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On this day

February 15

Maine Explodes in Havana: War With Spain Begins (1898). Singapore Surrenders: Britain's Greatest Defeat (1942). Notable births include Galileo Galilei (1564), Matt Groening (1954), Ernest Shackleton (1874).

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Maine Explodes in Havana: War With Spain Begins
1898Event

Maine Explodes in Havana: War With Spain Begins

The forward magazines of the USS Maine detonated at 9:40 PM on February 15, 1898, while the battleship sat at anchor in Havana Harbor. The explosion killed 260 of the 355 men aboard, most of them enlisted sailors sleeping in the forward berthing areas. The cause was never definitively established. A naval court of inquiry blamed an external mine, but modern forensic analysis suggests an internal coal fire ignited the adjacent ammunition magazine. The actual cause mattered far less than the political effect. 'Remember the Maine, to Hell with Spain' became the rallying cry of the yellow press, particularly Joseph Pulitzer's New York World and William Randolph Hearst's New York Journal, which published inflammatory coverage that made war inevitable. President McKinley, who privately opposed war, buckled under public pressure. Congress declared war on Spain on April 25, launching the conflict that transformed America into an imperial power.

Singapore Surrenders: Britain's Greatest Defeat
1942

Singapore Surrenders: Britain's Greatest Defeat

Lieutenant General Arthur Percival surrendered Singapore to the Japanese on February 15, 1942, handing over approximately 80,000 British, Australian, and Indian troops in what Winston Churchill called 'the worst disaster and largest capitulation in British history.' The defeat was a catastrophe of overconfidence. British commanders had assumed the Malay Peninsula's dense jungle was impassable; Japanese forces bicycled through it in sixty-five days. The 'fortress' of Singapore had its heavy guns pointed seaward, useless against a land assault from the north. Japanese General Tomoyuki Yamashita, outnumbered nearly three to one, bluffed Percival into surrendering by demanding it in a face-to-face meeting, hiding the fact that his troops were low on ammunition. The fall of Singapore shattered the myth of European invincibility in Asia, emboldening independence movements across Southeast Asia that would dismantle the British, French, and Dutch colonial empires within two decades.

Justinian II Executes Rivals in Hippodrome Chaos
706

Justinian II Executes Rivals in Hippodrome Chaos

Justinian II ordered the public execution of his predecessors Leontios and Tiberios III in the Hippodrome of Constantinople in 706, forcing them to lie prostrate before him while he rested his feet on their necks before the crowd. He then had them dragged to the Hippodrome's execution grounds and beheaded. Justinian had been deposed and mutilated in 695, his nose slit by Leontios, who was himself overthrown by Tiberios in 698. Justinian spent a decade in exile before returning with Bulgar mercenaries to reclaim his throne in 705. His brutal vengeance against anyone who had supported his overthrow, combined with erratic policy decisions and punitive taxation, alienated virtually every faction in the empire. Within five years, his own generals rebelled. Justinian was captured, beheaded, and his six-year-old son was murdered to prevent any future Heraclian restoration.

Plane Crash Kills Entire US Figure Skating Team
1961

Plane Crash Kills Entire US Figure Skating Team

Sabena Flight 548 crashed during its approach to Brussels Airport on February 15, 1961, killing all 72 people aboard and one person on the ground. Among the dead were the entire 18-member US figure skating team, traveling to the World Championships in Prague. The team included national champions, pairs skaters, and ice dancers who represented the best of American figure skating talent. The crash forced the cancellation of the 1961 World Championships and left the US skating program devastated. Rebuilding took nearly a decade, but the tragedy prompted the US Figure Skating Association to invest in a broader grassroots development pipeline rather than relying on a small elite. The Memorial Fund established after the crash has since provided over million in financial support to developing skaters. Peggy Fleming, who won gold at the 1968 Olympics, was among the first products of the rebuilt program.

