Stephen Schwartz Profile picture
Oct 27, 2021 27 tweets 10 min read Read on X
Fifty-nine years ago today—October 27, 1962—was arguably the most dangerous day of the Cuban Missile Crisis, a day when human error and sky-high tensions together nearly started World War III by accident at least three separate times. Here's what happened: Image
While flying a scheduled Strategic Air Command air-sampling mission out of Eielson Air Force Base, Alaska, over the North Pole to collect debris from Soviet atmospheric nuclear tests, Capt. Charles Maultsby’s U-2 accidentally strayed into Soviet airspace for more than an hour … ImageImage
starting at 8:00am Alaska time (Noon in Washington, DC) because he was blinded by the aurora borealis and unable to navigate accurately using the stars. MiG-19 fighters were scrambled from Pevek Airport on the Chukotka Peninsula at 11:56am EDT (and a little later from Anadyr) … Image
but were unable to shoot down the U-2. Although Strategic Air Command was able to track Maultsby and the MiGs by eavesdropping on Soviet air defense communications, they could not share this vital information with him because those capabilities were a closely-held secret. Image
Instead, SAC guided Maultsby home by instructing him to turn left until Orion’s Belt was off his right wingtip (thereby flying westward and back to Alaska). Alaska Air Defense Command scrambled two F-102s from Galena Air Force Base to guide Maultsby home and intercept the MiGs. ImageImage
Because DEFCON 3 had been ordered earlier in the week, the conventional weapons normally carried by the aircraft had been removed and each F-102 Delta Dagger was now armed with a Falcon air-to-air missile carrying a .25-kiloton (250 tons) W54 nuclear warhead. ImageImage
Maultsby actually ran out of fuel after leaving Soviet airspace and had to glide to a safe landing at a remote airstrip in Kotzebue, Alaska, at 2:25pm EDT, after flying 10 hours and 25 minutes (making his the longest U-2 flight on record).
Incredibly, SAC did not inform SecDef Robert McNamara of Maultsby’s wayward flight until 1:41pm EDT. McNamara hurriedly left a meeting with the Joint Chiefs of Staff and telephoned President Kennedy four minutes later. The Pentagon notified the State Department at 1:47pm EDT. Image
President Kennedy famously said of this very dangerous incident, “There is always some son-of-a-bitch who doesn't get the word.” But Maultsby was not at fault because no word had ever been given. No one at SAC had thought to review or suspend these flights during the crisis.
McNamara immediately ordered a second U-2 air-sampling mission to the North Pole already in the air to be recalled and subsequently canceled all U-2 air-sampling missions pending a full Air Force investigation into Maultsby’s errant flight (which remains classified to this day).
(Maultsby’s mistake made the New York Times front page the next morning, after Khrushchev disclosed the incident in a letter to Kennedy. Neither leader specified the type of aircraft involved and Khrushchev politely but firmly stressed the risk to peace such flights entailed.) ImageImage
Meanwhile, Strategic Air Command rushed the first Minuteman 1A ICBM onto full alert at Launch Facility A-06 at Malmstrom AFB, Montana (some sources say this happened on October 26). Five more followed by October 30. Test missiles were also made war ready at Vandenberg AFB, CA. Image
As Scott Sagan wrote in “The Limits of Safety,” to make these ICBMs ready for war quickly (SAC went to DEFCON 2 on October 24), Air Force personnel jury-rigged systems and improvised their own safety procedures. Said one, “I could have launched it on my own, if I had wanted to.” Image
At 11:19am EDT, over eastern Cuba, Soviet air defense forces at Banes shot down a U-2 reconnaissance plane piloted by Maj. Rudolf Anderson, Jr., out of fear it would discover that 3 FKR nuclear-armed cruise missiles had been deployed just 15 miles from Guantanamo Naval Base. ImageImage
That evening, Soviet Foxtrot-class submarine B-59 was submerged in international waters off Cuba when a group of 12 US Navy vessels located it. In order to identify it, the ships began dropping grenades and practice depth charges to force it to surface. nationalgeographic.com/culture/articl…
Submarine B-59 had been unable to surface for four days. As a result, it was excessively stuffy and carbon dioxide levels were dangerously high. And because it was not designed for tropical conditions, temperatures inside were almost unbearable, ranging from 122˚ F to 142˚ F. Image
To remain hidden from US forces, B-59 was sailing too deep to monitor radio traffic. No one aboard knew if the crisis had escalated into an actual war. Exhausted, confused, and rattled by the explosives, the captain ordered a torpedo to be prepared to launch at his tormentors.
Executive officer Vasili Arkhipov, 34, who was aboard the B-59 and also commodore of the entire Soviet submarine flotilla in Cuba, refused to authorize the torpedo launch and—following an argument—convinced Captain Valentin Savitsky to relent, surface, and await further orders. Image
(Fun Fact: in July 1961, Arkhipov was aboard the nuclear-powered ballistic missile submarine K-19 when it suffered a catastrophic reactor accident that killed 23 crew members—8 of them within one to three weeks—and nearly led to the loss of the submarine.)
When the B-59 surfaced, US ASW aircraft harrassed it with searchlights, flares, and tracer fire. Savitsky and others on the bridge panicked, believing they were under attack. He ordered a 10-kt nuclear torpedo readied for launch and turned the sub toward the destroyer USS Cony.
Cdr. William Morgan, the Cony’s captain, ordered Ens. Gary Slaughter to apologize for the aggressive tactics with a flashing signal light. Savitsky had already gone below. Arkhipov and a signals officer were about to descend when the officer and his light got stuck in the hatch.
Momentarily delayed, Arkhipov saw Slaughter’s flashing message and instantly understood its meaning. He ordered a halt to all preparations to fire the nuclear torpedo, although it remained in its tube. Savitsky acknowledged the apology, closed his torpedo doors, and turned away. Image
The incredible story of the B-59 and Vasili Arkhipov was very effectively dramatized in this October 2012 episode of “Secrets of the Dead”:
In addition to all that, the US and the USSR each conducted atmospheric nuclear tests today in 1962. The US test—Calamity (part of Operation Dominic)—involved an 800-kiloton device airdropped and detonated at 11,780 feet 164 miles SE of Johnston Island.
The Soviet test—codenamed 192—involved a 260-kiloton device airdropped and detonated 5,090 feet above Area C at the arctic archipelago of Novaya Zemlya. Image
The crisis eased the next day when Khrushchev announced on Radio Moscow all Soviet nuclear missiles in Cuba would be dismantled and removed. But it only ended on Nov. 20 when nuclear-capable bombers flew home. (Decades later, we learned 158 Soviet warheads were also in Cuba.) ImageImage
A good clarification from @CobraBall3. By the time the first Minuteman 1A ICBMs were hastily activated on this day in 1962, SAC already had 132 Atlas E/F and Titan I ICBMs—each armed with a 4.5-Mt W38 warhead—deployed and on alert as the crisis intensified.

