'he would want to know':
danger of getting 'bogged down': JCS message 051956Z, CNO Cuba, USNHC.
Electronic eavesdroppers on board: Intercepted message reported in ExComm meeting, interview with Keith Taylor, USS
FIRE HOSE: CINCAFLANT messages 27022Z and 280808Z, CNO Cuba, USNHC. Some writers have claimed that the White House had to talk LeMay out of ordering the immediate destruction of a SAM site ? see Brugioni,
The men were falling 'like dominoes': Mozgovoi, 92, Havana 2002, vol. 2.
According to regulations: Yesin et al.,
Arkhipov and Savitsky were equal in rank: Both men had the rank of captain 2nd class, the Soviet equivalent of a commander. The officer in charge of the torpedo was a captain 3rd class, equivalent to a lieutenant commander in the U.S. Navy.
'The Americans hit us': Mozgovoi, 93; Orlov interview with the author, July 2004. Other submarine commanders have questioned Orlov's version of events. Arkhipov and Savitsky are both dead. While it is impossible to know the precise words used by Savitsky, Orlov's account is consistent with other descriptions of the conditions on board the Soviet Foxtrots and the known movements of
'There were sharp disagreements': RFK, 102.
his 'terrific executive energy': Schlesinger,
'almost telepathic': Schlesinger, 'On JFK: An Interview with Isaiah Berlin,'
The final version bore the marks: See State Department and Stevenson drafts, and ExComm discussion.
The inner ExComm agreed that: Accounts differ as to who attended this meeting. According to Rusk, it was attended by JFK, RFK, McNamara, Bundy, and 'perhaps one other,' in addition to himself ? Letter to James Blight, February 25, 1987, NSAW. According to Bundy, the meeting was also attended by Ball, Gilpatric, Thompson, and Sorensen ? see McGeorge Bundy,
Drawing on a cable: The formula proposed by Rusk was first suggested by the U.S. ambassador to Turkey, Raymond Hare, in Ankara cable 587, which arrived at the State Department on Saturday morning ? NSAW.
'No one not in the room': Bundy, 433. For another account, see Rusk, 240-1.
a 'complex and difficult person': Dobrynin, 61. In an October 30, 1962, memo to Rusk, RFK said he asked Dobrynin to meet him at the Justice Department at 7:45 p.m. (FRUS, Vol. XI, 270). But RFK was running late. The ExComm session did not end until around 7:35. RFK then attended the meeting in the Oval Office, which lasted around twenty minutes. He likely met Dobrynin around 8:05 p.m., at the same time the State Department transmitted the president's message to Moscow ? ibid., 268.
'tapping telephone conversations': KGB profile of RFK, February 1962, SVR.
as 'very upset': Dobrynin cable to Soviet Foreign Ministry, October 27, 1962. I have reconstructed this account from the Dobrynin cable, the RFK memo to Rusk, and RFK,
'the children everywhere in the world': O'Donnell and Powers, 325; WH gate logs and president's phone log, October 27, 1962.
'an extra chicken leg': O'Donnell and Powers, 340-1.
The evacuation instructions were part: Ted Gup, 'The Doomsday Blueprints,'
'What happens to our wives': O'Donnell and Powers, 324.
'succumbed to the general mood of apocalypse': Brugioni,
'never live to see another': Blight et al.,
With Kennedy's consent, Rusk telephoned: FRUS, Vol. XI, 275; Rusk, 240-1. Some scholars have questioned the reliability of Rusk's 1987 account of the approach to Cordier, but it seems fully consistent with the thrust of the previous ExComm debate and JFK's views on the Jupiters.
'Junta for an Independent': State Department Coordinator for Cuban Affairs memo, October 27, 1962, JFKARC.
'I cannot run my office': Miro profile,
'I know something': Reeves, 97.
kept at 'maximum readiness': Nestor T. Carbonell,
a 'volatile, emotional': CIA memo for Lansdale on Operation Mongoose ? Infiltration Teams, October 29, 1962, JFKARC; see also Lansdale memo on covert operations, October 31, 1962, JFKARC.
'Friends simply do not behave': Allyn et al.,
'He began to assess the situation': Alekseev cable to Moscow, October 27, 1962, trans. in
His subsequent report to Moscow: Blight et al.,
'almost fell into the water': Orlov interview.
'This ship belongs': Ibid.
Lookouts reported that the Americans: Mozgovoi, 93; Carrier Division Sixteen, Cuban missile crisis documentation, NSAW.
'to throw off your pursuers': Orlov interview.
Kennedy dismissed most: Salinger,
a 'piece of ass': Seymour Hersh,
Mary telephoned Jack: White House phone records, October 27, 1962; WH social files, October 24, 1962, JFKL. Meyer's many visits to the White House were usually noted by the Secret Service. There is no evidence that she met JFK on October 27. It is unclear whether he returned her phone call, as he was able to make local calls without going through the White House switchboard. For a discussion of their relationship, see Nina Burleigh,
'We'll be going': O'Donnell and Powers, 341.
George Anderson retired to bed: CNO Office log, October 27, 1962; OPNAV resume of events, CNO Cuba, USNHC.
to be 'hostile': Gilpatric handwritten notes from 9:00 p.m. ExComm meeting, October 27, 1962, OSD.
'Now anything can happen': October 28