Twenty writers, including Edward R. Murrow, Arthur Koestler, Philip Wylie, Hal Boyle, Marguerite Higgins, and Walter Winchell, contributed to the article.
[1] In the scenario, Soviet and allied forces enter Yugoslavia in May 1952 to support an anti-Tito uprising organized by COMINTERN agents.
The US turns to psychological warfare by emphasising that the UN is fighting for the liberation of the Russian people, and support is provided to guerrilla forces in Soviet satellite countries.
A suicide task force of 10,000 US paratroopers destroy the last remaining Soviet nuclear stockpiles hidden in the Ural Mountains.
UN forces push the Soviet Army back across Europe, and by year's end have reached Warsaw and the Ukrainian border.
In the war's aftermath, a Christian Science Monitor editor reported on the rebirth of religion, unions, a free press and democracy in Russia.