Synonyms that are in the dictionary are marked in green. Synonyms that are not in the dictionary are marked in red.
Antonyms that are in the dictionary are marked in green. Antonyms that are not in the dictionary are marked in red.
A comparison of the establishment of the 1963 Russian/US hotline and the Cuban Missile Crisis and the lack of communication between Austin and his Chinese counterparts raises several thoughts.
Source: http://bangladeshchronicle.net/balloongate-lots-of-hot-air-and-the-cold-us-china-hotline/
After the Cuban Missile Crisis of October 1962 concluded when the Soviet Union withdrew nuclear weapons from the island, President John F. Kennedy’s political standing rose considerably.
Source: https://www.deseret.com/opinion/2023/3/16/23640225/russia-us-nuclear-arms-control-history
But the West fought back; the Vietnam War, the Cuban Missile Crisis, and civil wars in Angola, Zimbabwe and Afghanistan are prominent examples of the global conflict between the East and the West.
Source: https://thehillnews.org/opinions/owenrussell/colonial-reckoning-in-middle-east
For example, the crew of BUNO 141264 assigned to SAR duty at Naval Air Station, Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, photographed Russian forces unloading missiles in Cuba prior to commencement of the Cuban Missile Crisis.
Source: https://www.dvidshub.net/news/441025/blog-flights-albatross-1955-1967
In the fog of war all bets are off, as the Cuban Missile Crisis of 1962 showed.
The bunker was built between 1963 and 1968 at NATO’s insistence, following Soviet nuclear tests and the Cuban Missile Crisis.
When Kennedy came to the realization that it was the obsessive quest of the Pentagon and the CIA to invade Cuba that had provoked the Cuban Missile Crisis, he figured a way out of the crisis.