Serum Run to Nome: Balto's Heroic Antitoxin Dash
1925

Serum Run to Nome: Balto's Heroic Antitoxin Dash

Twenty mushers and their sled dog teams completed a 674-mile relay across frozen Alaska to deliver diphtheria antitoxin to the isolated town of Nome, saving the community from a deadly epidemic. Lead dog Balto became a national hero, immortalized with a statue in Central Park, and the feat inspired the annual Iditarod Trail Sled Dog Race.

Quote of the Day

“In the sciences, the authority of thousands of opinions is not worth as much as one tiny spark of reason in an individual man.”

Historical events

Born on February 15

Portrait of Matt Groening

Matt Groening drew Life in Hell in an alternative newspaper for years before James L.

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Brooks asked him to develop a cartoon for The Tracey Ullman Show in 1987. Groening sketched The Simpsons in the waiting room, named the characters after his own family, and sold the idea in fifteen minutes. The show premiered in 1989 and is still running. He created Futurama while The Simpsons was already the longest-running American primetime series. He did it with a different studio to avoid the conflict.

Portrait of Tomislav Nikolić
Tomislav Nikolić 1952

Tomislav Nikolić was born in 1952 in Kragujevac, Serbia.

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He dropped out of construction school. Worked as a gravedigger for years. Then cemetery manager. No university degree. He joined the Serbian Radical Party in the 1990s — the nationalist hard-right. Lost four presidential elections. On his fifth attempt, in 2012, he won. First Serbian president without higher education since World War II. He served one term, then didn't seek reelection. The gravedigger became president at 60.

Portrait of Jane Seymour
Jane Seymour 1951

Jane Seymour was born Joyce Penelope Wilhelmina Frankenberg in 1951.

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She changed her name to match Henry VIII's third wife — the one who gave him a son and died twelve days later. The stage name worked. She became a Bond girl at 22 in *Live and Let Die*. Then *Dr. Quinn, Medicine Woman* ran for six seasons in the '90s. She played a frontier doctor in Colorado. The show made her a household name at 42. She's also an accomplished painter and designed jewelry that's sold millions. The girl who borrowed a Tudor queen's name outlasted most of her generation.

Portrait of John Adams
John Adams 1947

John Adams was born in Worcester, Massachusetts, in 1947.

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Not that John Adams. This one writes operas about Nixon going to China and terrorists hijacking cruise ships. His father played clarinet in marching bands. Adams grew up listening to Duke Ellington and Benny Goodman, then discovered Stravinsky at fifteen. He moved to California in 1971 and started composing minimalist music — repeating patterns that slowly shift, like Steve Reich but with more drama. "Nixon in China" premiered in 1987. Critics called it everything from brilliant to absurd. Opera houses worldwide still perform it. He made contemporary classical music sound like something that could actually happen to you.

Portrait of Niklaus Wirth
Niklaus Wirth 1934

Niklaus Wirth was born in Winterthur, Switzerland, on February 15, 1934.

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He'd later design Pascal in 1970, naming it after the mathematician who built the first mechanical calculator. The language was meant to teach programming — clear, disciplined, impossible to write sloppy code in. It worked. Pascal dominated computer science education for two decades. But Wirth kept going. He created Modula, then Oberon, then the Oberon operating system that ran on hardware he also designed. In 1984, he won the Turing Award. The citation called him a master of "doing more with less." His law became famous among programmers: "Software gets slower faster than hardware gets faster.

Portrait of Sara Jane Moore
Sara Jane Moore 1930

38 revolver at President Gerald Ford on September 22, 1975, in San Francisco.

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She missed. A bystander grabbed her arm as she pulled the trigger. The bullet ricocheted off a wall. Ford kept walking. She'd been on the FBI's radar for months — an accountant turned radical who'd infiltrated leftist groups as an informant, then switched sides. The Secret Service had confiscated a gun from her the day before. She bought another one that morning. She served 32 years in federal prison. When they asked her later if she regretted it, she said no — she regretted missing.

Portrait of James R. Schlesinger
James R. Schlesinger 1929

James R.

