Monday, October 15, 2012

Morning Bell: Nuclear War Averted, 50 Years Ago This Week

To ensure email delivery directly to your inbox, please add
morningbell@heritage.org to your address book now.

If you're having trouble viewing this message, please view it online.

Morning Bell
10/15/2012

Nuclear War Averted, 50 Years Ago This Week

Fifty years ago, the world came to the brink of nuclear war.

On October 14, 1962, U.S. policymakers learned that the Soviet Union was building missile bases in Cuba, which would have allowed Moscow to attack anywhere in the continental United States within minutes. An international crisis followed, and while the crisis did not end in a nuclear exchange, it is important that U.S. policymakers never forget lessons the crisis taught us.

The most important one is that it is very difficult to manage allies once they are nuclear-armed.

Nuclear-armed allies are one thing; nuclear-armed enemies are another. As Iran builds its nuclear capability, the lessons of the Cuban Missile Crisis resonate in a fresh way.

Today, The Heritage Foundation looks back at that crisis of 50 years ago with a blog series on its lessons for missile defense, presidential leadership, crisis management, and avoiding escalation.

In this morning's first installment, Heritage experts Michaela Bendikova and Baker Spring remind us that "Fidel Castro and Che Guevara encouraged the Soviets to use ballistic missiles stationed in Cuba to attack the U.S."

Peter Brookes and Audrey Beck will examine President John F. Kennedy's leadership during the crisis, "a prime example of strong leadership—under intense pressure—that may have avoided an apocalyptic nuclear war." This serves as a sober reminder that such crises fall on the shoulders of Presidents.

While schoolchildren were being taught to "duck and cover" in the case of an attack, the Cuban Missile Crisis "inculcated among two generations of American policymakers a concern about the potential for inadvertent escalation and accidental war," as Dean Cheng will explain.

The U.S. faces a number of crises around the world right now. From Syria and Turkey to Libya, Afghanistan, and Iran, "the Obama Administration's policies for nuclear arms control, disarmament, and limited defensive capabilities are inadvertently serving to undermine the NATO security umbrella and increase the appetite for nuclear weapons in allied countries," Bendikova and Spring note.

Though 50 years may have passed, there are many dangerous similarities between then and now. As Ray Walser warns:
The toxic mix of nuclear weapons, rage against the U.S., and a readiness to embrace martyrdom for a cause—either sacred or secular—represents a danger in the world of October 2012 just as it did in October 1962.

Reflecting on the crises we have weathered provides key lessons for handling today's crises and evaluating our country's leadership. As JFK observed, "Domestic policy can only defeat us; foreign policy can kill us."


Twitter
 
Facebook

Print | Comments | Forward

FEATURED POSTS

50 Years Later: What the Cuban Missile Crisis Teaches Us About Nuclear Policy

Why Big Bird's Federal Subsides Need to Go

Debunked: Biden Claims HHS Mandate Not an Assault on Religious Liberty

Vice Presidential Debate: True/False Quiz on Medicare

VP Debate: Joe Biden's Three Most Misleading Foreign Policy Statements

QUICK HITS

Felix Baumgartner skydived from 128,100 feet to become the first person to break the sound barrier—without traveling in any type of vehicle.

Protestors of the idea of funding cuts to PBS are planning a "Million Muppet March" for November 3 in Washington, D.C.

"The 14-year-old Pakistani girl who was targeted and nearly killed by the Taliban for supporting education for girls has been flown to the United Kingdom for medical treatment," reports ABC News.

The Rolling Stones aren't done yet—the group will play four 50th anniversary gigs.

Heritage's Emily Goff explains why Big Bird's taxpayer subsidies need to go.



Heritage

Know anyone who shares your conservative values and principles and may want to receive the Heritage Foundation newsletters?  Please refer them to Heritage today!

Connect with Heritage

facebook Facebook twitter Twitter youtube YouTube youtube Kindle youtube Flickr


Support our work by becoming a member.  Donate today.
The Heritage Foundation
214 Massachusetts Avenue, NE
Washington, DC 20002-4999
Call us at (202) 546-4400

Add morningbell@heritage.org to your address book
to ensure that you receive emails from us.

No comments: