Thirteen Days
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:21:02
I do not wish to seem melodramatic
:21:04
but I do wish to impress upon you
:21:06
a lesson I learned with bitter tears
:21:08
and great sacrifice
:21:10
The Soviet understands
only one language

:21:12
action
:21:13
Respects only one word
:21:15
Force
:21:17
I concur with General Taylor
:21:19
I recommend air strikes
followed by invasion

:21:22
perhaps
:21:24
proceeded by an ultimatum
to dismantle the missiles

:21:26
If that is militarily viable
:21:28
So it appears we have three options
:21:30
Number one, a surgical air strike
against the missiles themselves

:21:35
Two, a much larger air strike
against their air defenses

:21:37
along with the missiles. And three
:21:43
invasion
:21:45
So we're certainly gonna do number one
We're gonna take these missiles out

:21:49
It seems to me we can't wait very long
:21:50
We should at leat
be making those preparations

:21:52
We're preparing to
implement all three options

:21:53
Though I must stress again, sir
there are risks to the strikes

:21:57
without the follow-on invasion
:22:01
You want to be clear, Mr. President
:22:03
that we've definitely decided
against a political track

:22:08
Dean
:22:10
How does this all play out?
:22:14
Your first step, sir
will be to demand that the Soviet

:22:17
withdraw the missiles
within 12 to 24 hours

:22:20
The will refuse
:22:21
When they do
you will order the strikes

:22:23
followed by the invasion
:22:25
They will resist and be overrun
:22:28
They will retaliate against another
target somewhere else in the world

:22:31
most likely Berlin
:22:33
We will honor our treaty commitments
:22:35
and resist them there
:22:37
defeating them per our plans
:22:41
Those plans call for
the use of nuclear weapons

:22:49
So...
:22:52
what is the next step?
:22:53
Hopeful cooler heads will prevail
:22:55
before we reach the next step

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