David Susskind Archive: Interview with Nikita Khrushchev (1962)
1h 32min
Unavailable
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Synopsis:
In October 1960, Eisenhower was President and the election that put John F. Kennedy into the White House was less than a month away. The Cold War was at its zenith. Nikita Khrushchev, the Soviet Premier was visiting the United Nations headquarters in New York City. No Soviet leader had ever been interviewed by an American, yet Khrushchev agreed to appear live on David Susskind's "Open End". There was an immediate negative reaction to the announcement, even causing then F.B.I. director Hoover to ask "What do our files show on Susskind?". The program aired live on Sunday, October 9 on New York television station WNTA. The two-hour conversation (through an interpreter) was very spirited and focused on two main topics. First, the virtues of Soviet styled communism versus American style capitalism, and second, would Khrushchev give his assurance that he would never initiate a nuclear war. At one point, after a commercial break, Khrushchev is informed that one of the commercials during the break was for Radio Free Europe. The commercial depicted a communist soldier smashing a radio set with an axe. Initially, this set Khrushchev off, but after a moment he said "Well, alright, let them screen it. We are not afraid. This will only make us stronger...Let them do it".
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