J
JimG
Guest
pThe whole thing (Cuban Missile Crisis in 1962) seems indefensible to me. Why is it wrong for Russia to have missiles near the US, but it is not wrong for the US to have missiles near Russia?
In 1962, the U.S. primary deterrent force was B-52 bombers on alert status constantly. They would have had a several hours flight time to hit targets in Russia. The Minuteman I ICBM had just come on line, with only one launch control center operational. It takes two LCF’s to insert a launch command into the system. (One of the issues in the 1960 presidential campaign was the alleged “missile gap” with the USSR.) Russian had land based ICBM’s. Any attack by ICBM’s would have given us about 30 minutes warning time. When the USSR placed intermediate range nuclear missiles in Cuba, their flight time to DC or NYC would have been five minutes, and Russian commanders did not need prior Moscow authorization. It was considered a serious imbalance of deterrence which could not be allowed to stand. And it didn’t.
Now, of course, both sides have submarine based nuclear missiles.