This day in history
On this day in 1983, the Soviet Union releases a letter that
Russian leader Yuri Andropov wrote to Samantha Smith, an American fifth-grader
from Manchester, Maine, inviting her to visit his country. Andropov’s letter
came in response to a note Smith had sent him in December 1982, asking if the
Soviets were planning to start a nuclear war. At the time, the United States
and Soviet Union were Cold War enemies.
President Ronald Reagan, a passionate anti-communist, had
dubbed the Soviet Union the “evil empire” and called for massive increases in
U.S. defense spending to meet the perceived Soviet threat. In his public
relations duel with Reagan, known as the “Great Communicator,” Andropov, who
had succeeded longtime Soviet leader Leonid Brezhnev in 1982, assumed a folksy,
almost grandfatherly approach that was incongruous with the negative image most
Americans had of the Soviets.
Andropov’s letter said that Russian people wanted to “live
in peace, to trade and cooperate with all our neighbors on the globe, no matter
how close or far away they are, and, certainly, with such a great country as
the United States of America.” In response to Smith’s question about whether
the Soviet Union wished to prevent nuclear war, Andropov declared, “Yes,
Samantha, we in the Soviet Union are endeavoring and doing everything so that
there will be no war between our two countries, so that there will be no war at
all on earth.” Andropov also complimented Smith, comparing her to the spunky
character Becky Thatcher from “The Adventures of Tom Sawyer” by Mark Twain.
Smith, born June 29, 1972, accepted Andropov’s invitation
and flew to the Soviet Union with her parents for a visit. Afterward, she
became an international celebrity and peace ambassador, making speeches,
writing a book and even landing a role on an American television series. In
February 1984, Yuri Andropov died from kidney failure and was succeeded by
Konstantin Chernenko. The following year, in August 1985, Samantha Smith died
tragically in a plane crash at age 13.
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