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Kennedy averts Cuban Missile Crisis disaster

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The military, almost unanimously, demanded a nuclear airstrike to destroy the missile sites. However, after much thought and soul-searching, the president agreed with his brother that such a military strike could well precipitate a nuclear war.

Instead, he instituted a naval blockade of Cuba (although he called it a “quarantine” because a blockade is considered an act of war), which was successful in convincing Khrushchev to back down.

Up to Oct. 14, when Kennedy received the photographic proof of the missile sites’ construction, the Russians, especially Ambassador Anatoly Dobrynin, who openly lied to Kennedy in a face-to-face encounter, but also Khrushchev, repeatedly stated that the Soviets were not supplying Castro with offensive missiles. Finally, however, the Soviet premier, having been caught with his “hand in the cookie jar,” saw the folly of supplying missiles to Castro and agreed to their removal.

Kennedy wisely gave Khrushchev a face-saving out by agreeing to the removal of, what were obsolete, U.S. missiles in Turkey and stating that the U.S. was not contemplating an invasion of Cuba.

President Kennedy’s adroit, statesman-like handling of the Cuban Missile Crisis was his crowning achievement. He went against the advice of the military and many of his advisers to pursue a peaceful, but as it turned out, eminently successful solution to what could well have ended in a nuclear conflict.

• Crystal Lake resident Joseph C. Morton is professor emeritus at Northeastern Illinois University and author of “The American Revolution” and “Shapers of the Great Debate at the Constitutional Convention of 1787.” Email him at demjcm@comcast.net.

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