One Minute to Midnight: Kennedy, Khrushchev, and Castro on the Brink of Nuclear War

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One Minute to Midnight: Kennedy, Khrushchev, and Castro on the Brink of Nuclear War Page 53

by M. Dobbs


  With Kennedy's consent, Rusk telephoned: FRUS, Vol. XI, 275; Rusk, 240-1. Some scholars have questioned the reliability of Rusk's 1987 account of the approach to Cordier, but it seems fully consistent with the thrust of the previous ExComm debate and JFK's views on the Jupiters.

  "Junta for an Independent": State Department Coordinator for Cuban Affairs memo, October 27, 1962, JFKARC.

  "I cannot run my office": Miro profile, Time, April 28, 1961.

  "I know something": Reeves, 97.

  kept at "maximum readiness": Nestor T. Carbonell, And the Russians Stayed: The Sovietization of Cuba (New York: William Morrow, 1989), 222-3.

  a "volatile, emotional": CIA memo for Lansdale on Operation Mongoose ― Infiltration Teams, October 29, 1962, JFKARC; see also Lansdale memo on covert operations, October 31, 1962, JFKARC.

  "Friends simply do not behave": Allyn et al., Back to the Brink, 149.

  "He began to assess the situation": Alekseev cable to Moscow, October 27, 1962, trans. in CWIHP, 8–9 (Winter 1996-97), 291.

  His subsequent report to Moscow: Blight et al., Cuba on the Brink, 117. Alekseev said that he did not find out the truth about who shot down the plane until 1978.

  "almost fell into the water": Orlov interview.

  "This ship belongs": Ibid.

  Lookouts reported that the Americans: Mozgovoi, 93; Carrier Division Sixteen, Cuban missile crisis documentation, NSAW.

  "to throw off your pursuers": Orlov interview.

  Kennedy dismissed most: Salinger, John F. Kennedy, 125.

  a "piece of ass": Seymour Hersh, The Dark Side of Camelot (Boston: Little, Brown, 1997), 389. The need for sex was a recurring theme for JFK. He told Clare Boothe Luce that he could not "go to sleep without a lay."

  Mary telephoned Jack: White House phone records, October 27, 1962; WH social files, October 24, 1962, JFKL. Meyer's many visits to the White House were usually noted by the Secret Service. There is no evidence that she met JFK on October 27. It is unclear whether he returned her phone call, as he was able to make local calls without going through the White House switchboard. For a discussion of their relationship, see Nina Burleigh, A Very Private Woman (New York: Bantam Books, 1998), 181–227.

  "We'll be going": O'Donnell and Powers, 341.

  George Anderson retired to bed: CNO Office log, October 27, 1962; OPNAV resume of events, CNO Cuba, USNHC.

  to be "hostile": Gilpatric handwritten notes from 9:00 p.m. ExComm meeting, October 27, 1962, OSD.

  "Now anything can happen": October 28 Prensa Latina report, FBIS, October 30, 1962.

  CHAPTER FOURTEEN: "CRATE AND RETURN"

  "You dragged us into this mess": Troyanovsky, 250. For the time of meeting, see Sergei Khrushchev, Nikita Khrushchev, 351.

  "the danger of war and nuclear": September 1993 interview with CC secretary Boris Ponomaryev cited in Fursenko and Naftali, One Hell of a Gamble, 284; see Fursenko, Prezidium Ts. K. KPSS, 624, for Malin notes on Presidium meeting, October 28, 1962.

  The possibility that Soviet commanders on Cuba: Sergei Khrushchev, 335. Sergei reports that his father angrily asked Malinovsky whether Soviet generals on Cuba were serving in the Soviet or Cuban army. "If they are serving in the Soviet army, why do they place themselves under a foreign commander?" Since Sergei was not present at this conversation, I have not used the quote. However, the sentiment appears to be an accurate reflection of his father's views at the time.

  the "hour of decision": Troyanovsky, 251; Dobrynin, 88. Several writers have argued that Dobrynin's report on his meeting with RFK arrived too late to influence Khrushchev's reply to JFK. See, e.g., Fursenko and Naftali, Khrushchev's Cold War, 490, which claims that Khrushchev "dictated his concession speech…before he knew of Kennedy's own concession." This is a misreading of the October 28 Presidium record. The minutes do suggest that a smaller group of Presidium members convened later in the day to consider the Dobrynin report, and reply to it. However, they list the Dobrynin report as number three on an agenda of at least nine items that day, ahead of a letter to Fidel Castro and a telegram to Pliyev (number five on the agenda), which were both part of the original discussion. Other Presidium records show that several agenda items were debated "out of order."

  It seems probable, therefore, that the Dobrynin message arrived during the first part of the meeting, before Khrushchev dictated his letters to JFK and Castro, but became the subject of detailed discussion at the second session. This is consistent with Khrushchev's own memoirs and the memories of Oleg Troyanovsky, who was present at the first session. Together with the fragmentary Presidium record, Troyanovsky's account is the most authoritative version of what took place, and I have followed it closely.

  if he led them into a "war of annihilation": Khrushchev letter to Castro, October 30, 1962, NSAW.

