Author Topic: 'I was just doing my job': Soviet officer who averted nuclear war dies at age 77  (Read 954 times)

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Offline Suppressed

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'I was just doing my job': Soviet officer who averted nuclear war dies at age 77
Published time: 17 Sep, 2017 19:01
https://www.rt.com/news/403625-nuclear-soviet-officer-died/


Stanislav Petrov © Sergey Pirigov / Sputnik

A Soviet officer who prevented a nuclear crisis between the US and the USSR and possible World War III in the 1980s has quietly passed away. He was 77. In 2010 RT spoke to Stanislav Petrov, who never considered himself a hero. We look at the life of the man who saved the world.
A decision that Soviet lieutenant colonel Stanislav Petrov once took went down in history as one that stopped the Cold War from turning into nuclear Armageddon, largely thanks to Karl Schumacher, a political activist from Germany who helped the news of his heroism first reach a western audience nearly two decades ago.

On September 7, Schumacher, who kept in touch with Petrov in the intervening years, phoned him to wish him a happy birthday, but instead learned from Petrov’s son, Dmitry, that the retired officer had died on May 19 in his home in a small town near Moscow.

On September 26, 1983, Stanislav Petrov was on duty in charge of an early warning radar system in a bunker near Moscow, when just past midnight he saw the radar screen showing a single missile inbound from the United States and headed toward the Soviet Union.

“When I first saw the alert message, I got up from my chair. All my subordinates were confused, so I started shouting orders at them to avoid panic. I knew my decision would have a lot of consequences,” Petrov recalled of that fateful night in an interview with RT in 2010.

“The siren went off for a second time. Giant blood-red letters appeared on our main screen, saying START. It said that four more missiles had been launched,” he said. From the moment the warheads had taken off, there was only half an hour for the Kremlin to decide on whether to push the red button in retaliation and just 15 minutes for Petrov to determine whether the threat was real and report to his commanders.

“My cozy armchair felt like a red-hot frying pan and my legs went limp. I felt like I couldn't even stand up. That's how nervous I was when I was taking this decision,”
he told RT.

Taught that in case of a real attack the US would have gone on an all-out offensive, Petrov told his bosses the alarm must have been caused by a system malfunction.
“I’ll admit it, I was scared. I knew the level of responsibility at my fingertips,” he said.

 It was later revealed that what the Soviet satellites took for missiles launch was sunlight reflected from clouds. Petrov’s action, however, received no praise, and he was scolded for not filling in a service journal. His superiors were blamed for the system’s flaws. “My superiors were getting the blame and they did not want to recognize that anyone did any good, but instead chose to spread the blame.”

For over 10 years, the incident was kept secret as highly classified. Even Petrov’s wife, Raisa, who died in 1997, didn’t know anything of the role her husband played in averting nuclear war.

[...]

Based on his story, the movie “The man who saved the world” premiered in 2014, featuring actor Kevin Costner. The actor sent Petrov $500 as a “thank you” for making the right decision.

[...]

Excerpt.  Please read more here: https://www.rt.com/news/403625-nuclear-soviet-officer-died/
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“In the outside world, I'm a simple geologist. But in here .... I am Falcor, Defender of the Alliance” --Randy Marsh

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Offline Suppressed

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« Last Edit: September 18, 2017, 03:24:13 am by Suppressed »
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“In the outside world, I'm a simple geologist. But in here .... I am Falcor, Defender of the Alliance” --Randy Marsh

“The most effectual means of being secure against pain is to retire within ourselves, and to suffice for our own happiness.” -- Thomas Jefferson

“He's so dumb he thinks a Mexican border pays rent.” --Foghorn Leghorn

Offline Free Vulcan

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'Nuclear crisis'. More like nuclear annihilation. When you sit and hear liberals lionize themselves over their self-styled heroics, then you have this humble soldier who made a split second decision that truly saved the world.

RIP and godspeed Mr. Petrov.
The Republic is lost.

Offline TomSea

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Offline edpc

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What made this incident even more dangerous was the fact it occurred 3 weeks after the Soviets had shot down KAL 007.  Tensions were still high.  Two months after this, we conducted Able Archer and nearly had another mishap.
I disagree.  Circle gets the square.

Offline CSM

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What made this incident even more dangerous was the fact it occurred 3 weeks after the Soviets had shot down KAL 007.  Tensions were still high.  Two months after this, we conducted Able Archer and nearly had another mishap.

I was thinking that this was the incident that occured during Able Archer 83.  I didn't realize that this had happened before the exercise....Interesting stuff.

Did you participate in AA83?  Where were you stationed?  I actually served as a crypto tech in the bunker at SHAPE, but I didn't get there until 1990..

Offline edpc

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I was thinking that this was the incident that occured during Able Archer 83.  I didn't realize that this had happened before the exercise....Interesting stuff.

Did you participate in AA83?  Where were you stationed?  I actually served as a crypto tech in the bunker at SHAPE, but I didn't get there until 1990..

I was in high school on '83, but my brother was in the Air Force at the time. I was a Weekend Warrior later in the early 90s as a radio repairer.
I disagree.  Circle gets the square.