Able Archer 83: The NATO Exercise That Nearly Triggered Nuclear War Audiolibro Por Miles Dunsford arte de portada

Able Archer 83: The NATO Exercise That Nearly Triggered Nuclear War

Zentara Cold War Operations Revealed

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Able Archer 83: The NATO Exercise That Nearly Triggered Nuclear War

De: Miles Dunsford
Narrado por: Chris Bentley
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In November 1983, the Cold War reached one of its most dangerous and least remembered turning points. Able Archer 83 was not a battle, not an invasion, and not a declared crisis. It was a NATO command-post exercise, a controlled rehearsal designed to test communications, procedures, and decision-making in the event of war. Yet behind the closed doors of bunkers and command centres, it unfolded in a climate so tense, so brittle, and so saturated with fear that the Soviet Union reportedly interpreted elements of the exercise as preparation for a real nuclear first strike. For a brief, chilling window, the world may have edged closer to catastrophe not through deliberate aggression, but through misinterpretation, worst-case assumptions, and the dangerous logic of nuclear deterrence.

Able Archer 83 tells the story of that week, and of the year that made it possible. In 1983, the global atmosphere was already combustible. The Soviet war in Afghanistan continued to drain resources and deepen insecurity. Poland simmered under martial law, raising fears in the West of repression and expansion, and fears in Moscow of rebellion and collapse. The United States began deploying Pershing II and ground-launched cruise missiles to Europe, systems that the Soviet leadership believed could shorten warning time and weaken Moscow’s ability to respond. Meanwhile, President Ronald Reagan’s rhetoric, strategic posture, and military build-up reinforced Soviet suspicions that Washington might be seeking not coexistence but strategic dominance. In such an environment, even routine actions carried the potential to look menacing, and even a training scenario could be interpreted as cover for the real thing.

This book traces how an exercise that NATO saw as standard preparation became, through the Soviet lens, a possible signal of imminent attack. It explores the culture of Cold War intelligence, and the ways fear can become doctrine.

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