19 September 2017

The Man Who Saved the World

Matt Novak has a Gizmodo article about a man who saved us all, and we didn't even know it...

On September 26, 1983, then-Soviet military officer Stanislav Petrov (photo) received a message that five nuclear missiles had been launched by the United States and were heading for Moscow. He did not launch a retaliatory strike, believing correctly that it was a false alarm. With that, he saved the world from nuclear war. Reports have surfaced that Petrov died this past May at seventy-seven years old.
Karl Schumacher, a political activist in Germany, was one of the first people to publicize Petrov’s story back in the late 1990s. But Schumacher reportedly learned of Petrov’s death this month after contacting Petrov’s home. Petrov’s son Dmitry reported that the man who saved the world all those years ago had died on 19 May 2017. Schumacher confirmed Petrov’s death to Gizmodo this morning.
Lieutenant Colonel Stanislav Petrov was 44 years old and working at a missile detection bunker south of Moscow in the then-Soviet Union on 26 September 1983. His computer told him that five nuclear missiles were on their way and, given their flight time, he had just twenty minutes to launch a counter attack. But Petrov told his superior officers that it was a false alarm. He had absolutely no real evidence that this was true, but it probably saved millions of lives.
“The siren howled, but I just sat there for a few seconds, staring at the big, back-lit, red screen with the word ‘launch’ on it,” Petrov told the BBC’s Russian Service back in 2013. “I had all the data to suggest there was an ongoing missile attack. If I had sent my report up the chain of command, nobody would have said a word against it,” Petrov said.
“There was no rule about how long we were allowed to think before we reported a strike. But we knew that every second of procrastination took away valuable time; that the then-Soviet Union’s military and political leadership needed to be informed without delay,” he told the BBC. “All I had to do was to reach for the phone; to raise the direct line to our top commanders, but I couldn’t move. I felt like I was sitting on a hot frying pan,” Petrov said.
Perhaps importantly, Petrov noted that he was the only officer around that day who had received a civilian education. Everyone else were professional soldiers, and he believed that they would have simply reported the attack at face value. The men around him were “taught to give and obey orders.” Luckily, Petrov disobeyed what simply didn’t feel right to him.
Petrov reasoned that, if the Americans were going to launch a first strike, they’d send more than five missiles, despite the fact that five could still do an enormous amount of damage. He also believed that, since the alert system was relatively new, it seemed likely that it could be sending a false alarm.
If Petrov had been wrong, he would have compromised the then-Soviet Union’s ability to retaliate against a nuclear strike. But, if he was right, World War Three would be averted. Thankfully, he was right. And sadly, his wasn’t the first, nor the last, close call that the world has seen. The Cold War saw far too many false alarms triggered by everything from a computer simulation in 1979 to a NATO military exercise in 1983, just two months after Petrov’s false alarm. And then there was the Cuban Missile Crisis of 1962 and the captain who defied his direct orders.
Remember the 1983 movie War Games? The film is about a computer “game” with the potential to start World War Three.
It’s truly amazing that the world survived the Cold War. And it’ll be even more amazing if we survive the current missile crisis that’s heating up on the Korean peninsula.
Rest in peace, Stanislav Petrov. You may not have gotten the recognition you deserved in life, but hopefully you’ll be remembered in death. Those of us living in the twenty-first century owe you a tremendous debt. And the best most of us can do is hope that the nuclear powers of the world learn something from your heroism.
Rico says some heroes shouldn't be forgotten...

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