Tag Archives: submarine

Deputy Commander of Russia’s Northern Fleet submarine forces is killed in Nagorno-Karabakh – The Independent Barents Observer

  1. Deputy Commander of Russia’s Northern Fleet submarine forces is killed in Nagorno-Karabakh The Independent Barents Observer
  2. What to know about the Azerbaijan-Armenia conflict in Nagorno-Karabakh South China Morning Post
  3. Russian peacekeepers to escort Nagorno-Karabakh homeless families to Armenia Reuters
  4. Loyalty-security transactional relationship: ‘Russia has failed to provide for Armenia’s security’ FRANCE 24 English
  5. South Caucasus Conflict Reveals Signs of Russia’s Crumbling Influence in Its Own Backyard The Wall Street Journal
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1st Time Ever, Ukraine’s Cruise Missile Punctures A Submarine; Images Show ‘Irreparable Damage’ To Russia Vessel – EurAsian Times

  1. 1st Time Ever, Ukraine’s Cruise Missile Punctures A Submarine; Images Show ‘Irreparable Damage’ To Russia Vessel EurAsian Times
  2. Russian sub hit in Ukraine attack shows brutal damage: naval expert Business Insider
  3. A Ukrainian Cruise Missile With A Special Warhead Blew Up That Russian Submarine From The Inside Forbes
  4. New photos show Russian submarine damaged in Ukraine’s Sevastopol shipyard attack Meduza
  5. Russian submarine Rostov-on-Don took two direct hits in dock in Sevastopol, sub out for remainder of war Yahoo News
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PLA Submarine ‘Missing’, China’s Defense Minister Underground, Speculations On Mishap Reignites – EurAsian Times

  1. PLA Submarine ‘Missing’, China’s Defense Minister Underground, Speculations On Mishap Reignites EurAsian Times
  2. China: Defence Minsiter Li Shangfu missing, country says ‘not aware of the situation’ | This World WION
  3. What’s behind China’s military officer purge? Vox.com
  4. Xi purging military brass has a message—It’s CCP that calls shots in China, not PLA ThePrint
  5. Xi’s crackdown on corruption: Strong link to ‘lack of resources to achieve competing policy goals’ FRANCE 24 English
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The Sleeper Has Awakened: Six Key Takeaways From the Rollout of North Korea’s “Tactical Nuclear Attack Submarine” – 38 North

  1. The Sleeper Has Awakened: Six Key Takeaways From the Rollout of North Korea’s “Tactical Nuclear Attack Submarine” 38 North
  2. North Korea’s bodged nuclear-missile submarine will be very dangerous – to its crew The Telegraph
  3. Photos show Kim Jong Un celebrating a new ‘nuclear attack submarine’ Business Insider
  4. PHOTOS: North Korean Submarine Launch National Review
  5. Photos show Kim Jong Un celebrating the launch of North Korea’s new ‘nuclear attack’ submarine wearing a dapper cream suit, a sun hat, and really a big smile Yahoo News
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UH researchers find Hawaiʻi’s submarine volcano Kamaʻehuakanaloa has erupted at least 5 times in past 150 years – Kauai Now

  1. UH researchers find Hawaiʻi’s submarine volcano Kamaʻehuakanaloa has erupted at least 5 times in past 150 years Kauai Now
  2. History of Deep Sea Hawaii Volcano Revealed by Scientists Newsweek
  3. Scientists Discover That Hawai’i’s Undersea Volcano, Kama’ehu, Has Erupted 5 Times in the Past 150 Years SciTechDaily
  4. ‘Catastrophic’ eruption at Toba supervolcano possible after warning signs ‘re-evaluated’ Express
  5. New research finds Hawaiʻi’s undersea volcano Kamaʻehuakanaloa has erupted 5 times in past 150 years Big Island Now
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Venus Colony Being Planned From Company Responsible For OceanGate Submarine Disaster – Giant Freakin Robot

  1. Venus Colony Being Planned From Company Responsible For OceanGate Submarine Disaster Giant Freakin Robot
  2. OceanGate Co-Founder Wants To Send 1,000 People To Venus, A Completely Uninhabitable Planet BroBible
  3. OceanGate Co-Founder Shifts Focus From The Titan Tragedy To Sending 1,000 Humans To Venus By 2050 Swarajya
  4. OceanGate Expeditions co-founder reveals ambitious ‘Humans2Venus’ project following tragic submersible inc The Economic Times
  5. The cofounder of OceanGate, the firm whose CEO died on a deep-sea dive for the Titanic, now wants to send 1,000 people to Venus Fortune
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Stepson of Man Missing in Submarine Attends Blink-182 Concert: “My Family Would Want Me” to Be Here – Consequence

