United States will not invade Cuba with
its troops and will not support any other forces which might intend to invade
Cuba. Then the necessity of the presence of our military specialists in Cuba
will disappear.”
Castro, on the other hand, was frantic that he was
being abandoned by his ally and wrote Khrushchev to launch an immediate attack
on the U.S, instead. Revelations years
later indicated that this had the effect of convincing the Soviets that Castro
was crazy and re-enforced their intention to find a negotiated settlement.
On the morning of October 27 Radio Moscow began broadcasting another proposal from Khrushchev
that differed from the one the day before in a significant way. It added the dismantlement of the American
missiles in Italy and Turkey to the list of conditions need for the Soviets to
withdraw their weapons. The U.S. had
already consulted with the Italians and Turks secretly about the possibility of
such a deal. The Turks were adamant
about keeping the missiles on their soil.
The Italians indicated that they were willing to go along. The U.S. had already concluded that the
Jupiter missiles had been made obsolete by the growing fleet of U.S. nuclear submarines armed with Polaris missiles. The President felt,
however, that the U.S. could not be publicly seen as acceding to Soviet
demands. Still, it was determined to
continue back channel communication.
Just as a ray of hope for a bloodless conclusion
was being seen, a U-2 was shot down by a SAM over Cuba. Kennedy had earlier declared his intention to
strike at the SAM sites, which were manned by Soviet troops, should an American
plane be shot down. Now he wasn’t sure
if it was a mistake. He decided not to
take action unless another plane was shot down.
Unbeknown the U.S. the Soviet commander of a SAM battery had acted on
his own authority and without orders.
The Russian command was afraid that further action against the
reconnaissance planes would be taken by the Americans as proof that they meant
to continue construction. They issued
direct orders not to fire on more high altitude over flights. Low
level flights, now being done a two hour intervals, however were still subject
to anti-aircraft fire from Cuban instillations.
That evening a new response to the Soviet
overtures was devised. The U.S. would
simply ignore the proposal from the radio broadcast and reply instead to
Khrushchev’s first letter. White House Special Counsel and Adviser Ted Sorensen
and Robert Kennedy drafted the response generally accepting the October 26
letter. Although it was nowhere to be
written, general assurances would be made that the U.S. would voluntarily
withdraw the Turkish and Italian missiles after a withdrawal of all Russian
hardware was confirmed.
Some felt that ignoring the second proposal put
Khrushchev in an impossible situation with his own security forces and believed
that he would reject the offer.
Preparations for war continued.
Air Force personnel were confined to their bases and told to be ready
for action. Target lists were being
developed and a hasty replacement government of Cuban exiles was being put
together. Messages were sent to NATO and other allies that war seemed
imminent.
On October 27 the Navy dropped small practice
depth charges on a Soviet submarine operating near the embargo line in an attempt to force it to
surface. In an unrelated incident, MiG fighters in the Soviet Far East were scrambled
because of a U-2 intrusion into Russian air space and American F-102 fighters were sent up over the Bering Sea. With tensions running so high, any incidents
any where in the world could trigger a war.
Finally the two sides agreed on a settlement with
the U.S. withdrawal of the Italian and Turkish missiles a secret
component. On Monday, October 29 Radio
Moscow broadcast Khrushchev’s official statement, “the Soviet government, in
addition to previously issued instructions on the cessation of further work at
the building sites for the weapons, has issued a new order on the dismantling
of the weapons which you describe as ‘offensive’ and their crating and return
to the Soviet Union.” President Kennedy
made a public statement welcoming the step toward peace and drafted a private
letter re-enforcing the agreement.
Quarantine operations continued until the Soviets
demonstrated their commitment to follow through. 42 missiles and their support equipment were
loaded onto eight Soviet ships which sailed from Cuba from November 5 through
9. The IL-28 bombers followed in
December. The United States honored its
commitment not to invade Cuba. It
quietly removed its missiles from Turkey and Italy by the following
summer. The moment of danger had
passed. The world did not blow
up—barely.
In 2002 a special meeting of participants from all
sides was held in Havana. It was there that the Americans learned for
the first time how close things had really been. They learned that for the only time in Soviet
history, commanders on the ground had authority to use battlefield nuclear
weapons against U.S, Forces on their own without waiting for clearances from
Moscow in the event of an invasion—or what looked like might be an
invasion. Even worse, the Soviet sub
that was attacked with practice depth charges was armed with nuclear torpedoes
and under instructions to use them if its hull was breached. The skipper had ordered a torpedo armed and
for several desperate minutes thought about using it against one of the Navy
ships hounding it. If it had, that would
have started the war.
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