  "Let none of you": Gribkov et al., U Kraya Yadernoi Bezdni, 167.

  had come to "deeply respect": NK1, 500.

  The Soviet people wanted "nothing but peace": FRUS, Vol. XI, 279.

  advised Castro to "show patience": Khrushchev letter to Castro, October 28, 1962, NSAW, trans. by the author.

  "We consider that you acted": Malinovsky telegram to Pliyev (pseudonym Pavlov), October 28, 1962, 4:00 p.m. Moscow time. NSAW Cuba, trans. by the author. Malinovsky sent a further message at 6:30 p.m. Moscow time, ordering Pliyev not to use S-75 SAM missiles and to ground fighter aircraft "in order to avoid collisions with U.S. reconnaissance planes." Translations of both documents are in CWIHP, 14–15 (Winter 2003), 389.

  "a long wire" or rope: CINCLANFLT message 272318Z, CNO Cuba, USNHC.

  "Korabl X": Log books of USS Beale, Cony, and Murray. See Submarine chronology prepared by NSAW.

  "Attention, attention please": Carrier Division Sixteen, Cuban missile crisis documentation, NSAW.

  to "behave with dignity": Mozgovoi, 94; Orlov interview.

  "The only thing he understood": Dubivko memoir, "In the Depths of the Sargasso Sea," trans. Savranskaya.

  "It's a disgrace": Mozgovoi, 109-10.

  "enjoyed ridiculing people": Gen. Horace M. Wade OH, AFHRA.

  "Shit, oh dear!": Unpublished Maultsby memoir.

  "demonstrated the seriousness": Sagan, 76.

  "You are a lucky little devil": Exactly how Maultsby came to overfly the Soviet Union, and the precise route he took on his way to and from the North Pole, would remain mysterious for many decades. Although the U.S. government admitted to a "serious navigational error" by the pilot that took him over Soviet territory, it did its best to hush up the embarrassing incident. McNamara demanded "a complete and detailed report" on what went wrong, but the results of the Air Force investigation have not been released. (McNamara memo to Air Force secretary, Cuban missile crisis files, Box 1, OSD.) Among the few official documents that this author was able to find relating to the incident were two charts showing Maultsby's route over the Soviet Union. The charts turned up in unexpected places in the records of the State Department and the JFK Library, suggesting that they may have been declassified inadvertently.

  Read in conjunction with astronomical maps, the charts confirm the personal recollections of Maultsby and the navigator who helped him return to Alaska. But they also undermine the widely accepted official assumption that he ended up over the Soviet Union because he took a wrong turn over the North Pole. In fact, they suggest that he never reached the Pole, and instead ended up somewhere in the vicinity of northern Greenland or the Queen Elizabeth Islands of northern Canada.

  The principal problem with the official version is an unexplained hour and a quarter of extra flying time. At 75,000 thousand feet, a U-2 was obliged to fly at constant speed of around 420 knots. Had Maultsby maintained this speed and made a wrong turn at the North Pole, he would have crossed over Soviet territory around 10:45 a.m. Washington time, rather than 11:59 a.m. The extra flying time equates to a detour of around six hundred miles.

  The most likely explanation for the aberration is that his compass interfered with his navigat
ional computations. In the vicinity of the North Pole, a compass is useless. Pilots had to rely on the stars, a gyro to keep them on a fixed heading, and accurate calculations of time and distance flown. According to another U-2 pilot, Roger Herman, Maultsby told friends that he forgot to unchain his gyro from his compass, an error that would have had the effect of pulling him in the direction of the magnetic North Pole, then located in northern Canada.

  According to the State Department chart, Maultsby entered Soviet territory not from the north, but from the northeast. This is consistent with his recollection that he observed the Belt of Orion off the left nose of his plane. Had he been flying southward from the North Pole, he would have seen Orion off the right nose of the plane.

  Gradually, the truth sank in: Vera interview.

  The CIA later said: Richard Helms memo, November 13, 1962, JFKARC.

  "operationally infeasible": Chronology of the Mathambre Mine Sabotage Operation, November 14, 1962, JFKARC. See also Harvey memo to Director of Central Intelligence, November 21, 1962, JFKARC. In his memos, Harvey said that the plan called for "only two immediate alternate rendezvous, on 22 and 23 October," i.e., four or five days after the saboteurs were dropped off. A "final pickup operation," in the event that these rendezvous were missed, was set for November 19. This chronology makes little sense. Everybody understood that it was likely to take longer than four days to carry out the sabotage operation. During the previous, unsuccessful attempt to target the copper mine, in early October, a sabotage team led by Orozco was retrieved after five days in Cuba. The October 22–23 pickup may have been designed for a separate arms-caching operation, and as a fallback in case Orozco and Vera failed to make it as far as Matahambre. There is no reason to doubt Vera's insistence that the main rendezvous date was between October 28 and 30, with a final fallback date of November 19.

