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Fallout

Page 27

by Steve Sheinkin


  ________. The Man from Odessa. London: Robert Hale, 1981.

  York, Herbert F. The Advisors: Oppenheimer, Teller, and the Superbomb. Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press, 1976.

  Zaloga, Steven J. Target America: The Soviet Union and the Strategic Arms Race, 1945–1964. Novato, CA: Presidio, 1993.

  Zubok, Vladislav, and Constantine Pleshakov. Inside the Kremlin’s Cold War: From Stalin to Khrushchev. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1996.

  Documentaries and Films

  Cold War Roadshow. Directed and edited by Robert Stone and Tim B. Toidze. Episode 7, Season 26, American Experience, PBS, November 18, 2014.

  Command and Control. Directed by Robert Kenner. Episode 3, Season 29, American Experience, PBS, April 15, 2017.

  Duck and Cover. Directed by Anthony Rizzo. Federal Civil Defense Administration, 1951. youtube.com/watch?v=IKqXu-5jw60.

  The Fog of War: Eleven Lessons from the Life of Robert S. McNamara. Produced and directed by Errol Morris. Sony Pictures Classics, 2003.

  JFK, pt. 2. Produced and directed by Susan Bellows. Episode 8, Season 25, American Experience, PBS, November 12, 2013.

  The Man Who Saved the World. Written and produced by Nick Green. Episode 6, Season 12, Secrets of the Dead, PBS, October 23, 2012.

  Operation Doorstep. Produced by Byron Inc. Federal Civil Defense Administration, 1953. youtube.com/watch?v=uIWAs_avpbY.

  Race for the Superbomb. Directed by Thomas Ott. Episode 2, Season 11. American Experience, PBS, January 11, 1999.

  Newspapers

  Baltimore Evening Sun

  Boston Globe

  Charlotte (NC) Observer

  Corpus Christi (TX) Times

  Daily News (New York)

  Democrat and Chronicle (Rochester, NY)

  Detroit Free Press

  Guardian (Manchester, UK)

  Los Angeles Times

  Miami Herald

  Miami News

  Moscow Times

  News-Press (Fort Myers, FL)

  New York Times

  Observer (London)

  Orlando Sentinel

  Reno (NV) Gazette-Journal

  San Francisco Examiner

  Santa Cruz (CA) Sentinel

  St. Louis Post-Dispatch

  Tampa Times

  Times (London)

  Troy (NY) Record

  Vancouver (BC) Sun

  Wall Street Journal

  Washington Post

  Government Sources & Online Archives

  Atomic Heritage Foundation, atomicheritage.org

  Central Intelligence Agency Library, cia.gov/library

  Dwight D. Eisenhower Presidential Library, eisenhowerlibrary.gov

  Federal Bureau of Investigation, Rudolf Abel case files

  John F. Kennedy Presidential Library, jfklibrary.org

  Miller Center, University of Virginia, millercenter.org

  NASA, “Missions A-Z,” nasa.gov/missions

  National Air and Space Museum, “Space Race,” airandspace.si.edu/exhibitions/space-race

  National Security Archive, George Washington University, nsarchive.gwu.edu

  The Public Papers of the Presidents of the United States, University of Michigan Digital Library, quod.lib.umich.edu/p/ppotpus

  U.S. Department of State, Office of the Historian, history.state.gov

  U.S. Senate, “Hearings & Meetings,” senate.gov/committees/hearings_meetings.htm

  ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

  Research for this book was proceeding normally—and then 2020 happened. With all my nerdy detective travel canceled, I was even more reliant than usual on the generosity of libraries and archives. These invaluable sources are listed in the bibliography. Special thanks to Francis Gary Powers Jr., founder of the Cold War Museum in Virginia, who shared stories about his father’s experiences and even sent me a replica hollow silver dollar. I’ll show it to you sometime. Thanks to Jane Chisholm, daughter of Janet Chisholm, for sharing a few little-known details about her mother’s life as a spy in Moscow.

  I’m especially grateful to Dr. Sergei Khrushchev, who generously agreed to answer my questions about those private talks he had with his father during the missile crisis. Dr. Khrushchev, who became a U.S. citizen in 1999, died in June 2020. Through his writing and lectures, he has given us insight into key moments of Cold War history that literally could not have come from anywhere else.