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Schlesinger steered American defense policy through the volatile post-Vietnam era, serving as the first Secretary of Energy and a rigorous Secretary of Defense. His insistence on maintaining a strong nuclear triad and his skepticism toward detente reshaped Cold War strategy, ensuring that national security remained tethered to technological superiority and strategic realism.

Portrait of Kevin McCarthy
Kevin McCarthy 1914

Kevin McCarthy was born in Seattle in 1914.

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He'd become famous for one role: the man nobody believed in *Invasion of the Body Snatchers*. He spent the film running through the streets screaming that his neighbors had been replaced by emotionless duplicates. The studio made them add a framing device so audiences wouldn't leave too disturbed. McCarthy hated it. He thought the paranoia should stand alone. He reprised the role 22 years later in the remake, this time playing a man screaming the same warning. Still nobody listened.

Portrait of Miep Gies
Miep Gies 1909

Miep Gies was born in Vienna in 1909, during a famine.

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Her parents sent her to the Netherlands at age eleven to recover from malnutrition. She stayed. Thirty years later, she hid Anne Frank's family in an Amsterdam office building for two years. After the Gestapo raided, she went back to the annex. She found Anne's diary scattered on the floor and kept it in her desk drawer, unread. When Otto Frank returned from Auschwitz — the only survivor — she handed it to him. "Here is your daughter's legacy," she said. She refused to read it until it was published. She lived to 100.

Portrait of Ernest Shackleton
Ernest Shackleton 1874

Ernest Shackleton's ship Endurance was crushed by Antarctic pack ice in November 1915.

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He spent six months drifting on the ice, then sailed 800 miles across the Drake Passage in a twenty-two-foot lifeboat through the worst seas on Earth, then crossed the mountains of South Georgia Island on foot. He reached a whaling station and organized a rescue for the twenty-two men left behind. Every single one survived. He'd failed to cross Antarctica. He'd done something harder.

Portrait of Charles Lewis Tiffany
Charles Lewis Tiffany 1812

Charles Lewis Tiffany was born in 1812 in Connecticut.

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His father was a cotton mill owner who gave him $1,000 to start a business. He opened a stationery store in Manhattan. It sold office supplies and costume jewelry. Within 15 years, he'd pivoted entirely to diamonds. He bought the French crown jewels after the fall of Napoleon III — 24 pieces for $480,000, including Marie Antoinette's earrings. Americans had never seen gems like that for sale. He made luxury American, not European. His son Louis designed the lamps. But Charles built the blue box that meant something before you even opened it.

Portrait of Cyrus McCormick
Cyrus McCormick 1809

Cyrus McCormick invented the mechanical reaper at 22, in his father's Virginia blacksmith shop.

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His father had tried for 20 years and failed. McCormick added a vibrating blade, a reel to gather grain, and a platform to catch it. Farmers could suddenly harvest six times faster. He sold exactly one in the first year. Then he moved to Chicago, built a factory, and introduced installment payments — the first major manufacturer to let customers buy on credit. By the Civil War, his reapers were feeding the Union Army. The North had farm equipment. The South had manpower tied up in fields. It wasn't the only reason the North won, but it mattered.

Portrait of Galileo Galilei

Galileo Galilei was 17 when he noticed a chandelier swinging in the Pisa cathedral and used his own pulse to time it.

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Same period regardless of how wide the arc. He never published a paper on pendulums — he just filed it away. That's how his mind worked: watch carefully, measure, remember. He improved the telescope, which he hadn't invented, and turned it on the sky. Jupiter had moons orbiting it. Not everything orbited the Earth. He published that in 1610. The Church caught up with him in 1633. He recanted under threat of torture, went home, and kept working. He discovered the moon's libration while under house arrest. He went completely blind in 1638 and kept dictating science to students until he died.

Died on February 15

Portrait of Kevin Smith
Kevin Smith 2002

Kevin Smith died on February 15, 2002, from a head injury sustained in a fall on set in China.