  On the morning of Tuesday: Cuban interrogation report, November 8, 1962, Havana 2002, Documentos de los Archivos Cubanos, Vera interview.

  It was clear from the photographs: Blue Moon mission 5035, November 2, 1962, NARA.

  "within 11/2 to 2 hours": Moscow telegram 1115 to Secretary of State, October 28, 1962, SDX.

  With time running out: Troyanovsky, 252; Taubman, 575-6.

  sounded to him like a "shameful retreat": Sergei Khrushchev, 367.

  "If possible": Troyanovsky, 253.

  "I feel like a new man": O'Donnell and Powers, 341; Beschloss, 541.

  "I could hardly believe": Alsop and Bartlett, "In Time of Crisis," Saturday Evening Post, December 8, 1962.

  "felt like laughing": Wilson OH, JFKL.

  "a rose growing out": Abel, 180.

  between "one in three": Sorensen, Kennedy, 705.

  "a charade": JCS Poole notes.

  "an insincere proposal": NSAW Cuba.

  "It's the greatest defeat": Beschloss, 544.

  "Son of a bitch!": Franqui, 194, Thomas, 524. For the Castro account, see Blight et al., Cuba on the Brink, 214.

  Alekseev had been up late: Alekseev interview, CNN CW.

  The report reaching the North American: For a full account of this incident, see Sagan, 127-33. Sagan and other writers have given an apparently erroneous time: NORAD logs give the time as 1608Z, or 11:08 a.m. Washington time ― Sagan Collection, NSAW.

  "Everyone knows who were": Summary record of ExComm meeting, FRUS, Vol. XI, 283.

  "I don't think either of them": Sorensen interview, CNN CW.

  "a victory for us": Reeves, 424.

  "At last, I am going": Instructions to Dobrynin, October 28, 1962, NSAW; Dobrynin, 89–90.

  "All of them?": Gribkov and Smith, Operation ANADYR, 72.

  "Nikita, Nikita": Mario Vargas Llosa report, Le Monde, November 23, 1962.

  "watches, boots": CIA memorandum, The Crisis: USSR/Cuba, November 10, 1962, CREST.

  "Some experts and technicians": Telegram from Czechoslovak ambassador, October 31, 1962, Havana 2002, vol. 2.

  "First you urged me": Yesin et al., Strategicheskaya Operatsiya Anadyr, 57.

  "to tighten your belts": K. S. Karol, Guerrillas in Power (New York: Hill & Wang, 1970), 274.

  "This is the night": RFK, 110.

  AFTERWORD

  "dazzled the world": Arthur M. Schlesinger, Jr., A Thousand Days (Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1965), 851.

  "Adlai wanted a Munich": Alsop and Bartlett, "In Time of Crisis," Saturday Evening Post, December 8, 1962.

  "a dove from the start": Schlesinger, Robert Kennedy and His Times, 529.

  "a thought of breathtaking ingenuity": Schlesinger, A Thousand Days, 828.

  "the enormous tension that gripped us": Dobrynin, 83.

  Most books on the missile crisis: An exception is The Limits of Safety (1993), by Scott Sagan, a study about accidents involving nuclear weapons.

  "100 per cent successful": History of 4080th Strategic Wing, October 1962, FOIA.

  "an inner sense of confidence": Alsop and Bartlett, "In Time of Crisis."

  a policy of "progressive squeeze-and-talk": Kaplan, 334.

  "deeply influenced": Clark M. Clifford, Counsel to the President (New York: Random House, 1991), 411.

  "Very gung-ho fellows": Michael Charlton and Anthony Moncrieff, Many Reasons Why: The American Involvement in Vietnam (New York: Hill & Wang, 1978), 82, cited in Eliot A. Cohen, "Why We Should Stop Studying the Cuban Missile Crisis," The National Interest (Winter 1985-86).

  "You got away with it": Reeves, 424.

  "bright and energetic": Schlesinger, Robert Kennedy and His Times, 548.

  "incompatible with Soviet practice": NIE 85-3-62, September 19, 1962; for postmortem, see February 4, 1963, memo from President's Foreign Intelligence Advisory Board in McAuliffe, 362-71.

  "We all inhabit": JFK Commencement Address at American University, June 10, 1963.

  "plain dumb luck": Reeves, 425; see also "Acheson Says Luck Saved JFK on Cuba," WP, January 19, 1969.

  A NOTE ABOUT THE AUTHOR

  Michael Dobbs was born in Belfast, Northern Ireland, and educated at the University of York, with fellowships at Princeton and Harvard. He is a reporter for The Washington Post, where he spent much of his career as a foreign correspondent covering the collapse of communism. His Down with Big Brother: The Fall of the Soviet Empire was a runner-up for the 1997 PEN award for nonfiction. He lives in Bethesda, Maryland.

  ALSO BY MICHAEL DOBBS

  Saboteurs: The Nazi Raid on America

  Madeleine Albright: A Twentieth-Century Odyssey

  Down with Big Brother: The Fall of the Soviet Empire

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