The Day USA!USA!USA! ACTUALLY Ordered a Nuke Strike Against Russia

12 A10 Warthogs were deployed to Romania a few days ago. Hundreds of USA tanks in the Balkans. Poland erecting “watch towers” along its border on the lookout for a supposed Russian invasion. Everyone agrees that the Ukie Nazis will restart the slaughter in the East within two months.  General Breedlove, USA’s NATO Nazi Commander, fabricates stories out of thin air that Russia has invaded Ukraine … an “invisible invasion” they call it …. since there’s no proof.  We, the USA!, are completely surrounding Russia with our military. Russian Generals talk about the possibility of a nuke war … USA Generals think we can win it.

We NARROWLY averted a nuke Armageddon in 1962.

We won’t be so lucky next time. Coming soon, to a theater near you.

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US Veterans Reveal 1962 Nuclear Close Call Dodged in Okinawa

During the Cuban Missile Crisis, US missile men stationed in Okinawa actually received an order to launch their nuclear missiles.

At the final moment of the Cuban Missile Crisis in October 1962, the U.S. nuclear missile men in Okinawa received a launch order which was later found to have been mistakenly issued, according to testimonies by former U.S. veterans given to Kyodo News.

In the fall of 1962, the Soviet Union introduced nuclear missiles into Cuba from where Moscow could target the mainland of the United States. U.S. President John F. Kennedy and his top advisers then seriously considered military options as a countermeasure, and the two superpowers were on the brink of nuclear exchanges.

The testimonies by the veterans, who gazed into the “abyss” of a nuclear war, shed new historical light on a nuclear close call which could have triggered the use of nuclear weapons, highlighting the potential risk of an accidental nuclear launch.

According to John Bordne, 73, former member of the 873rd Tactical Missile Squadron of the U.S. Air Force, several hours after his crew took over a midnight shift from 12 a.m. on Oct. 28 in 1962 at the Missile Launch Control Center at Yomitan Village in Okinawa, a coded order to launch missiles was conveyed in a radio communication message from the Missile Operations Center at the Kadena Air Base.

Another former U.S. veteran who served in Okinawa also recently confirmed on condition of anonymity what Bordne told Kyodo News in an interview last summer and in following e-mail exchanges. Bordne has mentioned the incident in an unpublished memoir based on his diary.

Eight “Martin Marietta Mace B” nuclear cruise missiles were deployed at that time at the Yomitan missile site, called “Site One Bolo Point” by U.S. military personnel. Bordne, who currently lives in Blakeslee, Pennsylvania, was one of seven crew members there.

There were a total of four Mace B sites in Okinawa including Bolo Point. Each site had eight missiles which were commanded and controlled by the Missile Operations Center at Kadena.

The main daily mission of Bordne, one of the flight-control specialists called Mech2, was to maintain the ready-to-launch status of Mace B missiles. Normally, once they started an eight-hour shift at the site, they “recycled” a missile, meaning powering down a missile, checking parts of the warhead, nosecone and flight control systems and returning it to ready-to-launch status.

“Oh, my God!,” Bordne recalled his colleagues as saying as they turned white with shock and surprise when they received a launch order before dawn on Oct. 28. The order was issued from Kadena to all four Mace B sites in Okinawa including Bolo Point, he said.

According to him, the three-level confirmation process was taken step-by-step in accordance with a manual by comparing codes in the launch order and codes given to his crew team in advance. All of the codes matched.

“So, we read the targets out loud. Out of the four missiles, we had only one headed toward Russia. The other three were not going to Russia. That, right away, gave us a start to wonder. Because the launch directive said you launch all the missiles,” Bordne said. His crew team was in charge of four out of eight missiles deployed at the site.

“And we figured, ‘Why hit these other countries?’ They’ve got nothing to do with this. That doesn’t make any sense,” Bordne said. “So, our captain, the launch officer, said to us ‘We’ve got to think this through in a logical, rational manner’.”

When the launch order was issued, the five-level ​“DEFCON” scale, or defense condition, remained at level 2, one step from starting a war. Theoretically, a launch order should not be issued unless DEFCON is raised to 1, which means initiating a military counterattack against enemy forces.

