14 battles
June 24, 1948 ยท Europe Theater
On June 24, 1948, the Soviet Union severed all land and water routes into West Berlin, hoping to force the Western Allies to abandon the city or accept Soviet terms for Germany's future. Instead, the United States, Britain, and France launched a massive airlift that at its peak flew 1,398 sorties per day, delivering coal, food, and medicine to 2.2 million Berliners. After 318 days, the Soviets lifted the blockade on May 12, 1949 โ a humiliating failure that had only stiffened Western resolve.
Total casualties
100
Commanders
Germany) vs Germany)
June 25, 1950 ยท Asia Theater
North Korea's surprise invasion of South Korea on June 25, 1950 drew a UN coalition โ overwhelmingly American โ into three years of savage combat. The war swung wildly: UN forces were nearly pushed into the sea at Pusan, then MacArthur's brilliant Inchon landing drove the North Koreans back, then Chinese intervention in October 1950 shattered the advance. By 1951 the front had stabilized near the 38th parallel where it began, and two more years of grinding trench warfare produced the armistice of July 27, 1953.
3,000,000
Command) vs Army)
October 23, 1956 ยท Europe Theater
Sparked by student demonstrations in Budapest on October 23, 1956, the Hungarian Revolution briefly toppled the Soviet-backed government and installed reform communist Imre Nagy, who announced Hungary's withdrawal from the Warsaw Pact. The West โ preoccupied with the simultaneous Suez Crisis โ watched as Soviet tanks crushed the uprising on November 4, killing some 2,500 Hungarians and causing 200,000 to flee as refugees. Nagy was arrested, secretly tried, and executed in 1958.
3,200
government) vs Hungary)
October 29, 1956 ยท Middle East Theater
When Egyptian President Nasser nationalized the Suez Canal in July 1956, Britain, France, and Israel conspired in secret to seize it back by force. Israel attacked Egypt on October 29; Britain and France followed with an ultimatum and then airstrikes. The military operation succeeded โ but the political catastrophe was total. The United States, furious at being excluded from the plan and alarmed by Soviet threats of nuclear intervention, forced its own allies to back down, withdrawing all forces by December.
3,500
Force) vs Forces)
October 4, 1957 ยท Space Race Theater
On October 4, 1957, the Soviet Union launched Sputnik 1, the world's first artificial satellite โ a 184-pound aluminum sphere broadcasting a radio beep as it orbited the Earth every 98 minutes. Americans could tune their radios to hear it pass overhead. The achievement was a thunderbolt: if the Soviets could put a satellite in orbit, they could deliver a nuclear warhead to any city on Earth. The 'Sputnik Crisis' ignited a political firestorm in Washington that transformed American science, education, and defense policy.
0
Agency) vs OKB-1)
April 17, 1961 ยท Latin America Theater
The CIA's plan to overthrow Fidel Castro using 1,400 Cuban exiles trained in Guatemala collapsed catastrophically on the beaches of the Bay of Pigs on April 17, 1961. President Kennedy, inheriting the plan from Eisenhower, cancelled the essential air support at the last minute, fatally exposing the landing force. Within 72 hours all 1,400 Brigade 2506 fighters were either dead or captured; 1,189 were ransomed back two years later for $53 million in food and medicine.
200
Dulles vs Premier)
August 13, 1961 ยท Europe Theater
In the predawn hours of August 13, 1961, East German soldiers began sealing the border between East and West Berlin with barbed wire โ within days replaced by concrete. The Wall was built to stop the hemorrhage of East Germans fleeing to the West: 3.5 million had escaped since 1945, including the doctors, engineers, and teachers the communist state could not replace. Over 28 years, approximately 140 people were killed attempting to cross the Wall โ shot by East German border guards.
