General / Off-Topic It could have all ended in the 80's - Thermo Nuclear War. RIP Russian who saved the world.

The 80's. Synth pop, Wham, bad hair (both sexes), and a very close call when the MAD systems that Russia and America had built up during the Cold War nearly messed up. A Russian defence officer made a brave call and because of him we are all here to know about it. Anyway that person died the other day, so RIP Colonel Stanislav Petrov, and thank you so much for the future you allowed to exist. In my family we will remember your name and toast your memory :)

https://arstechnica.com/tech-policy...e-officer-who-saved-the-world-dies-at-age-77/
 
This is the fellow who made Grunge possible by preventing the end of the world.

I have mixed feelings.

( Seriously, RIP Colonel Petrov, a true citizen of the world.)
 
Reprise!

'It could all have ended in the 1960's!':

Soviet submarine officer who averted nuclear war honoured with prize:

https://www.theguardian.com/science...rted-nuclear-war-awarded-future-of-life-prize

A senior officer of a Soviet submarine who averted the outbreak of nuclear conflict during the cold war is to be honoured with a new prize, 55 years to the day after his heroic actions averted global catastrophe.

On 27 October 1962, Vasili Alexandrovich Arkhipov was on board the Soviet submarine B-59 near Cuba when the US forces began dropping non-lethal depth charges. While the action was designed to encourage the Soviet submarines to surface, the crew of B-59 had been incommunicado and so were unaware of the intention. They thought they were witnessing the beginning of a third world war.

Trapped in the sweltering submarine – the air-conditioning was no longer working – the crew feared death. But, unknown to the US forces, they had a special weapon in their arsenal: a ten kilotonne nuclear torpedo. What’s more, the officers had permission to launch it without waiting for approval from Moscow.

Two of the vessel’s senior officers – including the captain, Valentin Savitsky – wanted to launch the missile. According to a report from the US National Security Archive, Savitsky exclaimed: “We’re gonna blast them now! We will die, but we will sink them all – we will not become the shame of the fleet.”

But there was an important caveat: all three senior officers on board had to agree to deploy the weapon. As a result, the situation in the control room played out very differently. Arkhipov refused to sanction the launch of the weapon and calmed the captain down. The torpedo was never fired.

Had it been launched, the fate of the world would have been very different: the attack would probably have started a nuclear war which would have caused global devastation, with unimaginable numbers of civilian deaths.

“The lesson from this is that a guy called Vasili Arkhipov saved the world,’’ Thomas Blanton, director of the National Security Archive at George Washington University, told the Boston Globe in 2002, following a conference in which the details of the situation were explored.

What is it about heroic russians saving the world we never knew about?! ;)
 
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