Trece Dг­as -

: The book highlights the internal debates of the ExComm (Executive Committee of the National Security Council), showing how the administration balanced military pressure from the Joint Chiefs of Staff with diplomatic backchannels. 2. The Film: " Trece días " (2000)

Published posthumously in 1969, Trece días (ISBN 9788494372605) is Robert Kennedy's personal account of the most dangerous period of the Cold War. Trece dГ­as

(the Spanish title for "Thirteen Days" ) typically refers to two prominent works based on the 1962 Cuban Missile Crisis: a classic memoir by Robert F. Kennedy and its high-stakes film adaptation starring Kevin Costner. 1. The Memoir: "Trece días" by Robert F. Kennedy : The book highlights the internal debates of

Directed by Roger Donaldson, this political thriller is a dramatization of the crisis, heavily inspired by Kennedy's book. Cuban Missile Crisis - JFK Library (the Spanish title for "Thirteen Days" ) typically

: It chronicles the 13-day standoff between the U.S. and the Soviet Union from October 16 to October 28, 1962, after U-2 spy planes discovered Soviet nuclear missiles in Cuba.

Trece Dг­as -


: The book highlights the internal debates of the ExComm (Executive Committee of the National Security Council), showing how the administration balanced military pressure from the Joint Chiefs of Staff with diplomatic backchannels. 2. The Film: " Trece días " (2000)

Published posthumously in 1969, Trece días (ISBN 9788494372605) is Robert Kennedy's personal account of the most dangerous period of the Cold War.

(the Spanish title for "Thirteen Days" ) typically refers to two prominent works based on the 1962 Cuban Missile Crisis: a classic memoir by Robert F. Kennedy and its high-stakes film adaptation starring Kevin Costner. 1. The Memoir: "Trece días" by Robert F. Kennedy

Directed by Roger Donaldson, this political thriller is a dramatization of the crisis, heavily inspired by Kennedy's book. Cuban Missile Crisis - JFK Library

: It chronicles the 13-day standoff between the U.S. and the Soviet Union from October 16 to October 28, 1962, after U-2 spy planes discovered Soviet nuclear missiles in Cuba.