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October 22, 1962.
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US President John F Kennedy deploys a fleet of warships to Cuba.
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To intercept Soviet cargo ships, which are already on the way, transporting nuclear missiles to the island.
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Kennedy strategically called the impending showdown:
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"A strict quarantine of all offensive military equipment.”
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What it really was, was a blockade – which is an act of aggression.
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One wrong move on either side would trigger an all out nuclear war.
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And it all started here, a week earlier.
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With an aerial photograph that doesn't seem to show much, unless you're looking for something specific.
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Pretty much immediately following the allied victory in World War II, the United States and Soviet Union became bitter enemies,
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kicking off a decades-long struggle for global influence known as the“Cold War”.
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Espionage and intelligence were at the center of this conflict, most crucially surrounding the mutual buildup of nuclear arsenals capable of unprecedented levels of destruction.
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But the US initially had a hard time keeping track of their nemesis.
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The Soviet Union was notoriously secretive, and hid itself, and its actions from the world.
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"An iron curtain has descended across the continent."
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「Nobody knows what Soviet Russia intends to do in the immediate future."
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Then-US President Dwight D Eisenhower saw a solution that built on experimental intelligence gathering from World War II:
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Aerial photo analysis.
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In the late 1950s, the new high-altitude U-2 spy plane took photo reconnaissance to the next level.
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It was equipped with a powerful camera and could fly at a staggering height of 70,000 feet or roughly 13 miles above Earth's surface.
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“These cameras are described as capable of spotting a golf ball on a putting-green from 40,000 feet.”
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In 1961, Eisenhower authorized the creation of a new surveillance arm of the CIA:
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the National Photographic Interpretation Center, or NPIC.
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This small team of photo interpreters was trained in photogrammetry the science of determining measurements from photographs.
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Using this method, an expert photo interpreter could identify specific equipment hidden in the tiny details of photographs
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and recognize signs of nuclear missile site construction.
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So what's all this got to do with Cuba?
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After the failed Bay of Pigs invasion in 1961, where the US attempted to overthrow Cuba's communist government, ties between the Soviet Union and Cuba strengthened.
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The US worried that the Soviets might use Cuba as a nuclear missile base.
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If so, they would suddenly have the Western Hemisphere within range of nuclear weapons.
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The CIA began flying U-2 missions over Cuba and bringing the imagery to the NPIC,
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whose photo interpreters pored over every detail, searching for evidence of Soviet presence on the island.
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It was like looking for a needle in a mile-long haystack – that's how much film a single U-2 mission yields, covering huge amounts of land.
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But on October 15th, 1962, Dino Brugioni, a senior photo interpreter, found something.
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This photo proved, beyond doubt, that the Soviets were building nuclear missile sites in Cuba.
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Brugioni identified military tents and trucks, arranged in known-Soviet patterns.
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Launcher equipment.
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And, most critically, missile transport trailers measuring 65 feet in length.
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Which, when compared to a photo taken in Moscow, made it a perfect match for the Soviet SS-4,
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which had a range of 1,100 nautical miles, meaning American cities as far as Washington, DC would be in reach.
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When the NPIC briefed Kennedy on what they'd found, the president ordered a scaling up of U-2 missions to photograph and analyze all of Cuba.
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Photo analysts updated Kennedy daily and in secret on their progress, which gave them time to decide how to confront the Soviet Union.
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Given the evidence, Kennedy was strongly advised to launch air strikes against the missile sites and invade Cuba.
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But he took a more measured approach with his "strict quarantine of all offensive military equipment.”
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Which kicked off 6 intense days between the US and the Soviet Union,
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with Soviet Premier Nikita Krushchev calling Kennedy's move “an act of aggression that pushes mankind to the abyss of world nuclear missile war.”
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"Round the clock processing of their film shows that work on the missile sites is being accelerated."
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The damning photos were revealed to allies at the United Nations, as the US military rapidly mobilized and was placed on high alert, and Cuba prepared for another invasion.
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But when Soviet freighters reached the quarantine line….
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"A Soviet-chartered vessel Amaruchla is stopped, boarded, and inspected, then cleared to proceed to Cuba."
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"Apparently the Soviet vessels loaded with offensive weapons have turned back."
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A few days later, Kennedy received a message from Kruschev.
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The Soviet Union had agreed to withdraw from Cuba in exchange for the US removing missiles it had placed in Turkey and Italy.
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So, the nuclear missile sites were dismantled and the Soviets left.
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Transporting their nuclear missiles with them back across the Iron Curtain.
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In a personal thank you letter to the NPIC, Kennedy emphasized the importance of the analysis
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and interpretation of the Cuban photography in advising the US's response in what is now called the Cuban Missile Crisis.
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"In summary: the Soviet Union did embark upon a bold venture to establish clandestinely in the Western Hemisphere a major offensive weapons base."
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"That they were deterred in this effort is in large part attributable to the type of reconnaissance photography that we have just reviewed."