"The world as we know
it almost ended four
years ago, coming
within about two
minutes of nuclear
holocaust...
'Russian Roulette' --
produced by England's
Channel Four
Television in
association with PBS'
Frontline documentary
unit -- supplies those
chilling details, and
more...
[The] documentary
relies too heavily, as
British productions
tend to do, on generic
archival footage
edited to mimic the
actual crisis, and the
audio track of ominous
music doesn't add to
the sequence's
credibility.
Once past that,
however, the report
settles down to the
hard-edged business of
assessing the danger
of the situation.
What emerges from
interviews with
experts in both the
U.S. and Russia, in
and out of both
governments, is
agreement that the
systems of command and
control over Russia's
nuclear arsenal and
its early-warning
systems have
deteriorated
drastically."
"With all the chaos in
the former Soviet
Union, ever wonder who
--if anyone -- is in
charge of the nuclear
arsenal that made up
its defense system?
(Word is Russia
recently asked the
U.S. for $3 billion to
fix Y2K problems in
the computers that
control its missiles.
Uh-oh.) Ever think
about the chances of a
missile accidentally
being launched? On
Frontline, 'Russian
Roulette' raises some
very scary
possibilities."
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