October fury

October fury
About this book
"Not even the president knew the real danger. When U.S. spy planes revealed the presence of Soviet missiles in Cuba in 1962, President John E. Kennedy responded with a naval "quarantine" to send a clear signal to Khrushchev. The Cuban missile crisis had begun. In a tense encounter, U.S. Navy ships and aircraft intercepted a group of Soviet submarines in the midst of the blockade ringing Cuba. The encounters that followed proved far more perilous than the participants knew at the time.
One wrong move could have made them the first casualties in an all-out nuclear war." "In October Fury, a U.S. Navy officer who served on one of the ships involved reveals the startling truth behind the single most harrowing moment of the Cold War: Each of the four Soviet submarines was armed with a nuclear-tipped torpedo - and their commanders had authority to fire these weapons.".
"Drawing on his own experiences as well as the personal accounts and observations of U.S. and Soviet officers and sailors, Peter Huchthausen transports you to the deadly center of this showdown at sea. In a vividly detailed narrative worthy of Tom Clancy, Huchthausen takes you on board the U.S. destroyers and Soviet submarines, re-creating the all-too-real events that brought the two superpowers to the very brink of mutual annihilation."--BOOK JACKET.
Details
- OL Work ID
- OL566750W
Subjects
Cuban Missile Crisis, 1962Destroyers (Warships)HistorySoviet UnionSoviet Union. Voenno-Morskoĭ FlotSubmarines (Ships)United StatesUnited States. NavyUnited States. -- Navy -- History -- 20th centurySoviet Union. -- Voenno-Morskoĭ Flot -- HistoryDestroyers (Warships) -- Cuba -- History -- 20th centurySubmarines (Ships) -- Cuba -- History -- 20th centurySoviet Union. Voenno-Morskoi? FlotUnited states, navy, historySoviet union, historyCuban missile crisis, 1962WarshipsSubmarines (ships)