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- Cuban Missile Crisis - Wikipedia
In response to these factors the Soviet and Cuban governments agreed, at a meeting between leaders Nikita Khrushchev and Fidel Castro in July 1962, to place nuclear missiles on Cuba to deter a future US invasion Construction of launch facilities started shortly thereafter
- Missile Locations In Cuba - Atomic Archive
The missile locations on Cuba during the Cuban Missile Crisis
- Cuban missile crisis | History, Facts, Significance | Britannica
The United States and the Soviet Union began developing intercontinental ballistic missiles, and in 1962 the Soviets began secretly installing missiles in Cuba that could be used to launch nuclear attacks on U S cities
- Map of the Range of Nuclear Missiles in Cuba, 1962
"Map of the western hemisphere showing the full range of the nuclear missiles under construction in Cuba, 1962," John F Kennedy Presidential Library and Museum
- The Cuban Missile Crisis, October 1962 - Office of the Historian
Despite the warning, on October 14 a U S U–2 aircraft took several pictures clearly showing sites for medium-range and intermediate-range ballistic nuclear missiles (MRBMs and IRBMs) under construction in Cuba
- Cuban Missile Crisis | JFK Library
For thirteen days in October 1962 the world waited—seemingly on the brink of nuclear war—and hoped for a peaceful resolution to the Cuban Missile Crisis In October 1962, an American U-2 spy plane secretly photographed nuclear missile sites being built by the Soviet Union on the island of Cuba
- The Hidden Nuclear Crisis: Uncovering the Soviet Missiles in Cuba
One week after American U-2 spy planes first photographed Soviet missile installations in Cuba, CIA analysts still couldn’t answer President Kennedy’s most urgent question: where exactly were the nuclear warheads hidden?
- Cuban Missile Crisis - NHHC
In the fall of 1962, the Soviet Union began construction on ballistic missile launch sites in Cuba The United States responded with a naval blockade For thirteen days, the fear of impending
- Military Response · Cold War (Western) · Santa Clara University Digital . . .
Upon receiving Soviet aid, Cuba began construction of Surface-to-Air missile (SAM) sites SAMs are defensive weapons, whose aim was to prevent an invasion from the United States The Soviet Union claimed that only defensive missiles were in Cuba, and no nuclear missiles would be brought
- Forty Years Ago: The Cuban Missile Crisis | National Archives
With the October 14 photographs, the United States had caught the Soviet Union building offensive nuclear missile bases in its backyard, and the two superpowers were now joined in the first direct nuclear confrontation in history
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