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More from @AtomicAnalyst

Oct 3, 2023
Today in 1986, 680 miles NE of Bermuda, the Soviet Yankee 1-class ballistic missile submarine K-219 was on patrol when seawater leaked into a missile tube, triggering an explosion of the missile’s volatile liquid fuel that killed three sailors and crippled the submarine.


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Under very dangerous conditions, the crew managed to shut down the submarine’s reactors and stabilize it. Captain Igor Britanov was ordered to have the K-219 towed by freighter 4,300 miles to its homeport of Gadzhiyevo (near Murmansk), but it flooded and sank three days later. Image
The K-219—including its two nuclear reactors, 16 submarine-launched ballistic missiles, and 32-48 thermonuclear warheads—sank in 18,000 feet of water to the bottom of the Hatteras Abyssal Plain. Image
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Sep 29, 2023
This afternoon in 1957, in the closed city of Chelyabinsk-65 near Kyshtym in the Southern Urals, a stainless steel tank holding 70-80 tons of highly-radioactive waste left over from processing plutonium for nuclear weapons exploded, releasing 20 million curies of radioactivity. Image
While the explosion was chemical in nature (much of the liquid waste evaporated over time, leaving behind a volatile dry mixture of sodium nitrate and sodium acetate), a brief nuclear criticality may have initiated it. The explosion’s size has been estimated at 5-100 tons of TNT.
The explosion completely destroyed the tank and damaged two adjacent ones. About 90 percent of the radioactive waste fell to the ground in the immediate vicinity of the tank, while about 10 percent was lofted by the wind in a plume up to 1 kilometer high and 300 kilometers long. Image
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Sep 19, 2023
Today in 1980 at about 3:00am, the highly-volatile liquid fuel of a nuclear-armed Titan II ICBM exploded inside an underground silo 3.3 miles north-northeast of Damascus, Arkansas, and approximately 50 miles north of the capital of Little Rock, destroying the missile and silo.

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The explosion—which occurred more than 8 hours after a worker accidentally dropped a large socket, puncturing a fuel tank—killed Sr. Airman David Livingston, 22, destroyed the missile and silo, and hurled its 9-Mt W53 warhead through the 740-ton silo doors and ~100 feet away.


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Note also the unintentionally ironic, below-the-fold headline in the St. Louis Post-Dispatch that day, beneath the article about the catastrophic accident: “Would Use A-Bomb If Necessary To Defend U.S., Carter Warns.” Image
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Sep 17, 2023
Today in 1955, a specially-modified B-36 bomber—the NB-36H—made its first test flight out of Carswell AFB, Texas, carrying (but not powered by) an operational 1-Megawatt air-cooled nuclear reactor. It would make 46 additional flights over Texas and New Mexico through March 1957. Image
The NB-36H flew directly over Lake Worth, the principal water source for Fort Worth. A B-50 carrying specially-trained paratroopers escorted each test flight. Had the NB-36H crashed, they would jump into the impact zone to prevent any unauthorized entry.
A 12-ton lead-and-rubber-shielded cockpit with windows 10-12 inches thick protected the flight crew from the otherwise lethal amount of radiation emanating from the reactor hanging in the bomb bay. Special water pockets installed aft of the cockpit also absorbed radiation.
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Sep 14, 2023
OTD in 1954—for its ninth nuclear test—the USSR staged a live-fire nuclear wargame ~600 mi. SE of Moscow near Totskoye. At 9:33am (local), a 40-kt atomic bomb exploded 1,150 feet in the air between two groups of soldiers, some just 2 miles from the blast.
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Exposures that day were reportedly ten times the maximum allowable level for US soldiers for an entire year. The 1,000,000 people who lived within 100 miles of the blast were given no warning at all. For more about this “monstrous” exercise, see: washingtonpost.com/archive/politi…
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Sep 11, 2023
On September 11, 2001, US Strategic Command was one week into its annual Global Guardian nuclear command and control exercise. Bombers had been armed with nuclear weapons, ICBMs and several SSBNs were on alert, and three E-4B command posts were airborne. omaha.com/local/on-strat…
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In 2016, @warkin and @rwindrem reported that three dozen live nuclear weapons were loaded aboard strategic bombers at three US Air Force bases that day. The other bases were almost certainly Minot AFB in North Dakota and Whiteman AFB in Missouri. nbcnews.com/storyline/9-11…
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