The order under DEFCON 2 made the crew team, especially the launch officer, so dubious about its authenticity that the officer ordered suspension of the ongoing launch procedures which Bordne was engaged in.

Finally, the launch officer figured out that the order had been mistakenly issued, Bordne said, but added he has no idea why such an order was issued. Even though Bordne did not specify which country had been targeted besides Russia under the order, it is believed to be China considering the Mace B missile range of 2,200-2,300 kilometers.

It is not clear what caused such a wrong launch order to be issued, but a U.S. U-2 spy plane was shot down over Cuba just a few hours before the order was conveyed to the Mace B sites in Okinawa.

Other former U.S. veterans in Okinawa recalled tense moments during the Cuban Missile Crisis in interviews with Kyodo News, even though they did not have direct knowledge about the aborted nuclear missile launch order, which seems to have been handled as a military secret.

“I knew I was never going home. If we had launched our missiles and they had launched their missiles, there would be nothing to go back to,” Bill Horn, a 71-year old former colleague of Bordne, recalled of the moment when he listened to the presidential address on Oct. 22, 1962, which made public the Soviet buildup of a missile base in Cuba.

“Everybody in that part of the Air Force, or in the military service, knew at that point in time that peacetime would be over, that there would be no more wars to fight…1962 was the closest we ever came to complete annihilation of civilization as we know”, said Horn, who lives in Cookeville in Tennessee.

On Oct. 24, two days after the presidential address, the U.S. Strategic Air Command, the command unit at the time of a nuclear war, raised the ​“DEFCON” level from 3 to 2 without consultation with Kennedy.

“Going to DEFCON 2 was disturbing since DEFCON 1 is all-out war. DEFCON 2 is one step from war,” said Larry Havemann, another Mace B veteran who was stationed in Okinawa during the Cuban Missile Crisis.

“Since I was trained on the nuclear weapon I knew that if all the missiles were unleashed there would not be much left of this world or the people on it. That haunts me to this day,” Havemann, 73, told Kyodo News in Sparks, Nevada.

After DEFCON 2 was issued, U.S. forces took a posture to be ready for war within 15 minutes.

The crisis ended on Oct. 28, when Soviet leader Nikita Khrushchev announced that he would withdraw nuclear missiles from Cuba.

Author: Stucky

I'm right, you're wrong. Deal with it.

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4 Comments
Montefrío
Montefrío
April 7, 2015 11:52 am

Well do I remember October, 1962, well but not fondly. I recently reread Hiroshima, a short book that should be required reading in secondary school. Back then, we had Fail Safe and On the Beach and Dr. Strangelove to put nuclear war in perspective. A movie that would be worthwhile for the young and perhaps not so young is the more recent (80s) English “Threads”, grimmer by far than The Day After or even The Road. Truly, one would have to be insane to consider “the nuclear option”. One thinks of the Herman Kahn-esque character in Fail Safe. Such a person must be nearly entirely bereft of imagination. A nuclear war in this day and age? Madness, pure and simple. If persons of influence in the Pentagon are employing and listening to the likes of Mr. Watts, we should be seriously concerned and not a small bit frightened. I dislike using words like “frightened”, given that they’re often applied to situations that while disturbing are not truly “frightening”, but this one admits an element of legitimate fear, imho.

One tries to convince oneself that those responsible for such grave matters are certainly aware that a nuclear war must be considered inconceivable, but one knows that one is kidding oneself, trying to keep the bad thoughts away, so to speak. Could there REALLY be those who would…?

Yes, Virginia, as the old Spanish refrán goes: “No creo en brujas, pero que las hay las hay”, which amounts to “I don’t believe in witches, but they exist”. So do perfectly normal appearing people who harbor strange and dangerous fantasies.

Westcoaster
Westcoaster
April 7, 2015 4:52 pm

I was 10 years old in 1962 and remember the “duck & cover” drills. I also remember a day when all the Radio stations signed off except the “Conelrad” stations at 640 and 1240 to “test” the system. It was a very scary time to be alive, if you were paying attention.