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He was 38. Most people knew him as Ares, the god of war who showed up in 20 episodes of *Xena: Warrior Princess*. He'd been working on a Chinese historical film when he fell. The crew rushed him to a hospital, but he never regained consciousness. New Zealand lost one of its busiest character actors. Lucy Lawless called him irreplaceable.

Portrait of Big L
Big L 1999

Harlem lyricist Big L redefined East Coast hip-hop with his intricate internal rhyme schemes and razor-sharp storytelling.

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His murder in 1999 silenced one of rap’s most promising voices just as he prepared to launch his independent label, Flamboyant Entertainment. His posthumous releases cemented his status as a blueprint for the technical evolution of modern underground rap.

Portrait of Richard Feynman

Richard Feynman diagnosed the Challenger disaster by dropping a piece of O-ring into a glass of ice water during a televised Senate hearing.

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The rubber stiffened. That was the whole presentation. He'd done it alone, after the official investigation kept steering around the answer. He won the Nobel Prize for work so abstract it still resists plain explanation. What he couldn't stand was pretending not to know something when you did know it.

Portrait of Hugh Dowding
Hugh Dowding 1970

Hugh Dowding directed the Royal Air Force’s Fighter Command during the Battle of Britain, orchestrating the…

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radar-integrated defense that prevented a German invasion. His insistence on preserving fighter strength during the conflict ensured the survival of the British Isles, securing his legacy as the primary architect of the nation's survival against the Luftwaffe.

Portrait of H. H. Asquith
H. H. Asquith 1928

H.

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H. Asquith died on February 15, 1928. He'd been Prime Minister for eight years — longer than any 20th-century PM except Thatcher and Blair. He led Britain into World War I, then lost power halfway through it. His own party split over his leadership. By 1918, the Liberals were finished as a governing force. They haven't won an election since. Asquith spent his last decade watching from the sidelines as the party he'd led for two decades collapsed into irrelevance. He died at 75, still in Parliament, still a Liberal, leading a party that no longer mattered.

Portrait of Lew Wallace
Lew Wallace 1905

He was between military assignments, bored, scratching out chapters in his lap.

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The book sold 2 million copies by 1900 — only the Bible outsold it in the 19th century. He made almost nothing from it at first. Publishers owned the rights. He died in 1905, still best known as the general who almost lost the Battle of Shiloh. The book outlasted the battle. Nobody remembers Shiloh.

Portrait of Theodoros Kolokotronis
Theodoros Kolokotronis 1843

Theodoros Kolokotronis died in Athens on February 4, 1843.

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He'd led the Greek forces that broke Ottoman rule after four centuries. Started as a klepht — a mountain bandit — in the Peloponnese. By 1821, he commanded the entire Greek radical army. He won the Siege of Tripolitsa, the first major Greek victory. Then his own government arrested him for treason twice. They needed him too much to execute him. He died in bed at 73, having outlived most of his enemies and all of his doubters. Greece exists because he refused to lose.

Portrait of Ferdinand II
Ferdinand II 1637

Ferdinand II died in Vienna on February 15, 1637, at 58.

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He'd spent 28 years trying to force Catholicism back onto Protestant territories. The Thirty Years' War — which he escalated into the bloodiest conflict Europe had seen — was still raging. It would go on another eleven years. Central Europe lost between 25% and 40% of its population. Some German states lost two-thirds of their people. He died believing he was saving souls. The Peace of Westphalia, signed in 1648, undid almost everything he fought for. It established that rulers could choose their territory's religion, exactly what he'd spent three decades trying to prevent.

Holidays & observances

Candlemas marks the presentation of Jesus at the temple, forty days after his birth.

Candlemas marks the presentation of Jesus at the temple, forty days after his birth. But that's not why it survived. In medieval Europe, this was the day you blessed all the candles you'd burn through the year. Churches stockpiled beeswax for months. Entire villages showed up with armfuls of tapers. The blessing took hours. It mattered because winter wasn't over — February and March were the hungriest months, the darkest stretch before spring. You needed those candles blessed because you needed to believe they'd last. The church knew this. They turned anxiety into ceremony.

