Heroic USAF Captain Defied Orders and Stopped America From Starting World War III in 1962...
...during the Cuban Missile Crisis, Captain William Bassett stopped to think before pressing The Button. Thank goodness, otherwise most of the planet would be celebrating
Dia de Los Muertos from the Other Side.

The Okinawa missiles of October
Aaron Tovish
Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists, Oct. 25, 2015
John Bordne, a resident of Blakeslee, Penn., had to keep a personal history to himself for more than five decades. Only recently has the US Air Force given him permission to tell the tale, which, if borne out as true, would constitute a terrifying addition to the lengthy and already frightening list of mistakes and malfunctions that have nearly plunged the world into nuclear war.
The story begins just after midnight, in the wee hours of October 28, 1962, at the very height of the Cuban Missile Crisis. Then-Air Force airman John Bordne says he began his shift full of apprehension. At the time, in response to the developing crisis over secret Soviet missile deployments in Cuba, all US strategic forces had been raised to Defense Readiness Condition 2, or DEFCON2; that is, they were prepared to move to DEFCON1 status within a matter of minutes. Once at DEFCON1, a missile could be launched within a minute of a crew being instructed to do so.
Bordne, now 74, appeared in an introductory video, and then answered questions via Skype from his home in Pennsylvania. Recounting the atmosphere on the base that week, Bordne described all his fellow airmen crowding around a television to watch President John F. Kennedy discuss the standoff with the Soviet Union: There was standing room only. There was dead silence during
and there was dead silence after. It was then that we really got the impression we would have to do what we were paid to do.
SNIP...
According to Bordne, as Bassett attempted to determine whether the orders were legitimate, a lieutenant decided that Bassett did not have the authority to stop the launch, and ordered his section of the overall crew to proceed to fire its four missiles. Bassett, says Bordne, threatened to have the lieutenant shot.
SNIP...
As of today theres no way to know for certain whether events transpired 53 years ago as Bordne describes them. Bassett died in 2011, and Bordne remains the only participant willing to describe them on the record. However, a Japanese news outlet spoke last year to another U.S. veteran who was willing to anonymously confirm Bordnes account. There was general agreement among the other participants in the U.N. discussion, including Princeton nuclear security expert Bruce Blair, that Bordnes account was credible.
CONTINUED...
http://thebulletin.org/okinawa-missiles-october8826
Former Airman John Bordne appeared via Skype to discuss the incident with the United Nations yesterday.
As you know, MinM, these guys left the trail of bread crumbs from the TBSD to the Kremlin. Now we're finding out what else they were willing to do for the big showdown at the end of the cowboy film. Like GEICO commercial says: "If you're in the band 'Europe,' you play 'The Final Countdown.' It's what you do."