  My single biggest thank-you is to Connie Hsu for her expert editing and overall guidance. I’ve never written so much I didn’t end up using—my file of deleted scenes is 338 pages. Seriously, I just checked. Connie knew exactly what I was going for, and helped me craft the mass of material into a story.

  For their continued support, I’m very grateful to the entire team at Macmillan, including Jon Yaged, Jen Besser, and Allison Verost. Thanks to Mekisha Telfer for her edits and suggestions, and to Aurora Parlagreco and John Nora for making the book look so cool. For getting the book out in the world, thank you to Morgan Kane, Katie Quinn, Mary Van Akin, Elysse Villalobos, and Jennifer Edwards. And for their incredibly demanding (in a good way) commitment to accuracy, a huge thanks to Jen Healey and the “nonfiction A-team”—Sherri Schmidt, Janet Renard, and Susan Bishansky.

  As always, a big thanks to my wonderful agent, Susan Cohen, and the team at Writers House.

  And finally, of course, thank you to Rachel, Anna, and David. I’ve run out of clever ways to say it, but I could not do any of this without you.

  IMAGE CREDITS

  here: Photo 12/Universal Images Group via Getty Images; here: Bettmann/Bettmann via Getty Images; here: (top row, left to right) ullstein bild Dtl./ullstein bild via Getty Images, Patrick A. Burns/The New York Times/Redux, (middle row, left to right) Time Life Pictures/The LIFE Picture Collection via Getty Images, Wikimedia Commons, Associated Press, (bottom row, left to right) Alfred Eisenstaedt/The LIFE Picture Collection via Getty Images, Associated Press; here: (top row, left to right) National Archives photo no. 7865621, Wikimedia Commons, Hulton Deutsch/Corbis Historical via Getty Images, Associated Press, (bottom row, left to right) NurPhoto/NurPhoto via Getty Images, National Archives photo no. 7865563, Carl Mydans/The LIFE Picture Collection via Getty Images; here: (both) FBI; here: US Department of Energy; here: (top) US National Archives/Science Source, (bottom) NNSA/Nevada Field Office/Science Source; here: Courtesy of the Powers family; here: National Archives photo no. 7865621; here: Underwood Archives/Archive Photos via Getty Images; here: (top row, left to right) Keystone/Hulton Archive via Getty Images, Ed Clark/The LIFE Picture Collection via Getty Images, (middle row, left to right) Smithsonian Air and Space Museum, Keystone/ Hulton Archive via Getty Images, (bottom row) Keystone/Hulton Archive via Getty Images; here: (top row, both) ullstein bild Dtl./ullstein bild via Getty Images, (middle row, left to right) Central Press/Hulton Archive via Getty Images, courtesy of the Janet Chisholm family, NASA, (bottom row, left to right) Keystone-France/Gamma-Keystone via Getty Images, Associated Press; here: Photographer unknown/John F. Kennedy Presidential Library and Museum; here: Rolls Press/Popperfoto via Getty Images; here: Lynn Pelham/The LIFE Images Collection via Getty Images; here: Miguel Vinas/AFP via Getty Images; here: Rainer Lesniewski/Alamy; here: ullstein bild Dtl./ullstein bild via Getty Images; here: (top) Ralph Morse/The LIFE Premium Collection via Getty Images, (bottom) Walter Sanders/The LIFE Picture Collection via Getty; here: Ralph Crane/The LIFE Picture Collection via Getty Images; here: (top row, left to right) TASS/TASS via Getty Images, Nat Farbman/The LIFE Picture Collection via Getty Images, (middle row, left to right) United States Federal Government/Public domain/via Wikimedia Commons, PhotoQuest/Archive Photos via Getty Images, (bottom row, left to right) Associated Press, PhotoQuest/Archive Photos via Getty Images; here: (top row, left to right) courtesy of Marianna Yarovskaya, Bettmann/Bettmann via Getty Images, (middle row, left to right) Bob Gomel/The LIFE Images Collection via Getty Images, Hulton Archive/Staff /Hulton Archive via Getty Images, (bottom row, left to right) United States Air Force, Pho
toQuest/Archive Photos via Getty Images; here: Associated Press; here: Getty Images/Staff/Getty Images News via Getty Images; here: Bettmann/Bettmann via Getty Images; here: National Security Archive; here: Underwood Archives/Archive Photos via Getty Images; here: US National Archives, Still Pictures Branch, Record Group 428, Item 428-N-711201; here: Associated Press.