Two brothers, Roman soldiers, executed for refusing to sacrifice to pagan gods.

Two brothers, Roman soldiers, executed for refusing to sacrifice to pagan gods. Faustin and Jovita were beheaded in Brescia around 120 AD. They'd converted to Christianity, then converted others. The emperor ordered them to renounce their faith publicly. They refused. First came torture — the usual Roman catalog of persuasion. When that failed, the arena. Lions wouldn't touch them. Fire wouldn't burn them. The crowd started converting on the spot. So the authorities took them back to prison and killed them quietly. Their feast day celebrates brothers who died together rather than lie about what they believed. Brescia still claims them as patron saints.

Romans concluded the festival of Lupercalia by purifying their city through the ritual of Februa, a cleansing ceremon…

Romans concluded the festival of Lupercalia by purifying their city through the ritual of Februa, a cleansing ceremony involving goatskin thongs and sacrificial offerings. This ancient practice of spiritual and physical purging gave February its name and evolved into the foundation for later Roman religious calendars, directly influencing how the empire structured its annual cycle of atonement.

Susan B.

Susan B. Anthony Day honors the woman who voted illegally in 1872, got arrested for it, and refused to pay the $100 fine. She never did pay it. The government never collected. She spent fifty years traveling 75 to 100 days a year, giving speeches in every state, organizing women who couldn't vote to demand it anyway. She died in 1906, fourteen years before the Nineteenth Amendment passed. She knew she wouldn't see it. She kept going. The amendment they finally ratified? They call it the Susan B. Anthony Amendment.

Afghanistan celebrates Liberation Day on February 15, marking Soviet withdrawal in 1989.

Afghanistan celebrates Liberation Day on February 15, marking Soviet withdrawal in 1989. The last Soviet convoy crossed the Friendship Bridge into Uzbekistan at dawn. Commander Boris Gromov walked across last, carrying flowers. Nine years, 15,000 Soviet soldiers dead, over a million Afghans killed. Moscow called it internationalist duty. Afghans called it occupation. The Soviets left behind a communist government that collapsed three years later. Then came the warlords, then the Taliban. The liberation didn't end the war. It just changed who was fighting.

The Armenian Church celebrates Vartan today — a 5th-century general who led 1,036 soldiers against Persia's demand th…

The Armenian Church celebrates Vartan today — a 5th-century general who led 1,036 soldiers against Persia's demand that Armenia convert to Zoroastrianism. He lost. All 1,036 died. But Persia, exhausted by the resistance, stopped enforcing conversion. Armenia stayed Christian. They count the exact number of dead because losing mattered more than winning. The battle they lost saved what they were.

Serbia celebrates Statehood Day on February 15th, marking the First Serbian Uprising against Ottoman rule in 1804 and…

Serbia celebrates Statehood Day on February 15th, marking the First Serbian Uprising against Ottoman rule in 1804 and the adoption of the first constitution in 1835. Same date, two events 31 years apart. The uprising began when Karađorđe led rebels against rogue janissaries who'd been murdering Serbian leaders. Four years later, Serbia became the first Balkan nation to break Ottoman control. The Republic of Srpska—the Serb-majority entity within Bosnia and Herzegovina—adopted the holiday in 2025, linking its identity to Serbia's despite being a separate political entity. It's a choice that makes neighbors nervous.

Parinirvana Day marks when the Buddha died at 80, lying on his side between two sal trees.

Parinirvana Day marks when the Buddha died at 80, lying on his side between two sal trees. He'd eaten a meal at a blacksmith's house. Food poisoning, most scholars think. He knew he was dying. He told his followers not to blame the blacksmith. His last words: "All things are impermanent. Work out your own salvation with diligence." Then he was gone. Mahayana Buddhists celebrate this as the moment he entered final nirvana — complete liberation from the cycle of rebirth. Not a death. A completion.

Singapore calls it Total Defence Day because in 1942, they learned what happens when you only prepare soldiers.

