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Vasili Arkhipov - the man who saved the world
#1
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vasili arkhipov: The man who saved the world

matt blitz may 2, 2013 http://www.todayifoundout.com/index.php/...d/#respond

[Image: nuclear-missile-340x225.jpg]in 1962, the u.s. And the soviet union were on the brink of possible mutual destruction- the world as a whole was facing a possible nuclear winter and all the devastation that would come with it. The cold war had been escalated to "tepid" and was close to becoming hot with the failure of the bay of pigs in 1961 and the ensuing cuban missile crisis.
In may 1962, soviet president nikita khrushchev and cuban president fidel castro reached a "secret" agreement that allowed the soviets to start building missile sites in cuba, including stocking them with nuclear missiles- 42 of them.
It should be noted here that the u.s. At this time had nuclear missiles in turkey and italy that could hit moscow within 16 minutes of being launched. On the flip-side, the soviets had plenty of nukes pointed at and perfectly capable of destroying the u.s.' allies throughout europe. However, the soviets did not have nearly the capability to destroy targets in the u.s. Itself. Certainly they had enough nukes to destroy all the major cities in the u.s. And more, but they were lacking in reliable intercontinental ballistic missiles to adequately function as a "mutual destruction" deterrent. Indeed, there were some among the u.s. Brass that felt the loss of allies throughout europe and the lesser direct causalities from long range nukes that managed hit their targets in the u.s. Were acceptable losses given the payoff would be the annihilation of the soviet union and the end of that threat to the united states. So if the soviet union had nukes in cuba, that tipped the balance in the cold war back to near even, rather than in the u.s.'s favor as before.
In the fall of 1962, the united states sent a us u-2 aircraft to fly over cuba to attempt to confirm the rumors that they had heard about the soviet missile sites in cuba. On october 14th, 1962, the u-2 arrived back with pictures of these missiles sites. A day later, the pictures were presented to president kennedy. Tensions rose and alarms were sounded. And, thus, on october 15th, 1962 the 13-day ordeal that became known as the cuban missile crisis began.
Vasili arkhipov was born on january 30th, 1926 to a poor, peasant family near moscow in the town of staraya kupavna. At the age of 16, he began his education at the pacific higher naval school. Vasili saw his first military action as a minesweeper in the pacific theater at the tail end of world war ii. In 1947, he graduated from the caspian higher naval school and served on submarines in the soviet black sea, northern, and baltic fleets. In 1961, vasili got his first taste of crisis management in an incident that, while extremely momentous, wasn't even close to what he'd help with later.
This first incident happened when vasili was appointed deputy commander of the new k-19 sub (known today as "the widowmaker" more details below), one of the first soviet nuclear subs, which was also equipped with a nuclear ballistic missile. On july 4th, 1961, as the sub was conducting exercises near greenland, a major leak was discovered in the radiant cooling system. Since no backup cooling system was installed pre-sail, the reactor on the sub was in real danger of a nuclear meltdown. In order to prevent a nuclear accident unlike any the world had ever seen before, the captain of the sub sent workers into high-radiation areas to build a cooling system on the spot. Every member of the sub did what they could to prevent disaster. Vasili, lending his engineering expertise, helped contain the overheating reactor. The crew succeeded, but not before these workers and many on the crew developed radiation sickness. Every worker that was sent as first responders into the high-radiation areas died within days. Due to this, a mutiny nearly erupted on board the k-19 sub. Vasili backed his captain in continuing the work and was, eventually, awarded a medal for his bravery in a time of crisis and loyalty to the soviet union. All of this, though, was a precursor to the day vasili arkhipov saved the world.
After his time on the k-19 sub, vasili was made second in command on the b-59, one of four attack submarines that was ordered to travel to cuba on october 1st, 1962. The sub contained 22 torpedoes, one of which was nuclear, holding the same strength as the bomb that was dropped on hiroshima. The captains of each of the four subs were given permission to fire their nuclear torpedoes at their own discretion, so long as they had the backing of the political officer on board. Unknown to the crew of the b-59, the united states began their naval blockade of cuba on october 24th and informed the soviets that they would be dropping practice depth charges (think warning shots) to force subs to surface and be identified.
Moscow could not communicate this information to the b-59 due to it being too deep underwater to receive radio transmissions. On october 27th, 1962, us destroyers and the aircraft carrier uss randolph located the sub, trapped it, and began dropping depth charges to force it to surface. The sub's crew, which had been traveling for nearly 4 weeks with very little communication with moscow, was very tired and not aware of circumstances. The sub's captain, valentin savitsky, believed that nuclear war had already broken out between the soviet union and the us and wanted to fire the nuclear torpedo.
Fortunately, particularly given the heightened tensions at the time, in this case, one other person had veto power over firing besides the captain and the political officer, the second in command vasili arkhipov. Vasili, despite being second in command on the b-59, was the leader of the fleet of the four soviet subs sent. Had vasili not been present, nuclear war would have likely happened as both the captain and the political officer wanted to launch the nuclear torpedo. Vasili vehemently disagreed, arguing that since no orders had come from moscow in a long time, such a drastic action was ill-advised and the sub should surface to contact moscow. A heated argument broke out- legend, probably false- says punches were thrown. Eventually, though, vasili won the day (his reputation as a hero in the k-19 mutiny reportedly helped in the debate) and the sub surfaced. Upon meeting their american enemies, they were instructed to head back to russia. They obliged, (additionally, they began to have mechanical issues on board the sub) and headed east. Nuclear war was averted. Vasili arkhipov was a hero… again.
When the sub arrived back in russia, the crew of the b-59 were met with trepidation. After all, they had pretty much surrendered to the americans. Said one russian admiral to the submariners, "it would have been better if you'd gone down with your ship."
despite the not-so-hero's welcome he originally received from the soviets upon his return, to his wife, olga, vasili was always the man who saved the world,
the man who prevented a nuclear war was a russian submariner. His name was vasili arkhipov. I was proud and i am proud of my husband, always.
.

