USSR/SUBMARINES)RATHER
Document Type:
Collection:
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST):
CIA-RDP88-01070R000301530013-4
Release Decision:
RIFPUB
Original Classification:
K
Document Page Count:
1
Document Creation Date:
December 22, 2016
Document Release Date:
January 8, 2010
Sequence Number:
13
Case Number:
Publication Date:
January 10, 1985
Content Type:
OPEN SOURCE
File:
Attachment | Size |
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Body:
Approved For Release 2010/01/08: CIA-RDP88-0107OR000301530013-4
CBS EVENING NEWS
10 January 1985.
,>USSR/SUBMARINES>RATHER: Tonight, a CBS Evening News Insight report on the
.cost of' Soviet numerical superiority, in submarines. The
Soviet Union has about two and a half; times the number of
submarines as the United States and holds a slight edge in
the number of nuclear U-boats. Bill'Lynch as been
investigating how Moscow gained the edge and at what
price.
LYNCH: Fire at sea, terrifying to submariners. While
this smoky incident.in the Sea of Japan last fall may have
been just a drill, real mishaps are all too common on
Soviet subs. On paper, the Soviet navy has a mighty force
of more than 370 submarines, half of them nuclear-powered..
But in practice,?Soviet subs have proven deadly for
hundreds of Russian sailors. Half a dozen fatal
incidents, never before reported, of sinkings, fires and,
repeated radiation leakage emerged from censored-CIA
reports obtained by CBS News. Since the mid-1960s, six,
Soviet subs have been reported lost at sea, taking some
500 crewmen to their deaths. The CIA documents tell for
the first time of the 1968, sinking of a Northern Fleet sub
at the virtual doorstep of its base on the Kola Peninsula.
CMDR. ROY CORLETT (Ret.) (Soviet sub expert): For every
accident that you hear about, there must be a great many
which don't receive publicity.
LYNCH: Soviet sailors drill for the worst and,often face
real-life disasters. One CIA report describes a'nuclear
sub in the Baltic suffering violent shocks and radiation
leakage in 1981. Part of the crew was sealed off as the
sub was towed home, and they all later died of radiation
poisoning. As many as 30 crewmen died on the icebreaker
Lenin in the.mid-'60s, after what a CIA source described
as a 'meltdown of her nuclear reactor,' the worst type of
nuclear power emergency. ADM ANTHONY WHETSTONE (Ret.,
Royal Navy): The Soviets neglected to ensure complete
safety in certain areas, and they, they have paid the
penalty for that.
LYNCH: By contrast, the U.S. Navy says it puts safety
first. Except for the loss of the.Thresher and the
Scorpion in the 1960s, the Navy claims a spotless nuclear
safety record. Soviet admirals,'who traditionally put
less emphasis on crew health and safety, may have learned
from their disasters how_ to improve their newest subs.
CORLETT: They don't hesitate to experiment even where
this costs money or even where, in the event they may have
gone. disastrously wrong.'
LYNCH: Whatever role past disasters played in the latest
Soviet sub designs, Western'navies now-face a potential
adversary who can dive deeper, run faster and quieter than
before. Bill Lynch, CBS News, Washington. <
Approved For Release 2010/01/08: CIA-RDP88-0107OR000301530013-4