Singapore calls it Total Defence Day because in 1942, they learned what happens when you only prepare soldiers. The British had guns pointed at the sea. The Japanese came through the jungle from Malaysia. Singapore fell in a week. Now every February 15th, the entire country practices six kinds of defence: military, civil, economic, social, psychological, digital. Schools run blackout drills. Offices test supply chains. It's not about remembering defeat. It's about making sure every civilian knows their role before the next crisis hits.

Serbians celebrate National Day to honor the 1804 First Serbian Uprising against Ottoman rule and the adoption of the…

Serbians celebrate National Day to honor the 1804 First Serbian Uprising against Ottoman rule and the adoption of the country’s first modern constitution in 1835. These events transformed a localized rebellion into a formal movement for statehood, establishing the legal framework that eventually secured Serbia’s recognition as an independent, sovereign nation in the Balkans.

John Frum Day celebrates a cargo cult that started during World War II.

John Frum Day celebrates a cargo cult that started during World War II. American troops stationed in Vanuatu brought jeeps, radios, Coca-Cola, canned food. Then they left. Islanders built bamboo control towers and carved wooden radios, waiting for the cargo to return. They still celebrate every February 15th. The movement has its own political party. Members believe John Frum—possibly a conflation of multiple American servicemen—will come back with the goods. They've been waiting since 1945. The faith hasn't wavered.

Canada's flag is 60 years old.

Canada's flag is 60 years old. Before 1965, the country used the British Red Ensign — a colonial banner with the Union Jack in the corner. It took three years of debate to replace it. Veterans protested. Parliament nearly deadlocked. Lester Pearson, the Prime Minister, pushed it through after 308 designs were rejected. The maple leaf they chose wasn't even botanically accurate — it's a stylized hybrid of multiple species. But it worked. The old flag came down at noon on February 15, 1965. Thousands stood in minus-20 weather to watch. A country that couldn't agree on a symbol finally had one that belonged to nobody's empire but its own.

Lupercalia ended on its third day with the lottery.

Lupercalia ended on its third day with the lottery. Young men drew names of women from a jar. The pairs stayed together through the festival — sometimes longer. The ritual was meant to ward off evil spirits and purify the city, but by the late Republic, it was mostly an excuse for chaos. Half-naked men ran through the streets whipping people with strips of goat hide. Women lined up for it. Being struck was supposed to cure infertility. When Christianity took over, the church tried to ban Lupercalia for centuries. It didn't work. They finally just moved the date and called it Valentine's Day instead.

The Catholic Church celebrates the Feast of the Holy Innocents today — the children Herod killed trying to murder Jesus.

The Catholic Church celebrates the Feast of the Holy Innocents today — the children Herod killed trying to murder Jesus. Medieval priests let choirboys run the church for 24 hours: they elected a "Boy Bishop" who gave sermons, collected donations, even issued blessings. Some Boy Bishops got full episcopal robes and staffs. The tradition lasted until the Reformation banned it. One thing stayed: in Spain and Latin America, it's still their version of April Fools' Day. Sacred massacre became sanctioned chaos.

ENIAC took up 1,800 square feet and weighed 30 tons.

ENIAC took up 1,800 square feet and weighed 30 tons. It could do 5,000 additions per second — which sounds quaint until you realize human computers took days to do what ENIAC did in hours. The military kept it secret for years. When they finally unveiled it in Philadelphia in 1946, newspapers called it a "giant brain." The six women who programmed it weren't in the photos. Philadelphia celebrates ENIAC Day because the computer age started in a basement at the University of Pennsylvania.

Russia honors customs officers killed in the line of duty.

Russia honors customs officers killed in the line of duty. The date marks the 1995 ambush of a Russian border patrol in Tajikistan — all eleven agents died. Customs work sounds bureaucratic until you remember Russia shares land borders with fourteen countries, including Afghanistan. Officers face smugglers moving heroin through Central Asia, weapons through the Caucasus, contraband across the longest border on Earth. Since 1991, over 500 Russian customs agents have been killed on duty. Most weren't shot at checkpoints. They were assassinated at home.