140
Berlin) vs SED)
October 16, 1962 ยท Global Theater
On October 14, 1962, a U-2 spy plane photographed Soviet medium-range ballistic missile sites under construction in Cuba. For thirteen days โ October 16โ28 โ the world stood closer to nuclear war than at any other moment in history. Kennedy imposed a naval 'quarantine' on Cuba, Khrushchev threatened retaliation, Soviet submarines armed with nuclear torpedoes maneuvered near the blockade line, and American nuclear forces went to DEFCON 2 for the only time in history. The crisis resolved when Khrushchev agreed to remove the missiles in exchange for a secret U.S. pledge to remove Jupiter missiles from Turkey and a public pledge not to invade Cuba.
(ExComm) vs Malinovsky
August 20, 1968 ยท Europe Theater
Alexander Dubฤek's reform program โ 'socialism with a human face' โ abolished censorship, allowed political pluralism, and threatened to introduce market elements into the Czechoslovak economy. On the night of August 20โ21, 1968, 500,000 Warsaw Pact troops and 6,300 tanks from five countries invaded Czechoslovakia. Dubฤek was arrested, flown to Moscow, forced to sign the Moscow Protocol, and eventually replaced. The reforms were reversed one by one under the policy of 'normalization.'
137
Party) vs Commander)
September 11, 1973 ยท Latin America Theater
Salvador Allende, the world's first democratically elected Marxist head of state, had nationalized Chile's copper industry and pursued socialist economic policies since his 1970 election. With CIA funding of opposition groups, economic destabilization, and logistical support, Chilean military commanders launched a coup on September 11, 1973. The Presidential Palace was bombed; Allende died in the assault. General Pinochet's regime that followed killed over 3,000 people, tortured tens of thousands, and 'disappeared' hundreds more.
3,000
Commander) vs Chile)
December 24, 1979 ยท Asia Theater
On Christmas Eve 1979, Soviet paratroopers seized Kabul airport and killed Afghan President Hafizullah Amin in a special forces assault on the Tajbeg Palace. What followed was a nine-year counterinsurgency war against Mujahideen fighters backed by the CIA, Saudi Arabia, and Pakistan. The CIA's Operation Cyclone provided Stinger missiles that neutralized Soviet air superiority. By the time the last Soviet troops crossed back over the Amu Darya river on February 15, 1989, 15,000 Soviets and an estimated 1โ2 million Afghans were dead.
2,000,000
support) vs Army)
August 14, 1980 ยท Europe Theater
A strike at the Lenin Shipyard in Gdaลsk on August 14, 1980, led by electrician Lech Waลฤsa, rapidly grew into a nationwide movement. The Solidarity trade union enrolled 10 million members โ a third of Poland's working population โ and negotiated the Gdaลsk Agreements that gave workers the right to strike and form independent unions. Jaruzelski imposed martial law in December 1981, interning Solidarity leaders, but the movement survived underground, sustained by the Catholic Church and covert CIA funding. The 1989 Round Table talks gave Solidarity the political opening that began the fall of Eastern European communism.
Chairman) vs Secretary)
November 9, 1989 ยท Europe Theater
At a press conference on November 9, 1989, East German Politburo spokesman Gรผnter Schabowski, confused about the timing of new travel regulations, announced that East Germans could cross the border immediately. Crowds gathered at checkpoints; bewildered border guards, receiving no orders to fire, opened the gates. Within hours tens of thousands of East and West Berliners were dancing on the Wall, hacking at it with hammers and pickaxes. The symbol that had divided Europe for 28 years fell not to an army but to a bureaucratic mistake and a crowd that would not go home.
Germany) vs Spokesman)
December 25, 1991 ยท Global Theater
On Christmas Day 1991, Mikhail Gorbachev appeared on Soviet television to announce his resignation as President of the USSR. The Soviet flag was lowered over the Kremlin for the last time and replaced by the Russian tricolor. Fourteen Soviet republics had already declared independence; the Commonwealth of Independent States replaced the USSR as a loose successor. The largest country on Earth, the world's second superpower, the state that had survived Hitler and the Great Patriotic War, dissolved โ peacefully, almost quietly โ after 74 years of existence.
States) vs USSR)