Military Wiki
Register
Advertisement
Submarine incident off Kola Peninsula
Part of Operation Holy Stone
USS Grayling (SSN-646)
USS Grayling moored at Port Canaveral, Florida, a few months after the incident
Date20 March 1993
LocationNorth of Murmansk, Russia
70°30′10.5″N 32°56′52.8″E / 70.502917°N 32.948°E / 70.502917; 32.948Coordinates: 70°30′10.5″N 32°56′52.8″E / 70.502917°N 32.948°E / 70.502917; 32.948
Result US Navy surveillance on Russian naval bases restricted
Belligerents
United States Flag of Russia Russia
Commanders and leaders
United States Captain Richard Self[1] Russia Cdr. Andrei Bulgarkov
Strength
1 Sturgeon-class submarine 1 Delta IV-class submarine
Casualties and losses
1 nuclear submarine lightly damaged 1 nuclear submarine lightly damaged
<templatestyles src="Module:Location map/styles.css"></templatestyles>
Submarine incident off Kola Peninsula is located in Russia
Submarine incident off Kola Peninsula
Location within Russia

The Submarine Incident off Kola Peninsula was a collision between the US Navy nuclear attack submarine USS Grayling and the Russian Navy nuclear ballistic missile submarine K-407 Novomoskovsk some 100 miles north of the Russian naval base of Severomorsk, on 20 March 1993. The incident took place when the US unit, who was trailing her Russian counterpart, lost track of Novomoskovsk. At the time that Grayling reacquired the other submarine, the short distance of only half mile made the ramming unavoidable. The incident happened just a week before the first summit between American president Bill Clinton and the president of the Russian Federation, Boris Yeltsin.

Previous incident[]

Despite the end of the Cold War and the 1991 fall of the Soviet Union, the United States government tasked the US Navy to continue to keep a close watch on the main bases of Russian nuclear submarines to monitor developments, especially those related to strategic assets that remained under Russian control.[2] This kind of submarine surveillance was officially known as "Operation Holy Stone" and "Operation Pinnacle" or "Bollard" in the submariners’s jargon.[3] The intelligence-gathering included the tapping of Soviet submarine communication cables, the recording of the pattern of noises from Soviet submarines, and the observation of submarine-launched ballistic missile tests.[4]

On 11 February 1992, the American attack submarine USS Baton Rouge collided with the Russian Navy nuclear submarine B-276 Kostroma off Severomorsk. The mission of Baton Rouge was reportedly the recovery or delivery of intelligence-monitoring devices on the seabed.[4] The American press claimed that the submarine was checking wireless traffic between Russian bases,[5] but the Russians and other sources asserted that the two units were engaged in a ‘cat-and-mouse game’.[6][7][8]

According to some sources, Baton Rouge was written-off due to the high costs of repairing the damaged pressure hull, along with a programmed refueling.[9][10]

The collision[]

Novomoskovsk, commanded by Captain First Rank Andrei Bulgarkov,[11] was performing combat training tasks at a site 105 nautical miles (194 km) north of Murmansk.[12] Having reached the northern border of the designated area, she turned back, making between 16 knots (30 km/h) to 18 knots (33 km/h).[11] Twenty-five minutes later, while submerged at 74 meters,[13] Novomoskovsk felt an impact followed by screeching noises. Immediately afterwards, her sonar reported noises of a foreign submarine close by. Before clearing the area, the Grayling checked that the Russian submarine had not sustained serious damage.[12]

An investigation revealed that Grayling had been tracking Novomoskovsk from a position between 155 and 165 degrees to port and from distances of between 11–13 kilometres (5.9–7.0 nmi). Grayling lost contact with Novomoskovsk when the Russian submarine changed course to 180 degrees. To reacquire the target, Grayling sped to the location of contact loss at 8–15 knots (15–28 km/h).[14]

The breaking waves created in the shallow waters of the Barents Sea generate background signals, so that when two submarines approach one another head-on, each detects the other when the distance is of just a couple of hundred of meters.[4] Grayling's passive sonar detected Novomoskovsk at a distance of about a kilometer (0.54 nautical mile). With the distance closing and Grayling's Combat Information Center still trying to decide on the best way of avoiding a collision, Grayling's commanding officer, Captain Richard Self, tried to change course and to surface, but the attempts were thwarted by Grayling's momentum. Grayling collided with the upper structure of Novomoskovsk,[14] which suffered a large scratch on her starboard bow.[15] The American submarine limped away also with minor damage.[1] The American submarine was repaired and remained in service until her decommissioning in 1997.[14] Novomoskovsk also returned to service, and after a major upgrade she is expected to stay in the Russian Navy until 2020.[16]

