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(U) Remembering the Kursk -- The View from Norway (repost)
FROM: (S//SI)
former SLO Oslo
Run Date: 01/04/2007
(U) Here's an article that first appeared on SIDtoday on October 6th, 2006:
(S//SI//REL) I arrived as the new SLO (SIGINT Liaison Officer) Oslo in July 2000. Barely a month
later I would become a witness to a significant event that would involve Oslo Station for the next
18 months. This was the tragic explosion aboard the Russian submarine Kursk that sank on 12
August 2000 with all 118 crewmembers on board. During this period I witnessed first-hand some
of the public and classified activities between Norway and Russia associated with the sinking
and recovery of the Kursk.
(S//SI//REL) The Norwegian Intelligence Service (NIS) was perhaps the first, and in retrospect
the only, intelligence agency in the world to know what had happened to the ill-fated Kursk, long
before the Russians did. The saga began in the early morning hours on 12 August 2000. The
NIS was tracking the OSCAR II sub Kursk (PL850) as it participated in a Russian Northern Fleet
exercise. In addition to COMINT and ELINT, NIS used ACINT (acoustic intelligence) from
sonobuoys as well as a towed array from the collection ship Marjata, operating nearby in the
Barents Sea.
(U) OSCAR II 850 - Kursk
(S//SI//REL) The NIS issued the following report, on Saturday 12 August:
SUBMARINE TECHNICAL EXCHANGE (STE). AT 0729 ZULU AN UNDERWATER
EXPLOSION WAS REGISTERED AND TWO MINUTES LATER AT 0731 ZULU A
STRONGER EXPLOSION WAS REGISTERED FROM PL850 OSCAR II. THIS
CATASTROPHIC CASUALTY CAUSING ENTRY OF WATER INTO THE NOSE
COMPARTMENTS AND PL850 HIT THE BOTTOM PROBABLY A FEW SECONDS
LATER. BASED ON UPDATED DATA, PL850 OSCAR II WAS LOCATED AT BOTTOM
OF THE SEA IN POSITION 6936.59N 3734.32E AT A DEPTH OF 108 METERS WITH
PERISCOPE AND ANTENNAS ERECTED.
(S//SI) The Kursk experienced an explosion in the forward torpedo room followed by a larger
explosion that ultimately sank the sub. This occurred without any distress calls or
communications of its problems. In the words of the NIS report, "It seems as if the Northern
Fleet was not aware that the explosions had occurred on one of their vessels. Thus, 3 ½ hours
passed before any suspicion of problems on board OSCAR II 850 arose. Another 1 ½ hour
passed before the sub call dissemination activity started."
(S//SI//REL) Attempts to contact the Kursk by Northern Fleet Headquarters started on 12
August and continued until 14 August. Search and Rescue operations began on the evening of
12 August and continued through the 13th. A mini sub from the salvage and rescue ship Mikhail
Rudnitskiy located the Kursk, and a closure area was declared beginning a period of salvage and
security operations until the end of September. During this period it appeared that possible
rescue could be attempted.
(U//FOUO) By Monday, the European news channels were reporting on the "missing" submarine.
I received a call from a colleague at the NIS who provided the details reported above. It was
clear from the open source news the Russians had no idea that the sub had suffered a
catastrophic explosion. The BBC and EURONEWS sent reporters and cameras to Murmansk to
cover the Northern Fleet Headquarters handling of the event.
(U//FOUO) I recall standing in my Oslo apartment watching the BBC coverage of a meeting held
by the Northern Fleet Command and relatives of the Kursk crew that were trying to find out any
information about their loved ones. One woman was enraged and was yelling at the men on
stage when a man and women in trench coats came up from behind and injected something into
her neck. She immediately slumped and they took her away. I was shocked to witness this on
live TV, shades of the KGB in the 50s.
(S//SI//REL) Before the end of the week I had the opportunity to visit the NIS Signals Lab in the
basement of their headquarters building and actually heard the explosions recorded by the
sonobuoys and of the hull hitting the bottom. It was a chilling sound I'll never forget.
(S) It was clear that the Northern Fleet command had no information on the condition of the sub
or crew. Once located, the Russians did not have the ability to reach the sub to conduct any
type of rescue/extraction operations. Additionally, by Tuesday August 15, the Russians in press
were accusing the Americans of ramming their sub with one of our ships or subs. Ironically, a US
Navy ship pulled into Bergen, Norway with a (slightly) damaged hull. This, of course, drew
immediate fire from Russia. The Defense Attaché in the US embassy had to work with the
Ambassador to assure publicly that this was not related to the Kursk sinking.*
(S//SI//REL) Eventually, rescue efforts turned sadly to salvage and recovery. It would be 14
months before the Kursk would be recovered. During this period the recovery of the Kursk
remained a high interest to the US Intelligence Community, even after 9/11. Although all US
intelligence focus turned immediately toward global terrorism, the NIS and the staff at Oslo
Station continued to explore the mysteries of the Kursk. The CIA, ONI, NGA, and NSA, through
partnering with the NIS, provided unique intelligence in all forms that continue to be of great
value to the Community.
(S//SI//REL) All during the recovery phase up until the time the hull of the Kursk was returned
to Murmansk, the NIS monitored all aspects of the operation to the benefit of the US. The NIS
Marjata was on station within visual distance of the recovery operation, providing daily reporting
on the operation. During the recovery operations, the NIS WINTERGARDEN INMARSAT system,
which had just gone operational in December 2000, provided a wealth of collection on the
recovery activities.
(U) Picture of the Kursk submarine in drydock near Murmansk shows the horrific damage
caused by the explosion, with the hull torn open and the forward compartments devastated
(Jane's)
(S//SI//REL) It is now six years since the event, and documentaries appearing on the Discovery
Channel describe in fairly accurate detail the events of the sinking and the recovery that was a
significant technological feat. But for me, I still recall those months after the sinking and of the
tremendous work by our Norwegian partner as well as the members of Oslo Station. The NIS
exhaustively covered the event completely from the moment of occurrence and then during the
ensuing months, using all forms of intelligence collection, but it's not something you'll see on the
Discovery Channel.
*(U) SID today editor's note: According to Russian press, scientists subsequently concluded that
the cause of the Kursk accident was the explosion of torpedo ammunition stored in the first
(torpedo) compartment. The explosion had the equivalent force of 5-7 tons of TNT. The Russian
report further noted that the time of the explosion coincided with the scheduled time of a
torpedo training drill.
(S//SI//REL) Thanks to
Office of Russia;
SLO Oslo; and
NIS Senior Analyst, for contributing to this article, which is reprinted from the
Foreign Affairs Digest , September edition.
(U) Do you have any information to add to this story? If so, please post your comment in the
SID today blog .
"(U//FOUO) SIDtoday articles may not be republished or reposted outside NSANet
without the consent of S0121 (DL sid comms)."
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DERIVED FROM: NSA/CSSM 1-52, DATED 08 JAN 2007 DECLASSIFY ON: 20320108