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View Full Version : The Man Who Saved the World?


Coot
12-19-2004, 12:48 AM
Quite possibly, or perhaps he was a rational man doing his job in an irrational environment. Still, the story of Stanislav Petrov (http://www.dfw.com/mld/dfw/10439151.htm?1c) is an interesting read. I wonder how many more of these types of incidents are unreported? I wonder how many times we were a hair's breadth from nuclear winter?

Obligatory teaser:

The man who saved America -- and probably the world -- is living out his days on a measly pension in a dank apartment in a forlorn suburb of Moscow. He has a bad stomach, varicose veins and a mangy spotted dog named Jack the Ripper.

There was a time when Petrov, now 65 and a widower, was almost larger than life. He was a privileged member of the Soviet Union's military elite, a lieutenant colonel on the fast track to a generalship. He was educated, squared away and trustworthy, and that's why he was in the commander's chair on Sept. 26, 1983, the night the world nearly blew up.

Tensions were high: Weeks earlier, on Sept. 1, Soviet fighters had shot down a Korean airliner, killing all 269 people aboard.

Petrov was in charge of the secret bunker where a team of 120 technicians and military officers monitored the Soviet Union's early-warning system. It was just after midnight when a new satellite array known as Oko, or The Eye, spotted five U.S. missiles heading toward Moscow. The Eye discerned that they were Minuteman II nuclear missiles.

Petrov's computer was demanding that he follow the prescribed protocol and confirm an incoming attack to his superiors. A red light on the computer that read START! kept flashing at him. And there was this baleful message: MISSILE ATTACK!

Petrov had written the emergency protocol himself, and he knew he should immediately pick up the hot line at his desk to tell his superiors that the Motherland was under attack.

He also knew that time was short. The senior political and military chiefs in the Kremlin would have only about 12 minutes to wake up, get to their phones, digest Petrov's information and decide on a counterattack.

The article itself is a fluff piece with a "dire" warning at the end (yawn), but I'd be very much interested in the real facts of this episode and its internal fallout in the then SU.

ethics
12-19-2004, 01:20 AM
That's not the guy, at least not THE guy who saved the world. The real guy was murdered, savagely by the GRU and he was a GRU (prestigious) member himself.

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