Political consequences[]

The second clash between American and Russian submarines in a year unleashed a flurry of angry reactions, both inside the Clinton administration and in Yeltsin’s Russia. The news that the US Navy was still keeping a close watch on Russia’s ports and bases came barely a week before a scheduled summit between the presidents of both countries. At that time, the US government was trying to improve relationships with Russia, especially by supporting Yeltsin’s reforms. During the meeting, which took place in Canada, Clinton promised that he would conducted a review not only of the incident itself, but of the policies “of which the incident happened to be an unintended part.”[17]

Clinton’s statement caused concern in the US Navy, but after a briefing for top officials, among them the new national security adviser, Anthony Lake, the submarine force got the green light to continue its activities in the Barents Sea, although at a greatly reduced pace.[18] The result was a major effort to restrict the operational procedures and improve the training of submarines' commanding officers.[19]

Notes[]

  1. 1.0 1.1 Riddles persist in return of sub involved in collision State, 9 April 1993
  2. Sontag & Drew, page 586
  3. Reed, page 1
  4. 4.0 4.1 4.2 Eugene Miasnikov (April, 1993). "Submarine Collision off Murmansk". p. 6. http://www.armscontrol.ru/subs/collisions/db080693.htm#prof. 
  5. John H. Gushman Jr. "Two Subs Collide off Russian Port", The New York Times, Feb. 19, 1992
  6. Artur Blinov and Nikolay Burbyga, "Underwater Incident in the Kola Gulf," Izvestia, Feb. 20, 1992 p.1; Nikolay Burbyga and Viktor Litovkin "Americans Not Only Helping Us, But Spying on Us. Details of Submarine Collision in Barents Sea," Izvestia, Feb. 21, 1992, p.2
  7. Jane's defence weekly: Volume 17, p. 352. Jane's Pub. Co., 1992
  8. Schwartz, Stephen I. (1998). Atomic audit: the costs and consequences of U.S. nuclear weapons since 1940. Brookings Institution Press, p. 306, note 89. ISBN 0815777744
  9. “In late 1993, it was announced that one of the oldest Los Angeles class boats, the USS Baton Rouge, would be decommissioned and placed in reserve. The official reason for this was that the boat was due for a very expensive refueling and the cost of this could not be justified in the current environment. However, confidential European sources have pointed out that the Baton Rouge was involved in a collision with a Russian Sierra-class submarine and had not been to sea since. This, they suggested, pointed to serious pressure hull damage rather than refueling costs as being responsible for the decommissioning.” Warship Forecast, 1997
  10. Stitz, Gregory: Peacetime Submarine losses. Texas Maritime Academy, Texas A & M University at Galveston, 1996
  11. 11.0 11.1 Cherkashin, Nikolay. "Подводный крейсер идет на таран (An underwater cruiser rams)" (in Russian). Soviet Belorussia. http://www.nvmu.ru/archiv/1/n_0/9684.htm. Retrieved 2009-02-10. 
  12. 12.0 12.1 U.S. and Russian Subs in Collision In Arctic Ocean Near Murmansk by Michael E. Gordon. The New York Times, 23 March 1993
  13. The Last Frontier of the Cold War by Jon Bowermaster
  14. 14.0 14.1 14.2 USS Grayling (SSN-646), History, Patrols and Crews, Mesothelioma Web Organization. Retrieved on 25 May 2013
  15. Sontag & Drew, p. 590
  16. Northern Fleet Official: SSBN Novomoskovsk to Stay in Navy till 2020, 14 August 2012
  17. Sontag & Drew, pp. 590-592
  18. Sontag & Drew, pp. 592-593
  19. Moore, Robert (2002) ’’A Time to Die: The Kursk disaster’’. Doubleday, p. 116. ISBN 0385602650

References[]

  • Sontag, Sherry and Drew, Christopher (1998). Blind Man’s Bluff: The untold story of American submarine espionage. Thorndyke press. ISBN 0786218762
  • Stern, Robert (2007). The hunter hunted: submarine versus submarine encounters from World War I to the present. Naval Institute Press. ISBN 1591143799
  • Reed, Williams (2003). Crazy Ivan: Based on a True Story of Submarine Espionage. IUniverse. ISBN 0595265065
All or a portion of this article consists of text from Wikipedia, and is therefore Creative Commons Licensed under GFDL.
The original article can be found at Submarine incident off Kola Peninsula and the edit history here.
Advertisement