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Paperback Awaiting Armageddon: How Americans Faced the Cuban Missile Crisis Book

ISBN: 1469608839

ISBN13: 9781469608839

Awaiting Armageddon: How Americans Faced the Cuban Missile Crisis

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Book Overview

For thirteen days in October 1962, America stood at the brink of nuclear war. Nikita Khrushchev's decision to place nuclear missiles in Cuba and John F. Kennedy's defiant response introduced the possibility of unprecedented cataclysm. The immediate threat of destruction entered America's classrooms and its living rooms. Awaiting Armageddon provides the first in-depth look at this crisis as it roiled outside of government offices, where ordinary...

Customer Reviews

4 ratings

Another Side of the Cuban Missile Crisis

As most readers are aware, the Soviet Union secretly placed missiles with nuclear warheads in Cuba during the early 1960s, touching off what is generally known to history as the Cuban Missile Crisis. For many who lived through it, this was the scariest week of their lives. Nuclear war might have come at any moment. While scores of books and articles have been written on this event, most have been concerned with the political, diplomatic, and/or military aspects. Alice George in her 2003 book AWAITING ARMAGEDDON chose to focus mainly on the impact of the crisis on the US population. What does she reveal? Her single most important point is how ill-prepared in civil defense the country was at the time (and after). Preparation to preserve both the civilian population and the civilian government in case of attack was sadly lacking. If a nuclear attack against the US had taken place, the country would have suffered millions and more likely tens of millions of deaths. Ms. George attempts to explain why people in the US never "embraced" civil defense. Her identifying a conflict between hope and fear leading to "a sort of paralysis" (p. 11) is somewhat murky. She says the public abdicated civil defense concerns to their leaders (e.g. the Truman and especially the Eisenhower and Kennedy administrations), nad their leaders failed them. Oh sure, there existed public fall-out shelters in some areas. But most were lacking not only in food and other necessities, but they even lacked identifying signs. And of course most families did not invest in expensive personal shelters. One of the most interesting and provocative statements in the book is that "perhaps ten million Americans fled their homes after [President Kennedy] revealed the presence of missiles and threatened to remove them". (p. 189) Really? Nowhere in this book does the author pursue or elaborate this point. Why? She does quote from interviews she conducted with people who lived during the crisis, but we hear nothing from or about those who supposedly fled. This chapter that never was might well have been the most fascinating one in her book . . . at least for this reader. In the end, while the missiles didn't fly in 1962, civil defense didn't fly either after those terrible days, for as George says: "Americans did not come out of the Cuban Missile Crisis campaigning for civil defense." (p. 167). But when you think about it, can there be any effective or meaningful civil defense against nuclear war? Tim Koerner September 2010

How we faced doomsday

The material itself is pretty good, once you get past the nay-saying of the threat of communism and the typical "Red Scare" rhetoric (extremely out of place in a book written about a crisis triggered by the creation of a Soviet missile base within missile range of D.C. and NYC). I had expected a collection of personal anecdotes by Soldiers, civilians, housewives, policymakers, etc. but instead it is a book of contexts and social reactions. How did the state of U.S. civil defense effect government workers? How did mobilization effect Soldiers sent to Florida? How did the media view the Blockade? The author puts all this together in a way that is informative and easy to read. She also has the latest information that we have discovered about the missile crisis, including the presence of Soviet tactical nukes in Cuba. A good book but it was just short of being an EXCELLENT book. Especially when the author seems to imply that there was somthing wrong with anticommunists... men and women who opposed a system which killed millions in the name of political correctness.

Nuclear Confrontation 2006?

Just what would the government tell us at the brink of a nuclear war? I believe very little. The intense media we have over relatively small events today would certainly amplify the helpless feeling of not just the US population but of the world about another nuclear confrontation. What I was looking for in this book was a description of the sheer terror that people might feel if we thought Russia or China was about to attack. Ask someone the sequence of events leading up to a nuclear attack in progress and the answers vary widely. If people knew how bad a nuclear attack, just one warhead, would be and thought it was about to happen they would be dropping on the streets from fright. The author describes this when comparing 1962 to the 2001 terrorist attacks. Compound the feeling most people had that day many times over and you can imagine the emotional and physical affect on people. Next take away the tv, phones, Internet and power as the attack gets underway and life in a digital void is a frightening thought. The section about effects on children is interesting as some experts told adults to confront and talk about the issue with the children. Others told adults to just shut off the television/radio and don't over stimulate the child. Seemed like good advice for 2001 when children in school were subjected to continuous television replays with aircraft crashing into buildings. Good topic and book.

Fear of World's End

With the precision of a journalist, Dr. Alice George returns a generation of baby boomers to a protracted period of dread. Her delvings into a broad span of source material, scholarly and popular, touch anew the terrors of the Cuban Missile Crisis, a time when people began to see the world as finite. As the current administration searches for weapons of mass destruction and biological killers, those of us old enough to remember the 1960s can recall the helpless feeling of squat-and-duck exercises that had no chance of protecting us from nuclear fallout. Well done, Dr. George.
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