  INDEX

  The index that appeared in the print version of this title does not match the pages in your e-book. Please use the search function on your e-reading device to search for terms of interest. For your reference, the terms that appear in the print index are listed below.

  Abel, Rudolf

  belief in communism

  conviction of

  cover story for

  Donovan as legal counsel for

  flipping of, failed attempts at

  Hayhanen and

  imprisonment of

  in prisoner trade, for Powers, Francis

  recruitment of, by Soviet Union

  spy trial for

  Air Force, U.S. See also U-2 spy plane

  B-52 bombers

  early-warning systems

  hydrogen bombs dropped on North Carolina by

  Strategic Air Command

  Aldrin, Buzz

  Alekseyev, Aleksandr

  Anderson, Rudolf

  Area 51

  Arkhipov, Vasili

  Armstrong, Neil

  assassination plots, by CIA

  atomic bombs. See also fallout shelters; hydrogen bombs

  dropped in Japan

  hydrogen bombs compared to

  Oppenheimer and

  Soviet spies and, stolen secrets by

  U.S. development of, expansion in

  B-52 bombers (U.S.)

  B-59 nuclear submarine (USSR)

  Bahía de Cochinos. See Bay of Pigs

  Baikonur Cosmodome

  Batista, Fulgencio

  Bay of Pigs (Bahía de Cochinos), Cuba

  captured rebels from

  Oliva and

  political importance of, for Kennedy, John

  San Román and

  U.S. invasion of, failure of

  in U.S. media

  Beria, Lavrenty

  Berlin, Germany. See also East Berlin; West Berlin

  Berlin Wall

  East German fortification of

  escape missions under

  Kennedy, John

  Seidel and

  Big Ivan (H-bomb)

  Bikini Atoll, as hydrogen bomb testing site

  Biryuzov, Sergei

  Bissell, Richard

  Bodies for Butter program

  bombs. See fission bombs; fusion bombs; hydrogen bombs; Super

  Bozart, Jimmy

  Brezhnev, Leonid

  Bridge of Spies (film)

  Brooklyn Eagle (newspaper)

  Bulik, Joe

  Bundy, McGeorge

  bunkers. See fallout shelters

  Burke, Arleigh

  Cabell, Charles

  Camp David, Eisenhower, D., at

  Canada

  Carreras, Enrique

  Castro, Fidel. See also Bay of Pigs

  assassination plots against

  during Cuban missile crisis

  Khrushchev, Nikita, and

  LeMay on

  Castro, Raúl

  Central Intelligence Agency (CIA)

  assassination plots, against Castro

  investigation of Powers, Francis

  China

  Chisholm, Janet

  Chisholm, Ruari

  Churchill, Winston

  CIA. See Central Intelligence Agency

  Civil Defense Department, U.S.

  Clifton, Chester

  Cline, Ray

  Cohen, Lona

  Cohen, Morris

  coins. See currency

  Cold War. See also Bay of Pigs; Cuban missile crisis; East Germany; fallout shelters; West Germany

