Thirteen Days: The Cuban Missile Crisis

In October 1962, a U-2 spy plane photographed something that nearly ended the world. Over thirteen days, two men — Kennedy and Khrushchev — stared at each other across an ocean, with hundreds of nuclear warheads in between. This is the story of the decisions, the near-misses, and the one submarine officer who may have saved us all.

Thirteen Days: The Cuban Missile Crisis
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In October 1962, a U-2 spy plane returned from a routine flight over Cuba carrying photographs that changed everything. The grainy black-and-white images showed nuclear missile launch pads under construction — 90 miles from Florida. What followed were 13 days that brought the world closer to nuclear war than it has ever been before or since. This episode walks through the full sequence: Kennedy's secret inner circle, Khrushchev's miscalculation, the naval standoff, and the single Soviet officer deep underwater who may have kept the planet in one piece.
The story moves through some genuinely remarkable human moments — a ship captain deciding to turn back at the quarantine line, two leaders exchanging letters across a four-hour telegraph delay, a back-channel lunch between a spy and a journalist at a Washington restaurant. And then there's Vasili Arkhipov, a name most people have never heard, whose decision in a sweltering submarine became one of the most consequential acts of the entire Cold War.
The episode closes with what happened next: within months of the crisis ending, a direct telephone link was installed between Washington and Moscow — because both sides had just learned, the hard way, what happens when nuclear-armed leaders can only shout at each other on a four-hour delay.

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