Cuban Missile Crisis
A CLEAR AND PRESENT DANGERThe time had come for President Kennedy to brief the American people. He had reached his first-response decision: a "strict quarantine on all offensive military equipment under shipment to Cuba." He signed the quarantine order (Proclamation 3504) in the Oval Office.
No one (including the Soviets) knew why JFK wanted broadcast time. When people throughout the country (including Soviet representatives in the United States) tuned in at 7 p.m. on October 22, they had no idea what the President would say. After he spoke, life for the world's populations would never be the same: The President flatly accused Gromyko and other Soviet officials of lying to him. He warned the American people of difficult days ahead: He also spoke to the Soviets: The United States Strategic Air Command moved from DEFCON 5 (Defense Condition 5 - Normal Peace Readiness) to DEFCON 3 (Increase in Force Readiness) during the President's speech. B-52s were dispatched to maintain airborne alert. The gauntlet was thrown down. How would the Soviets respond?
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Table of Contents
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Biographies
History
- American Colonies
- American Revolution - Highlights
- Assassination of Abraham Lincoln
- Assassination of John F. Kennedy
- Auschwitz: Place of Horrors
- Book Burning and Censorship
Disasters
- America Attacked: 9/11
- Black Death
- Challenger Disaster
- Columbia Space Shuttle Explosion
- Deepwater Horizon: Disaster in the Gulf
- Fatal Voyage: The Titanic
Philosophy
- Bagger Vance and and the Bhagavad Gita
- Bonhoeffer: Martyr of Faith
- C.S. Lewis
- Dead Sea Scrolls
- Easter Story
- Freedom of Religion


















