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'Cold War Roadshow' PBS 'The American Experience'

 ... this is a great documentary! All of the PBS 'American Experience' programs are excellent! It is an accurate and well crafted look which brings history alive and is a revealing snapshot of life in America during the late 1950's. Nikita Khrushchev visits the United States in 1959! He kisses babies, lectures and threatens and wants to, but can't, go to Disneyland!

 


 

Bunker #42 (Moscow: Cold War)

 I cruise the Internet a lot  looking for, amongst other things, Cold War material to put on this Blog. Here is a series of photos from a interesting site I stumbled upon By Simon Raffeiner   'One Man - One Map' .

This is a 'Spare Long-Range Command Bunker of the Soviet Air Forces from 1951 to 1995'
It is located beneath the streets of Moscow. It was sold in auction to a private company that now operates it as a museum. I urge you to go to the site LINK  to read complete descriptions of these wonderful photos.

 

If this is the original entrance I would be surprised. Even the proud Russians would be a little bit more secretive about such an important installation. I'll go with the explanation that it was installed by the museum curators to more easily guide tourists to their Cold War Destination. Although I do notice, from the mess on the sidewalk, that a spy may have been recently shot during some sort of skullduggery sabotage mission.


Gotta love that carpet! Visible are lots and lots of plate and screw shaft pinions used to secure reinforced panels to underground rock. I am thinking of the renovations done to NORAD headquarters inside of Cheyenne Mountain.

 

Be sure to stop by the mannequin to have your papers checked Comrade! He looks like he was recruited from an upscale Woolworth's. Unlike many the disheveled dummies I have seen at other museums. 

 




 






I certainly hope the electrician who produced this work of art was praised. Not sent to Siberia for wasting precious building materials!

 

all images - Right Click - Open in New Window or Tab = super size! 

 

 

 


1970 ... what we need is a REALLY big helicopter!

 Sikorsky Heavy Lift Helicopter (HLH)   see Link at bottom of post!

 






 LINK

 

 

 

 

"... obey your air-raid warden!"


 ... no background on this. But let us imagine it was produced at the Sheboygan, Wisconsin Rotary Club as a public service and aired before sign-off by the local TV station. The group were, of course, the Trinity Test Trio!

 


 

 

1958 ... the Brits are up an Atom!



 A British 'V-Bomber', a Handley Page 'Victor', is scrambled. Notice the all white 'anti-flash' livery. This was protection against the heat transmitted by the flash of nuclear detonation.

LINK 

 

 

1960's ... underground West German supply depot.


 all images - Right Click - Open in New Window or Tab = super size!

 

1956 ... 'The Big Stick'


 From 1948 to 1955 the Convair B-36 'Peacemaker' was the only aircraft capable of making a round trip from the United States to the Soviet Union and then back again. That's on one load of fuel! In fact the B-36 was not even capable of air to air refueling; having been developed in an era when that technique had not been sufficiently developed. The USAF's Strategic Air Command had 'smaller' bombers at forward stations in allied Nato countries closer to Russia. But those planes could not carry the new, very large, Hydrogen Bombs and their bases were much more vulnerable than SAC's runways in the geographic center of of America. 

LINK

 

 

1960 ... mixin' it up with The Mix!


 

... notice there is no mention of Polaris Ballistic Missile Submarines? They won't come on duty till next year (1961). Instead of a 'mix' it will be the 'Triad'.

 

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1980 ... ballpoint pens keep the Peace!

 ... from those patriotic warhawk fellows at the 'National Lampoon'. They hit the nose on the button! There isn't a male Boomer that I've met who doesn't confirm that he kept America safe and strong with an arsenal five and dime pens at the ready! Only possible with Space-Age industrial giants like Bic and Fisher. (Imagine the catastrophic loss of life and environmental damage if fountain pens had been deployed!)

1960 ... putting the 'A' in M.A.D.


As Dr. Strangelove would have pointed out; the insane logic of Mutually Assured Destruction*  relies on the 'Assurance' that if there is a 'sneak attack' the defending team will still have enough surviving nuclear weapon delivery systems to totally destroy the aggressor. In 1960 as the first USN Polaris Missile nuclear submarines became operational that assurance guarantee became heavily underlined. Because these subs were nuclear powered they could cruise submerged for months.  They could not be found underneath the vastness of the ocean and were largely invulnerable to any first strike by the Soviets.  So, no matter what the outcome of a topside duel of a aircraft and land based atomic war was; the submarines always had enough missiles  and megatons to launch and flatten the Soviet Union.

 At first, in the early sixties, the range of  the SLBM's (Submarine Launched Ballistic Missiles) was only about 1,200 miles. US subs had to lurk in waters close to the USSR as shown by the map above. The accuracy of the subs solid fuel 'Polaris' missiles was not good enough for hitting precise military targets. Instead the 1 megaton warhead was targeted at large population centers. A 'Polaris' Submarine carried sixteen missiles.  The Soviet Union test launched their first SLBM about 2 months after the USA. The 'Triad' of air, land and sea atomic annihilation was in place. 'Assurance' was complete.

* Pentagon planners would rather we use the word 'deterrence' 

Note: the USSR began operating their missile carrying nuclear subs two months after the United States. 

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/41_for_Freedom

List of USN 'Polaris' submarines 

about the missile















1967 ... suckin' that JP-7 !


 

... painted by master illustrator Keith Ferris and brought to us by the wonderfully cranky host of 'Up-ship'

https://up-ship.com/blog/  

 

all images - Right Click - Open in New Window or Tab = super size!  

 

 

 

1950 ... 'Uncle Joe' becomes the stuff of nightmares!



The Soviet Union was always a scary place. Lot's of violence and blood. Lot's of murder in the name of utopia. But the dictatorship of Joseph Stalin was it's darkest chapter. Stalin's paranoia and absolute control fashioned an adversary of dark and unknowable threat. When the Soviets got 'the Bomb' in1949 the world was in a nightmare it could not wake up from!

 

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joseph_Stalin