My bolding.

Charming fuckers, those members of the US brass who felt that nuclear annihilation in Europe was an acceptable cost for their murdering madness.

People like this ought to be placed in the firing line, unprotected, and sit there as the prey for being the first casualties. If they survive the "event" ask them how it felt.

I suspect it might change their mind. But I'm not certain of it.
The shadow is a moral problem that challenges the whole ego-personality, for no one can become conscious of the shadow without considerable moral effort. To become conscious of it involves recognizing the dark aspects of the personality as present and real. This act is the essential condition for any kind of self-knowledge.
Carl Jung - Aion (1951). CW 9, Part II: P.14
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#2
There is a certain similarity between the foregoing and the film The Bedford Incident, staring Richard Widmark, which I remember watching a long time ago. The plot is as follows (from Wiki):

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Plot [edit]

The American destroyer USS Bedford (DLG-113) detects a Soviet submarine in the GIUK gap near the Greenland coast. (Specifically, they are in Greenland territorial waters at the entrance to the J.C. Jacobsen Fjord, which is due northwest from Iceland.) Although the U.S. and the U.S.S.R. are not at war, Captain Eric Finlander (Widmark) harries his prey mercilessly, while civilian photojournalist Ben Munceford (Poitier) and NATO naval advisor, Commodore (and ex-World War II U-boat captain) Wolfgang Schrepke (Portman), look on with mounting alarm. Because the submarine is not powered by a nuclear reactor, its submerged run distance is limited, critical when it also needs breathing air and to recharge its batteries. This gives Finlander an advantage, but also means the Soviets will be more desperate. Also aboard the ship are Ensign Ralston (James MacArthur), an inexperienced young officer constantly being criticized by his captain for small errors, and Lieutenant Commander Chester Potter, USNR (Martin Balsam), the ship's new doctor, who is a reservist recently recalled to active duty.
Munceford is on board in order to photograph life on a navy destroyer, but his real interest is Captain Finlander, who was recently passed over for promotion to rear admiral. Munceford is curious whether a comment made by Finlander regarding the American intervention inCuba, is the reason for his non-promotion, perhaps betraying veiled aggression. He is treated with mounting hostility by the captain because he is seen as a civilian putting his nose where it does not belong and because he disagrees with Finlander's decision to continue with an unnecessary and dangerous confrontation. Finlander is hostile to anyone who is not involved in the hunt - including the doctor, who will not stand up to the captain and advise that the pressure on the crew be reduced.
The crew becomes increasingly fatigued by the unrelenting pursuit during which the Captain demands full attention to the instruments. When the sub is found and ignores Captain Finlander's demand to surface and identify itself, Finlander escalates by smashing into the sub's snorkel, calling it floating debris. Finlander then orders Bedford to arm weapons and withdraw a distance, where he will wait for the sub's crew to run out of air and be forced to surface. He reassures Munceford and Schrepke that he is in command of the situation and that he will not fire first, but: "If he fires one, I'll fire one." Ensign Ralston mistakes Finlander's remark as an order to "Fire One" and launches an anti-submarine rocket, which destroys the submarine. Their sonar detects a salvo of four nuclear-armed torpedoes coming at the destroyer. Finlander gives basic orders to evade, then goes outside. Despite Munceford's frantic pleading, Finlander does nothing more to save his ship, perhaps because he recognizes that there is no way of escaping. The film ends with still shots of various crewmen "melting" as if the celluloid film were burning as Bedford and her crew are vaporized. The last image is an iconic, towering mushroom cloud from the torpedo detonations.
The shadow is a moral problem that challenges the whole ego-personality, for no one can become conscious of the shadow without considerable moral effort. To become conscious of it involves recognizing the dark aspects of the personality as present and real. This act is the essential condition for any kind of self-knowledge.
Carl Jung - Aion (1951). CW 9, Part II: P.14
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#3
David - excellent, thanks.

Oliver Stone's judgement in episode 6 of Untold History is courageous and appropriate.

I'm reminded of Tony Scott's Crimson Tide, where for box office reasons the events unfold on an American submarine.

We do have the pleasure of watching fine performances from Gene Hackman and Denzel Washington.
"It means this War was never political at all, the politics was all theatre, all just to keep the people distracted...."
"Proverbs for Paranoids 4: You hide, They seek."
"They are in Love. Fuck the War."

Gravity's Rainbow, Thomas Pynchon

"Ccollanan Pachacamac ricuy auccacunac yahuarniy hichascancuta."
The last words of the last Inka, Tupac Amaru, led to the gallows by men of god & dogs of war
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