The famous cold war nuke guy (CONELRAD) found a letter at the Eisenhower Presidential Library: Theodore F. Koop [1907-1988], first host of Face The Nation & director-designate of the Eisenhower/JFK/LBJ/Nixon secret censorship office, writes to Ike to accept the shadow govt. assignment.
During the Cuban Missile Crisis, Broadcasting Magazine had named Theodore F. Koop as the would-be director of the emergency censorship office and then mentioned he was out of the country on vacation.
Broadcasting Magazine 1962 (PDF)
"The sign is ready." A few days ago, in 1961, the new Fallout Shelter Sign appeared in newspapers across the nation. The soon-to-be-ubiquitous Cold War symbol had been unveiled the previous day by the DoD.
"IN EVENT OF WAR, THIS SHELTER WOULD BE USELESS." Front page Fallout Shelter Sign protest news published Dec 3, 1962 in @TheLantern.
A Cold War Heist with OCEAN'S ELEVEN-esque precision and timing! 17 Fallout Shelter Signs were removed a "few hours after they had been installed" at University of Redlands (@UofRedlands). Per the Redlands Daily Record published Dec 4, 1962.
Redlands Photo source.
1c Postcard for $14.95
Fallout Shelter Sign Photo-Op published Dec 5, 1962 in the News Palladium of Benton Harbor, Michigan:
CONELRAD will tell you... THE COMPLETE HISTORY OF THE FALLOUT SHELTER SIGN
NY Times guest essay: (A species with amnesia)
Continue reading here if you wish.
During the Cuban Missile Crisis, Broadcasting Magazine had named Theodore F. Koop as the would-be director of the emergency censorship office and then mentioned he was out of the country on vacation.
Broadcasting Magazine 1962 (PDF)
"The sign is ready." A few days ago, in 1961, the new Fallout Shelter Sign appeared in newspapers across the nation. The soon-to-be-ubiquitous Cold War symbol had been unveiled the previous day by the DoD.
"IN EVENT OF WAR, THIS SHELTER WOULD BE USELESS." Front page Fallout Shelter Sign protest news published Dec 3, 1962 in @TheLantern.
A Cold War Heist with OCEAN'S ELEVEN-esque precision and timing! 17 Fallout Shelter Signs were removed a "few hours after they had been installed" at University of Redlands (@UofRedlands). Per the Redlands Daily Record published Dec 4, 1962.
Redlands Photo source.
1c Postcard for $14.95
Fallout Shelter Sign Photo-Op published Dec 5, 1962 in the News Palladium of Benton Harbor, Michigan:
CONELRAD will tell you... THE COMPLETE HISTORY OF THE FALLOUT SHELTER SIGN
NY Times guest essay: (A species with amnesia)
Quote:World War III Begins With Forgetting
By Stephen Wertheim
Mr. Wertheim is a scholar and writer on U.S. foreign policy.
Dec. 2, 2022
In March, as President Biden was facing pressure to intensify U.S. involvement in Ukraine, he responded by invoking the specter of World War III four times in one day.
“Direct conflict between NATO and Russia is World War III,” he said, “something we must strive to prevent.” He underscored the point hours later: “The idea that we’re going to send in offensive equipment and have planes and tanks and trains going in with American pilots and American crews — just understand, and don’t kid yourself, no matter what you all say, that’s called World War III, OK?”
More than any other presidential statement since Sept. 11, 2001, Mr. Biden’s warning signaled the start of a new era in American foreign policy. Throughout my adult life and that of most Americans today, the United States bestrode the world, essentially unchallenged and unchecked. A few years ago, it was still possible to expect a benign geopolitical future. Although “great power competition” became the watchword of Pentagonese, the phrase could as easily imply sporting rivalry as explosive conflict. Washington, Moscow and Beijing would stiffly compete but could surely coexist.
How quaint. The United States now faces the real and regular prospect of fighting adversaries strong enough to do Americans immense harm. The post-Sept. 11 forever wars have been costly, but a true great power war — the kind that used to afflict Europe — would be something else, pitting the United States against Russia or even China, whose economic strength rivals America’s and whose military could soon as well.
This grim reality has arrived with startling rapidity. Since February, the war in Ukraine has created an acute risk of U.S.-Russia conflict. It has also vaulted a Chinese invasion of Taiwan to the forefront of American fears and increased Washington’s willingness to respond with military force. “That’s called World War III,” indeed.
Yet how many Americans can truly envision what a third world war would mean? Just as great power conflict looms again, those who witnessed the last one are disappearing. Around 1 percent of U.S. veterans of World War II remain alive to tell their stories. It is estimated that by the end of this decade, fewer than 10,000 will be left. The vast majority of Americans today are unused to enduring hardship for foreign policy choices, let alone the loss of life and wealth that direct conflict with China or Russia would bring.
Preparing the country shouldn’t begin with tanks, planes and ships. It will require a national effort of historical recovery and imagination — first and foremost to enable the American people to consider whether they wish to enter a major war if the moment of decision arrives.
Navigating great power conflict is hardly a novel challenge for the United States. By 1945, Americans had lived through two world wars. The country emerged triumphant yet sobered by its wounds. Even as the wars propelled the United States to world leadership, American leaders and citizens feared that a third world war might be as probable as it today appears unthinkable. Perhaps that is one reason a catastrophe was avoided.
For four decades, America’s postwar presidents appreciated that the next hot war would likely be worse than the last. In the nuclear age, “we will be a battlefront,” Truman said. “We can look forward to destruction here, just as the other countries in the Second World War.” This insight didn’t keep him or his successors from meddling in third world countries, from Guatemala to Indonesia, where the Cold War was brutal. But U.S. leaders, regardless of party, recognized that if the United States and the Soviet Union squared off directly, nuclear weapons would lay waste to the American mainland.
Nuclear terror became part of American life, thanks to a purposeful effort by the government to prepare the country for the worst. The Federal Civil Defense Administration advised citizens to build bomb shelters in their backyards and keep clean homes so there would be less clutter to ignite in a nuclear blast. The film “Duck and Cover,” released in 1951, encouraged schoolchildren to act like animated turtles and hide under a makeshift shell — “a table or desk or anything else close by” — if nukes hit. By the 1960s, yellow-and-black signs for fallout shelters dotted American cities.
The specter of full-scale war kept the Cold War superpowers in check. In 1950, Truman sent U.S. troops to defend South Korea against invasion by the Communist North, but his resolve had limits. After Gen. Douglas MacArthur implored Truman to blast China and North Korea with 34 nuclear bombs, the president fired the general. Evoking the “disaster of World War II,” he told the nation: “We will not take any action which might place upon us the responsibility of initiating a general war — a third world war.”
Continue reading here if you wish.
"It is hard to imagine a more stupid or more dangerous way of making decisions than by putting those decisions in the hands of people who pay no price for being wrong." – Thomas Sowell