  1. Stepson of Man Missing in Submarine Attends Blink-182 Concert: “My Family Would Want Me” to Be Here Consequence
  2. Stepson of Missing Billionaire on Titanic Submarine Attends Blink-182 Concert TMZ
  3. Titanic Sub Missing: Billionaire Passenger’s Stepson Defends Attending Blink-182 Show During Search Yahoo Entertainment
  4. Blink-182 provides comfort to stepson of lost Titan passenger Hartford Courant
  5. Stepson of missing billionaire on Titanic submarine attends Blink-182 concert, says “music helps me in difficult times” NME
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Cocaine Colombia: Colombian Navy seizes drug-smuggling submarine with 2 bodies, 3 tons of cocaine off Pacific coast – WLS-TV

  1. Cocaine Colombia: Colombian Navy seizes drug-smuggling submarine with 2 bodies, 3 tons of cocaine off Pacific coast WLS-TV
  2. Submarine with 2 bodies, 3 tons of cocaine seized in the Pacific Ocean off Colombia CBS News
  3. Ghost submarine with $87.7 million of cocaine and two bodies aboard seized off coast of Colombia New York Post
  4. Mystery as submarine with $87m worth of cocaine and two dead bodies found off coast of Colombia The Independent
  5. Watch: Narco submarine containing 3.6 tonnes of cocaine and two dead bodies seized The Telegraph
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Belgorod submarine: Russian Navy’s massive sub could set the stage for ‘a new Cold War’ in the oceans

The Belgorod was turned over to the Russian Navy earlier this month in the port of Severodvinsk, according to the country’s largest shipbuilder, Sevmash Shipyard.

Experts say its design is a modified version of Russia’s Oscar II class guided-missile submarines, made longer with the aim to eventually accommodate the world’s first nuclear-armed stealth torpedoes and equipment for intelligence gathering.

If the Belgorod can successfully add those new capabilities to the Russian fleet, it could in the next decade set the stage for a return to scenes of the Cold War under the ocean, with US and Russian subs tracking and hunting each other in tense face-offs.

At more than 184 meters (608 feet), the Belgorod is the longest submarine in the ocean today — longer even than the US Navy’s Ohio class ballistic and guided missile submarines, which come in at 171 meters (569 feet).

The Belgorod was floated in 2019 and was expected to be delivered to the Russian Navy in 2020 after trials and testing, but those were delayed by the coronavirus pandemic, Russia’s state-run TASS news agency reported. No timeline for the sub’s first deployment was given.

‘Mega torpedo’

What sets the Belgorod apart from any of the nuclear-powered submarines in the Russian fleet — or indeed from any of the nuclear submarines operated anywhere in the world — is its mission.

TASS has reported that the sub will carry the in-development Poseidon nuclear-capable torpedoes, which are being designed to be launched from hundreds of miles away and to sneak past coastal defenses by traveling along the sea floor.

“This nuclear ‘mega torpedo’ is unique in the history of the world,” American submarine expert H. I. Sutton wrote on his Covert Shores website in March.

“Poseidon is a completely new category of weapon. It will reshape naval planning in both Russia and the West, leading to new requirements and new counter-weapons,” Sutton wrote.

Both US and Russian officials have said the torpedoes could deliver warheads of multiple megatons, causing radioactive waves that would render swathes of the target coastline uninhabitable for decades.

In November 2020, Christopher A. Ford, then assistant secretary of state for international security and non-proliferation, said Poseidons are being designed to “inundate US coastal cities with radioactive tsunamis.”

A US Congressional Research Service (CRS) report in April said Poseidons are intended as retaliatory weapons, designed to hit back at an enemy after a nuclear strike on Russia.

According to the CRS report, the Belgorod would be capable of carrying up to eight Poseidons, though some weapons experts say its payload is more likely to be six torpedoes.

Sutton wrote in 2019 that the Poseidon, which is expected to be 2 meters (6.5 feet) in diameter and over 20 meters (65 feet) long, “is the largest torpedo ever developed in any country.”

That’s “thirty times the size of a regular ‘heavyweight’ torpedo,” Sutton wrote.

Torpedo doubts

The CRS reported that Russian President Vladimir Putin had touted the Poseidons in a 2018 speech, saying, “They are quiet, highly maneuverable and have hardly any vulnerabilities for the enemy to exploit.”

If armed with conventional warheads, the Poseidons could be used against targets “including aircraft carrier groups, shore fortifications, and infrastructure,” Putin reportedly said.

But there are doubts about the weapon and whether it will eventually be added to Russia’s arsenal.

“This is still a technology in development, both the torpedo and the platform,” said Hans Kristensen, director of the Nuclear Information Project at the Federation of American Scientists.

The Poseidon is not expected to be ready for deployment until the second half of this decade, he said. The CRS said it did not expect the Poseidon torpedoes to be deployed until 2027.

And Kristensen points out that the Belgorod itself is really a test vessel for the coming Khabarovsk class of nuclear-powered submarines, the first of which could be launched this year.

