![]() The Cuban Missile Crisis is regarded as the closest the world has ever come to nuclear war. The largest "nuke" was the Soviet Tsar Bomba. The most recent nuclear test was by Korea, on Oct. 9, 2006. The Limited Test Ban Treaty banned all kinds of nuclear tests, i.e. underwater, save for underground ones. |
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The Cuban Missile Crisis is regarded as the closest the world has ever come to nuclear war. The beginning and end of the Crisis, as well as nuclear weapons threatened to be used, are all accounted for below.
The Crisis was mainly started by two countries in 1962,
one of them the USSR. A Soviet leader, Nikita Khrushchev, was worried
about the fact that the US had nuclear missiles only 150 miles away in
Turkey, short work for a missile. Also, Khrushchev knew that no matter
what Kennedy, President at the time, said while in his campaign, the
Americans had more missiles than the Soviets. Thus, the USSR felt
endangered. The other main cause was the Cuban fear of a US invasion.
Ever since the failed Bay of Pigs assault, Fidel Castro, a Cuban
dictator, had feared another, perhaps more successful, invasion of Cuba.
As a result, Castro turned to the Soviets for protection. Khrushchev
knew that the US was drafting "Operation Mongoose", a mock plan to
invade Cuba and was only too glad to place nuclear missiles only 90
miles from the American coast. With the installment of the missiles, the
Crisis was on. Nuclear missiles were the central factor in the Cuban
Missile Crisis. But exactly what is a nuclear weapon anyway? Nuclear
weapons or "nukes" as they are sometimes referred to, derive their
terrible abilities from nuclear reactions of fission or fusion, allowing
them to level entire cities. This weapon of mass destruction has only been used
twice in history, both in World War II, both on Japan, and both
manufactured by the USA. The two weapons were codenamed "Fat Man" and
"Little Boy." At the Trinity Site the first atomic weapon was detonated
with a probable yield of 20 kilotons. The first hydrogen bomb, "Mike,"
and was tested on Nov. 1, 1952 in the Enewetak atoll in the Marshall
Islands by the US. The largest nuclear weapon, the Soviet "Tsar Bomba"
had an approximate yield of 50 megatons and was tested at Novaya Zemlya
on Oct. 30, 1961. In 1963, every nuclear and many non-nuclear countries
signed the Limited Test Ban Treaty, which made them pledge to cease
nuclear testing in the atmosphere, underwater, or in outer space.
However, the treaty permitted underground tests. The last US test was in
1992, and the most recent test was done by North Korea on Oct. 9, 2006. When telling the public about the Crisis, Kennedy said he would
impose a blockade around Cuba. He thought that blockade sounded
the least like a proclamation of war. Towards the end of the Crisis, Khrushchev sent
Kennedy two conflicting letters. One letter stated that the Cuban
missiles would be removed if the US promised not to invade Cuba. The
other was slightly more threatening. It said that if the Americans had
missiles in Turkey, close to the USSR, why shouldn’t the Soviets have
missiles in Cuba, close to the US? Kennedy of course stuck with the
first letter and said that if the USSR removed the missiles, the USA
would end the quarantine of Cuba and would promise not to invade said
island. Khrushchev had until Oct. 27 to respond. If they didn’t reply by
then, the US would conduct a military invasion of Cuba. On the 27th
exactly, the USSR said they would remove the missiles. The dreaded
Crisis was finally over. In less than two months the missiles were gone. Though it was a tense
time for both countries, something good came out of it. A year later,
the Nuclear Test Ban Treaty was signed, stating that neither country
would detonate bombs during atmospheric testing. For more information:
Ms. Garrido's Class |
Mrs. Lebenson's Class Copyright © 2007, Terry Hongell - Pocantico Hills School All rights reserved |
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