I appreciate and respect your opinions but I have to say that the Cuban Missile Crisis was the closest our country has ever come to all out nuclear war. If it had not been for restraint and diplomacy we might not be having these discussions.
BD, there is absolutely no doubt that the base fact that in the end nothing happened made Cuba a "win." Absolutely no debate.
We didn't know at the time that local authority for nuclear release had been granted from Moscow to Soviet commanders on the ground. Had we landed it is all too possible they would have used something. The ramifications therefrom could have been somewhere between only barely comprehensible and apocryphal.
The incident is ususally measured historically, however, in the context of "who won" short of war. In that context the incident started with us holding three aces and the Soviets holding an ace high. They shipped in a joker for a pair and Khruschev knew he was bluffing. In the end we gave them another joker to allow the perception of a split pot while we quietly let them take the next two antes just for showing up.
As for the choice of Palin for VP , I think McCain believes women will vote for him because of her.
Everyone right now is assuming she is either an amazing choice gifted by bravery and insight on the part of McCain or she's a terrible choice gifted by pandering and senility on his part. The truth is neither; yet. It's one of those times when we have to admit we don't know what we don't know. And what we don't know is just about everything.
This isn't the GOP leadership's first rodeo. They know how to vet a prospective candidate. Even though McCain doesn't always take senior party advice too well there had to be something that intelligent people saw to make the choice seem viable. And it has to be more than just picking up undecided women.
Truth be told VP's that have ascended to the Presidency have a
very mixed record; and that's being generous. Who can remember anything about John Tyler, Millard Fillmore, Andrew Johnson (except that he was impeached), Chester Arthur or Cal Coolidge? LBJ gave his heart and soul to the office and has a mixed legacy; at best. Teddy Roosevelt and Harry Truman are the only Vice Presidents who ascended the Presidency on the death of their former and are seen mostly well in the historical lens. Yet Truman barely won his own election against Dewey and TR couldn't win when he tried again under the Bull Moose banner. So even contemporaries had significant doubts. For that matter a lot of Presidents who got in on their own didn't have much of a record.
Palin may burst from the bloom and be the rock star that some seem to expect. She may be the death of the campaign. More likely she'll be a somewhere very much in between. If we're honest, however, the only thing we know for sure right now is that we don't know.