“Ukraine is a reminder that Russian advanced weapons are not silver bullets but suffer from reliability issues. There is every reason to believe that an intercontinental-range nuclear-powered torpedo will have its fair share of problems,” Kristensen said.

But other experts caution against any assumption that the sub or the Poseidon torpedoes may not be what is advertised.

“Transposing impressions of the Russian ground and tactical air forces to Russian undersea and nuclear forces — in particular, impressions based on watching the execution of a pretty bad plan in Ukraine — could lead to a dangerous underestimation of those Russian strategic forces’ competence and capability,” said Thomas Shugart, a former US Navy submarine captain and now an analyst at the Center for a New American Security.

“It would be sort of like observing the US’s chaotic withdrawal from Afghanistan, and then as a result questioning the ability of its ballistic missile submarines to execute their nuclear mission — a conclusion the US’ adversaries would draw only at their own great peril.”

‘Underwater game of cat and mouse’

The Belgorod may be only the first in a fleet of four submarines that could carry the Poseidon torpedoes, the CRS said, with two destined for service in Russia’s Pacific Fleet and two in its Northern Fleet.

Sutton, of Covert Shores, wrote in 2020 that the next three Poseidon-armed subs, the aforementioned Khabarovsk class, “are likely to be the defining submarine of the 2020s because they represent a novel and difficult adversary.”

“Other navies are unlikely to emulate it, but they will want to counter it,” Sutton said of the Khabarovsk class. “The underwater game of cat and mouse where US Navy and (British) Royal Navy hunter-killer submarines stalk the Russians could be reinvigorated. A new Cold War in the Arctic, North Atlantic and North Pacific” could be coming, he wrote.

While the Belgorod could be the future Poseidon test launcher, Sutton said the submarine would likely also operate as an intelligence gathering platform.

“It will be crewed by the Russian Navy but operated under GUGI, the secretive Main Directorate of Deep-Sea Research organization,” and carry a range of midget submarines and submersibles “to conduct covert special missions,” Sutton wrote.

In a news release earlier this month, the Russian shipbuilder highlighted the Belgorod’s non-lethal capabilities, saying it opened up “new opportunities for Russia” to conduct “scientific expeditions and rescue operations in the most remote areas of the world ocean.”

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Sharkcano! – NASA Satellite Catches Submarine Eruption of Kavachi Volcano

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May 14, 2022. A plume of discolored water being emitted by Kavachi Volcano.

Kavachi Volcano in the Southwest Pacific Solomon Islands—where hammerhead sharks prowl—has entered an active phase of eruption.

The Solomon Islands’ Kavachi Volcano is one of the most active submarine volcanoes in the Pacific Ocean. According to the Smithsonian Global Volcanism Program, the volcano entered an eruptive phase in October 2021. Now, satellite data shows discolored water around Kavachi on several days in April and May 2022.

The image above, acquired on May 14, 2022, by the Operational Land Imager-2 (OLI-2) on Landsat 9, shows a plume of discolored water being emitted from the submarine volcano, which lies about 24 kilometers (15 miles) south of Vangunu Island (shown below).

May 14, 2022. Kavachi Volcano, which is about 15 miles south of Vangunu Island, emitted a plume of discolored water.

Previous research has shown such plumes of superheated, acidic water usually contain particulate matter, volcanic rock fragments, and sulfur. A 2015 scientific expedition to the volcano found two species of sharks, including hammerheads, living in the submerged crater. The researchers also found microbial communities that thrive on sulfur.

The presence of the sharks in the crater raised “new questions about the ecology of active submarine volcanoes and the extreme environments in which large marine animals can exist,” the scientists wrote in a 2016 Oceanography article, “Exploring the ‘Sharkcano’.”

Prior to this recent activity, large eruptions were observed at Kavachi in 2014 and 2007. The volcano erupts nearly continuously, and residents of nearby inhabited islands often report visible steam and ash. The island is named for a sea god of the Gatokae and Vangunu peoples, and it is sometimes also referred to as Rejo te Kvachi, or “Kavachi’s Oven.”

Since its first recorded eruption in 1939, Kavachi has created ephemeral islands on several occasions. But the islands, up to a kilometer long, have been eroded and washed away by wave action. The summit of the volcano is currently estimated to lie 20 meters (65 feet) below sea level; its base lies on the seafloor at a depth of 1.2 kilometers (0.75 miles).

Kavachi formed in a tectonically active area—a subduction zone lies 30 kilometers (18 miles) to the southwest. The volcano produces lavas that range from basaltic, which is rich in magnesium and iron, to andesitic, which contains more silica. It is known for having phreatomagmatic eruptions in which the interaction of magma and water cause explosive eruptions that eject steam, ash, volcanic rock fragments, and incandescent bombs.



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