It might seem odd to celebrate a 23rd anniversary but every year since
I heard of this man I go out and raise a glass to his memory. In truth
you can get most journalists to raise a glass to anything but in this
case I'm thanking him for my life.

On 26th September 1983 the hero of the day, Colonel Stanislav
Yefgrafovich Petrov, clocked on for work as normal. Petrov was in
charge of the Soviet Union's satellite warning systems and this was
the height of the cold war. Everyone was on edge because NATO was
carrying out its annual tactical exercises and two weeks before the
Soviets had shot down a Korean airliner that had wandered into the
wrong airspace.

Meanwhile in the wider picture Ronald Reagan was publicly calling the
Soviet Union an 'Evil Empire', the warm up man at a UK Conservative
party rally had opened with the call to "Bomb Russia" and we had
Andropov, a former leader of the KGB, as the current ruler of the
Kremlin. Things were, to put it mildly, on a hair trigger.

All in all it was a scary time to be alive. If I hadn't had the first
Sláine series in the comic 2000AD and Duran Duran's Rio to distract me
I'd never have made it through the year without digging a fallout
shelter – something plenty of people did.

Anyway, at 40 minutes past midnight on the 26th Petrov looked up and
saw a missile launch from a United States silo had been detected by
one of his satellites. Now you might expect panic at this point but
missile command tends to attract the serious, sober type, probably the
type of people who smoke a pipe and sew leather patches on their
jackets, and Petrov kept his head.

He knew the satellite had been reported as suspect and decided to hold
off on informing the high command. Then a second missile launch was
picked up, and shortly after another, and another and another. Petrov
knew that if he waited until he could confirm the launches with ground
radar it would be too late for his country, he and his family would
die and the Yankees would win the Cold War.

Thankfully for us he thought before acting. He reasoned that it was
illogical for a surprise attack to launch missiles one after the other
– instead you'd launch everything you had and hope to wipe out the
enemy before they reacted. He left the launch button alone and
thankfully the missiles proved to be ghosts.

Myself and millions other slept peacefully in our beds that night,
blissfully unaware of how close we came to fiery death or a worse
existence than we could imagine if we had lived. Had the missiles
flown Britain would, according to government war plan projections,
currently be at a medieval level of technology in most places, having
lost 90 per cent of its population.

Petrov was reprimanded and now lives in the scientific community of
Fryazino in Russia. He was honoured this year in a ceremony at the
United Nations and has been honoured with two World Citizen Awards. So
take some time out today and say your private thanks to the man who
saved the world.

http://www.itpro.co.uk/blogs/categories/security/589/remember-the-forgotten-hero-who-saved-the-world.thtml

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