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[personal profile] pecunium
By way of [livejournal.com profile] deyo I got details of something I'd heard whispered around various watercoolers.

1983, the movie War Games came out. The movie opened with a test of the crews in missile silos. Many of them were said to have not launched when given what looked to be legitimate orders.

This was a tense time. People still went to sleep at night and wondered if some odd-fluke would cause the Soviets to bomb us. In 1984 the movie "Red Dawn" came out, about an invasion of the Rocky Mountain States by Russian paratroopers, and the subsequent resistance.

We were fighting a proxy war by helping the Mujahadin in Afganistan.

On Sept. 26, 1983 COL Stanislav Petrov was on duty, in a bunker outside of Moscow. His job was to watch the early warning radar, so that, in the event of a U.S. attack, the Russians could implement Mutual Assured Destruction.

He got a warning. A missile was headed for the Soviet Union. He decided the Americans wouldn't send just one missle, so he called it a false alarm.

A little later he got a string of missles on the radar. He decided (with great trepidation) that they too must be false alarms.

He was right.

What, one wonders, would have happened if he'd reported it; even with the caveat that he thought it a false alarm. Tensions were high. This was the time of Reagan. Big buildup of the Army; and deployment of the Pershing 2 SSSM, and howitzers with nuclear shells in Germany. The trident submarine, and a larger Boomer fleet. A president who thought nothing of joking he'd given the order to launch the missles.

Would the officers above him have been willing to roll the dice that this wasn't an attack, because it was only a small handfull of missiles, and they'd still be able to retaliate? No one will ever, Thank God, know.

All because Stanislav Petrov was on duty that night.

We need to celebrate, so I intend to raise a toast, on Sep. 26, in honor of him, with thanksgiving and singing.

Re: Na zdrovje --

Date: 2005-10-31 04:46 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] pecunium.livejournal.com
I wasn't going to bring this up, it's Polish.

There are a lot (and I mean a lot of loan words in Russian (for example, of the basic ranks (excluding, basically, such modern inventions as Warrant Officers) of the Army, the only one which is native to Russian is Private (riyadavoi=one who stands in line).

Most of the rest are either French (serzhant) or German (ephraitor).

The word for Colonel, is Polish, (polkhovnik=one who leads a polk).

At some point in the past, when the Poles had control of a large chunk of what is now Western Russia and Ukraine, the Polish toast, "Na zdrovie" came to be the drinking toast to health.

When at a formal dinner in Ukraine this past July, that was toast raised when we started. When out in Kiev it was the toast raised, when in the canteen at the military acadamy, it was raised, and one could hear it offered up by people at nearby tables who were celebrating..

So, it's origin is Polish, it's present status us Russian (and Polish, and Ukrainian).

TK

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