Cuban Missile Crisis: Declassified Truths
Declassified records show the 1962 crisis was closer to catastrophic escalation than early public narratives suggested.
Under Review DailyExecutive Summary
Declassified and official records show the public “thirteen days” story captures only the most visible phase of a broader U.S.-Soviet-Cuban nuclear confrontation. The first established boundary is solid: U.S. aerial reconnaissance identified Soviet missile-site construction in mid-October 1962. Further source passes should test deeper claims about tactical nuclear weapons, Soviet/Cuban motives, back-channel concessions, and near-accidents without overstating certainty.
Evidence Ledger (research packet)
| Claim | Source | Source Type | Evidence Grade | Confidence |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| U.S. intelligence identified Soviet missile-site construction in Cuba through aerial photographs before Kennedy publicly addressed the country. | Cuban Missile Crisis | official archive / primary-source portal | A- | high |
| The crisis settlement included a secret U.S. understanding to remove Jupiter missiles from Turkey after the public Cuba-for-non-invasion exchange. | October 27, 1962 - Cuban Missile Crisis | official archive day page | A- | high |
| Kennedy resisted immediate military retaliation after a U-2 was shot down over Cuba on October 27, 1962. | October 27, 1962 - Cuban Missile Crisis | official archive day page | A- | high |
| On October 28, 1962, Radio Moscow announced Soviet acceptance of missile removal from Cuba in exchange for a U.S. pledge not to invade Cuba. | October 28, 1962 - Cuban Missile Crisis | official archive day page | A- | high |
Sources
- Cuban Missile CrisisJohn F. Kennedy Presidential Library and Museum / NARA • official archive / primary-source portal • accessed 2026-05-21
The landing page is a curated educational portal emphasizing the familiar October 16-28 “thirteen days” framing; it points to documents but is not itself a full historiographic account.
- October 27, 1962 - Cuban Missile CrisisJFK Presidential Library and Museum / NARA • official archive / primary-source portal day page • accessed 2026-05-21
Curated day summary; should be paired with underlying documents and ExComm recordings.
- October 28, 1962 - Cuban Missile CrisisJFK Presidential Library and Museum / NARA • official archive / primary-source portal day page • accessed 2026-05-21
Marks end of the “thirteen days” public crisis; does not by itself cover later verification/removal phases.
AI Analysis
The JFK Library provides a reliable orientation point and primary-source gateway, but it is curated around the canonical crisis narrative rather than the full declassified record.
Patterns
- Official memory emphasizes decision-making from Washington; additional sources are needed to restore Soviet and Cuban perspectives.
- The crisis can be split between public discovery/negotiation and the less-public prelude/aftermath of deployments and removals.
- The official record supports a layered settlement: public pledge plus private missile trade.
Uncertainties
- Which “declassified truths” are best documented versus interpretive?
- How to weigh later oral histories against contemporaneous documents?
Counterarguments
- The “thirteen days” framing is not false for the public White House crisis, but it is incomplete if the inquiry concerns deployments, prior intelligence, and removal-verification timelines.
Timeline
- 1962-10-14A U.S. surveillance aircraft photographed Cuba, generating images later interpreted as evidence of Soviet missile-site construction.
- 1962-10-16McGeorge Bundy alerted President Kennedy to the missile evidence, beginning the ExComm crisis-management period.
- 1962-10-27A U.S. U-2 was shot down over Cuba, killing Major Rudolf Anderson, while Kennedy resisted immediate military action.
- 1962-10-27Robert Kennedy met secretly with Soviet Ambassador Anatoly Dobrynin; the understanding included U.S. non-invasion pledge and eventual Jupiter missile removal from Turkey.
- 1962-10-28Radio Moscow announced Khrushchev’s acceptance of the proposed Cuba settlement; Kennedy publicly responded.