(OT) The Man Who Saved the World RIP

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Gary

Social climber
Desolation Basin, Calif.
Topic Author's Original Post - Sep 25, 2017 - 10:51am PT
Stanislav Petrov, a former Soviet military officer known in the West as “the man who saved the world” for his role in averting a nuclear war over a false missile warning at the height of the Cold War, has died. He was 77...

Petrov was on night duty at the Soviet military’s early-warning facility outside Moscow on Sept. 26, 1983, when an alarm went off, signaling the launch of several U.S. intercontinental ballistic missiles. The 44-year-old lieutenant colonel had to quickly determine whether the attack was real. He chose to consider it a false alarm, which it was...

The responsibility was enormous.

If he had judged it a real launch, the top Soviet military brass and the Kremlin would have had no time for extra analysis in the few minutes left before the incoming nuclear-tipped missiles hit Soviet territory. They likely would have ordered a retaliatory strike, triggering a nuclear war.

“It was this quiet situation, and suddenly the roar of the siren breaks in and the command post lights up with the word ‘LAUNCH,’ ” Petrov told the AP. “This hit the nerves. I was really taken aback. Holy cow!”

Within minutes of the first alarm, the siren sounded again, warning of a second U.S. missile launch. Soon, the system was reporting that five missiles had been launched.

Petrov recalled standing up as the alarm siren blared and seeing that the others were all looking at him in confusion.

“My team was close to panic, and it hit me that if panic sets in, then it’s all over,” he said.

Petrov told his commander that the system was giving false information. He was not at all certain, but he was driven by the fact that Soviet ground radar could not confirm a launch. The radar system picked up incoming missiles only well after any launch, but he knew it to be more reliable than the satellites.

The false alarm later was determined to have been caused by a malfunction of the satellite, which mistook the reflection of the sun off high clouds for a missile launch.

Petrov was not rewarded for his actions. In fact, he received a reprimand for failing to correctly fill the duty log and retired from the military the following year.

Although his commanding officer did not support Petrov at the time, he was the one who revealed the incident after the Soviet Union collapsed in 1991. If Col. Gen. Yury Votintsev had not spoken out, Petrov said he himself “would have forgotten about it like a bad dream.”

After his story was told, Petrov received accolades, international awards and became known as “the man who saved the world.”

http://www.latimes.com/local/obituaries/la-me-stanislavsky-petrov-20170921-story.html
skcreidc

Social climber
SD, CA
Sep 25, 2017 - 11:07am PT
Let cooler heads prevail once more.
Reilly

Mountain climber
The Other Monrovia- CA
Sep 25, 2017 - 11:23am PT
It's a bad system where one guy has to make that call. On the other hand it's a good system when it's a guy like him. A more bureaucratized system likely would have prevaricated and then panicked at the perceived 'last second'. RIP, sir.
mouse from merced

Trad climber
The finger of fate, my friends, is fickle.
Sep 25, 2017 - 01:53pm PT
My buddy Decker was telling me of Petrov just a couple of days ago. I was shocked, I tell ya, just shocked.

Is everything the governators tell us a LIE?
neebee

Social climber
calif/texas
Sep 25, 2017 - 02:10pm PT
hey there say, Gary... thanks for sharing, and tami, too...


makes you wonder what these men were like, as little kids, growing up...

and the things that formed them through life, into the kind of
think, reactions, and etc, etc,s... as to this, and perhaps many other things, down the line...
dirtbag

climber
Sep 25, 2017 - 02:24pm PT
Just heard Foreign Minister of North Korea speak at U.N. If he echoes thoughts of Little Rocket Man, they won't be around much longer!
-Donald Trump


Yeah...we're screwed.
Alexey

climber
San Jose, CA
Sep 25, 2017 - 03:35pm PT
I remember I read this story in 90th where Petrov detected only one missile [ not 5 like in this article] - and because of this he make conclusion that it can NOT be US intended attack on USSR. It was time of one of the worse relations between USA and USSR. Soviets just shut down Korean passenger jet and Reagan call them Empire of Evil. My friends who served in Soviet military at this time were saying that they were told by commanders that war and clash is coming and not avoidable.
And in fact Soviet computers/radars took weird sunset lights as a missile launch
Gary

Social climber
Desolation Basin, Calif.
Topic Author's Reply - Sep 25, 2017 - 05:33pm PT
Tami, TFPU.
Reilly

Mountain climber
The Other Monrovia- CA
Sep 25, 2017 - 06:05pm PT
I wonder how many other Cold War incidents have not nor ever will come to light

The Pentagon and the Soviet archives of the really secret shiz will not be opened for a long time, if ever, especially on the submarines. We won't because of operational and technical reasons and the Rooskies cause it would be so embarrassing. Their boats were so effing crude.
10b4me

Mountain climber
Retired
Sep 25, 2017 - 06:14pm PT
It's a bad system where one guy has to make that call.

The NKs think that HR McMaster has his finger on the button, and not trump.
I hope that's true.
guido

Trad climber
Santa Cruz/New Zealand/South Pacific
Sep 25, 2017 - 06:49pm PT
So if you really want some nightmares over Nuclear Holocaust tap into this book:

Command and Control-Nuclear Weapons, the Damascus Accident and the illusions of Safety
Messages 1 - 11 of total 11 in this topic
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