FJAG
Army.ca Legend
- Reaction score
- 14,273
- Points
- 1,160
mariomike said:I was eight. I remember a lot of tension. A lot of fire drills. As we kids ran around the neighborhood playing war, I had no idea that the real thing was actually taking place.
I remember a sense of joyous relief in the community when the Crisis ended.
Funny thing I remember ten years after the Cuban Missile Crisis, when I started working, was the number of homes you would be sent into with pictures of Jesus Christ and President Kennedy hanging side-by-side on the wall.
I guess that I'm the old man in the group and my recollection was that this was just one slightly more tense moment than the rest in our world of CONELRAD alert tests, duck and cover drills and a general expectation that nuclear missiles would be raining down on us at any moment.
Notwithstanding all this we too played "guns" (not Cowboys and Indians), street hockey and Relievio in the streets and those tiny strips of grass and trees which in Toronto went by the grandiose title of "the bush".
Our neighbourhood was predominantly protestant but the two Catholic friends I had also had the Kennedy/Jesus pictures hanging in their living rooms.
Changing topic:
Trump gets testy as national security team warns of risks of Syria withdrawal
. . .
Military officials have presented an almost unanimous view that withdrawing US troops from Syria now would be a mistake -- a stance that clashes with Trump's stated opinion that "it's time" to come home. Top commanders expressed their sentiments in public on Tuesday, despite Trump's remarks.
During the meeting with his national security council at the White House, Trump was told by top advisers such as Gen. Joseph Dunford, the chairman of the Joints Chiefs of Staff, that leaving Syria now would provide an opening for Russia, Turkey and Iran to advance their own interests in the country, which run counter to the United States'. The leaders of those countries are meeting in Ankara this week to discuss their own path forward in Syria.
At one stage, Dunford asked the President to state explicitly what he wanted to see happen in Syria, according to an administration official.
A joint staff spokesman declined to comment on what Dunford said to the President.
. . .
https://www.cnn.com/2018/04/04/politics/donald-trump-syria-troops/index.html
:cheers: