Ever heard of Stanislav Petrov?
Probably not – but you may very well
owe him your life.
Petrov, a former member of the
Soviet military, didn't actually
do
anything – but that's precisely the
point.
In 1983, Petrov held a very
important station: As lieutenant
colonel, he was in charge of
monitoring the Soviet Union's
satellites over the United States,
and watching for any sign of
unauthorized military action.
This was the Cold War era, and
suspicions were high – on September
1st, the Soviet Union had mistakenly
shot down a Korean aircraft it had
believed to be a military plane,
killing 269 civilians, including an
American Congressman. The Soviet
Union believed that the United
States might launch a missile attack
at any moment, and that they would
be forced to respond with their own
arsenal of nuclear weapons.
Several weeks after the airplane
disaster, on September 23rd, another
officer called in sick, so Petrov
was stuck working a double shift at
a secret bunker, monitoring
satellite activity, when "suddenly
the screen in front of me turned
bright red,"
Petrov told
BBC
News. "An alarm went off.
It was piercing, loud enough to
raise a dead man from his grave."
According to the system, the United
States had launched five missiles,
which were rapidly heading into
Soviet territory. The U.S.S.R. was
under attack.
All Petrov had to do was push the
flashing red button on the desk in
front of him, and the Soviets would
retaliate with their own battery of
missiles, launching a full-scale
nuclear war.
"For 15 seconds, we were in a state
of shock,"
he told
The
Washington Post. "We
needed to understand, what's next?"
Though the bunker atmosphere was
chaotic, Petrov, who had trained as
a scientist, took the time to
analyze the data carefully before
making his decision. He realized
that, if the U.S.
did
attack, they would be unlikely to
launch a mere five missiles at once.
And when he studied the system's
ground-based radar, he could see no
evidence of oncoming missiles.
He still couldn't say for sure what
was going on, but "I had a funny
feeling in my gut," he told
The
Post. "I didn't want to make
a mistake. I made a decision, and
that was it."
Luckily for all of us, he decided
not to push that button. Later, his
instincts were proven right – the
malfunctioning system had given him
a false alarm, and the U.S. had not
deployed any missiles. Thanks to
Petrov's cool head, nuclear war had
been narrowly averted, and millions
of lives were saved.
Unfortunately, Petrov didn't exactly
receive a heroic reward from the
Soviet military: Embarrassed by
their own mistakes, and angry at
Petrov for breaking military
protocol, they forced him into early
retirement with a pension of $200 a
month. Petrov's brave act was kept
secret from the outside world until
the 1998 publication of a book by
one of Petrov's fellow officers, who
witnessed his courage on that
terrifying night.
Since the book's publication, Petrov
has been honored by the United
Nations and presented with a World
Citizen Award, and there has been
talk of giving him the Nobel Prize.
Still, the humble Russian scientist
plays down his role in averting a
nuclear crisis: "I was simply the
right person in the right time, that
was all," he said in the upcoming
documentary,
The
Red Button and the Man Who Saved the
World.
We've got to disagree with him.
Sure, he may have done nothing – but
in this case, it might just be the
hardest thing to do.
Original story by Kathryn Hawkins