  Civil Defense department during

  Duck and Cover

  fear of hydrogen bombs as element of

  Godzilla as symbol of

  Khrushchev, Nikita, and, approach to

  postwar expansion as factor for

  Red Scare during

  space race as part of

  violence during expansion of

  Collins, William

  communism. See also Union of Soviet Socialist Republics

  Abel’s belief in

  American opinions on

  Khrushchev, Nikita, belief in

  Communist Party, in Soviet Union

  Communists. See also Union of Soviet Socialist Republics

  in China, establishment of

  in North Korea

  Russia taken over by, after World War II

  compulsion to move. See zugzwang

  Cooper, Gordon

  cosmonauts. See also Gagarin, Yuri; Titov, Gherman

  Baikonur Cosmodome

  Kennedy, John, on

  Korolev and

  R-7 rockets

  trainers for

  Vostok

  Cox, Eldon Ray

  Cuba. See also Bay of Pigs; Castro, Fidel

  Batista dictatorship in, overthrow of

  economic embargo of

  Executive Committee of the National Security Council and

  Khrushchev, Nikita, military plan for

  reconnaissance information on

  Revolución newspaper

  Soviet missiles in

  Soviet nuclear submarines near

  U-2 missions over

  U.S. blockade of

  U.S. exploitation of

  U.S. invasion of, plans for

  U.S. overflight of

  Cuban missile crisis

  Anderson death during

  anti-aircraft missiles in U.S. during

  B-59 nuclear submarine

  Castro, Fidel, during

  claims as political victory, for Khrushchev, Nikita

  Cuba-for-Turkey trade and

  foundations for

  Kennedy, Bobby, during

  Kennedy, John, speech on

  Khrushchev, Nikita, public statement on

  Kimovsk

  “knot of war” and

  national statements on, by political leaders

  as political victory, for Kennedy, John

  Soviet military preparedness during, changes to

  Soviet nuclear submarines during

  U-2 spy plane missions during

  U.S. blockade of Cuba

  U.S. public response to

  USSR preparation for U.S. missile attacks

  Yuri Gagarin

  currency, as spyware

  Daily News

  The Day After (TV movie)

  de Gaulle, Charles

  Deterling, Harry

  Dobrynin, Anatoly

  Donovan, James

  Dr. No (film)

  Dubivko, Aleksei

  Duck and Cover (film)

  Dulles, Allen

  East Berlin, Germany

  Berlin Wall

  border crossings from

  Seidel, H., arrest in

  Seidel, H., escape missions from

  Ulbricht and

  East Germany. See also Berlin

  Bodies for Butter program

  border crossings from

  Seidel, H., trial in

  Ulbricht as Soviet dictator of

  Eisenhower, Dwight

  at Camp David

  on Castro, as political threat to U.S.

  Kennedy, John, and

  Khrushchev, Nikita, visit to U.S.

  knowledge of assassination plots against Castro, F.

  Korean War and

  official statement about U-2 spy plane crash

  U-2 spy plane program under

  Eisenhower, Mamie

  Executive Committee of the National Security Council (ExComm), U.S.

  fallout shelters

  bunker drills

  Duck and Cover and

  Mount W
eather

  Project X

  public service announcements about

  Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), U.S.

  Fields, Alonzo

  fission bombs. See also hydrogen bombs

  “football,” nuclear war procedures and

  France

  at Paris Summit

  Franqui, Carlos

  Frisch, Otto

  Fuchs, Klaus

  fusion bombs

  Gagarin, Anna

  Gagarin, Yuri

  as cosmonaut trainer

  training for

  Vostok

  Gasa, Biuku

  Germany. See also Berlin; East Germany; Nazi Germany; West Germany

  Soviet Union attacked by, during World War II

  Godzilla (film)

  Gold, Harry

  Goodpaster, Andrew

  Great Britain

  arrests of Soviet spies in

  MI6

  nuclear weapons arsenal for

  at Paris Summit

  Gribkov, Anatoly

  Grinev, Mikhail

  GRU (Soviet military intelligence agency)

  The Guns of August (Tuchman)

  H-bombs. See hydrogen bombs

  Hayhanen, Reino

  Abel and

  return to Soviet Union

  as spy trial witness, against Abel

  television interviews by

  Heyser, Richard

  Hiroshima, Japan, atom bomb dropped on

  Hitler, Adolf

  Honda, Ishiro

  Hungary

  hydrogen bombs (H-bombs). See also fallout shelters; Super

  Abel and

  atomic bombs compared to

  Big Ivan

  Bikini Atoll and, as testing site

  dropped on North Carolina, by U.S. Air Force

  fallout shelters and

  Los Alamos labs

  in media

  Oppenheimer and

  radiation poisoning as result of

  Sakharov

  Soviet development of

  Soviet Union use of

  Teller and

  Truman, H. and, research and development under

  Ulam, S., and

  U.S. designers of

  Ilychev, Leonid

  Iron Curtain. See also Berlin Wall; Union of Soviet Socialist Republics

  Israel, nuclear weapons arsenal for

  Ivanov, Semyon

  Ivanovich, Ivan

  Ivanovsky, Oleg

  Jacob, Richard

  Jercha, Heinz

  Johnson, Lyndon

  K-19 (Soviet nuclear submarine)

  Kennedy, Bobby

  during Cuban missile crisis

 

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