1983
Petrov averts nuclear war
At a Soviet early-warning bunker, Lieutenant Colonel Stanislav Petrov saw his screens show five incoming American nuclear missiles. Standing orders were to launch a counterstrike. Petrov, guessing it was a false alarm, refused to report it up the chain. It was. A single man's judgment had probably saved humanity from extinction that night.
Beirut barracks bombing
A suicide truck bomber drove into the US Marine compound at Beirut airport and detonated twelve thousand pounds of explosives. Two hundred forty-one American servicemen died in their beds. A second bomb killed fifty-eight French paratroopers nearby. Within months Reagan quietly withdrew US forces. Suicide bombing had announced itself as a weapon.
KAL 007 shot down
A Korean Air Lines Boeing 747 flying from Anchorage to Seoul strayed into Soviet airspace over Sakhalin. A Soviet fighter shot it down. Two hundred and sixty-nine passengers and crew died, including a US congressman. The Cold War had reached a new temperature. Reagan called the USSR an evil empire.
US invades Grenada
After a coup on the Caribbean island of Grenada and concerns about American medical students there, Ronald Reagan sent Marines in. Resistance was slight. The invasion was condemned by most of the world and celebrated in the United States as a small Cold War win after the humiliation of Beirut two days earlier. A new American assertiveness was on display.