BLIND MAN'S BLUFF: The Untold Story of American Submarine Espionage.BLIND MAN'S BLUFF Blind man's bluff can refer to:
In 1987, just out of high school, I joined the Navy and after a difficult training program found myself as a Sonar Operator on a nuclear attack submarine. Our operations consisted mainly of training work-ups ("drilling and killing Drilling and Killing: Chevron and Nigeria's Oil Dictatorship is an award-winning audio documentary produced by Amy Goodman and Jeremy Scahill, mixed and engineered by Dred Scott Keyes. ") and fleet exercises in which our smaller, older boat would play the bad guy, sneak in Verb 1. sneak in - enter surreptitiously; "He sneaked in under cover of darkness"; "In this essay, the author's personal feelings creep in" creep in through the antisubmarine defenses and torpedo the Admiral's command ship again and again and again. After a series of inspections culminating in our receiving renewed reactor safety and weapons certifications, one ominous day the whole crew filled out their wills and we deployed on a two month "Spec Op." I had no idea what happened on a Special Operation and none of the more experienced sailors would tell me; they took great pride in their ability to keep their mouths shut. That first day on station was the most exciting of my life. And that was just the first day. After sixty-seven days continuously submerged, and running out of food, we surfaced off the beautiful California coast and pulled into San Diego with a very skinny crew. I am still legally prohibited from discussing where we went and what we did, which is why I will be forever grateful for the book Blind Man's Bluff It is a godsend god·send n. Something wanted or needed that comes or happens unexpectedly. [Alteration of Middle English goddes sand, God's message : goddes, genitive of God, God for veteran submariners who have had to explain away long absences from their families with the simple euphemism "special operations." With Naval security agents on their heels, The New York New York, state, United States New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of Times investigative journalists Sherry Sontag and Christopher Drew have made a successful end run around stacks of secrecy oaths and the locked lips of the Silent Service to make public some of the most astounding a·stound tr.v. a·stound·ed, a·stound·ing, a·stounds To astonish and bewilder. See Synonyms at surprise. [From Middle English astoned, past participle of astonen, military operations of the Cold War. It is a surprisingly complete account of how the ultimate stealth war machine, the nuclear submarine, became the ultimate spy platform in a strange marriage between the Navy's "go to hell and back" submarine captains and the CIA's spooks. Together they engaged in the world's second oldest profession, spying, and achieved some amazing successes, as well as the occasional blunder. This book will be an eye opener for those who think the Cold War was a mere sitzkreig as Warsaw Pact and NATO NATO: see North Atlantic Treaty Organization. NATO in full North Atlantic Treaty Organization International military alliance created to defend western Europe against a possible Soviet invasion. armies eyeballed each other across the Iron Curtain. Undersea the Cold War was boiling hot, as the U.S. Navy engaged in incredibly aggressive operations against Soviet Naval forces, concealing the dangers from the American leadership, often going so far as to falsify falsify, v to forge; to give a false appearance to anything, as to falsify a record. patrol reports. Thousands of sailors ventured into harm's way as American subs maintained year round vigils off the Soviet coastline, even venturing into its territorial waters territorial waters: see waters, territorial. territorial waters Waters under the sovereign jurisdiction of a nation or state, including both marginal sea and inland waters. as they carefully cataloged the latest Soviet weapons developments. In one of the more gripping incidents detailed in the book, the USS Seawolf was on the bottom of the desolate Siberian Sea of Okhotsk Noun 1. Sea of Okhotsk - an arm of the Pacific to the east of Asia Pacific, Pacific Ocean - the largest ocean in the world , tapping undersea telephone cables, when a powerful storm threatened to bury her in the seabed. In a desperate moment, Seawolf's captain contemplated detonating det·o·nate intr. & tr.v. det·o·nat·ed, det·o·nat·ing, det·o·nates To explode or cause to explode. [Latin d the high explosive scuttling Scuttling is the act of deliberately sinking a ship by allowing water to flow into the hull. This can be achieved in several ways - valves or hatches can be opened to the sea, or holes may be ripped into the hull with brute force or with explosives. charges that would prevent his submarine and its crew from falling into Soviet hands. One disturbing revelation may lay to rest wild rumors that have circulated in the submarine community for decades regarding the USS Scorpion. Lost with all hands in the Atlantic in 1968, the Soviets were often accused of torpedoing the boat. Presenting new evidence, the book's authors make the case that the tragedy was caused by a weapons malfunction and could have been prevented by the Navy with a simple modification to its torpedoes. Packed with real life adventures that Tom Clancy could only have guessed at, the book is more than a collection of sea stories. It reveals how submarine operations during the Cold War had a profound impact on strategic decisions made in the Kremlin and Washington. While the superpowers conducted peacetalks, their submarines, armed with nuclear weapons, were colliding with each other on a regular basis. In November 1969, when U.S. and Soviet relations were moving towards detente dé·tente n. 1. A relaxing or easing, as of tension between rivals. 2. A policy toward a rival nation or bloc characterized by increased diplomatic, commercial, and cultural contact and a desire to reduce tensions, as through , the USS Gato collided with a Soviet Hotel class missile submarine in the Barents Sea a mere two days before arms control talks were to begin in Helsinki, Finland. Though there were no injuries and neither sub was seriously damaged, the Soviet Navy believed the Gato had sunk. They scoured the Barents for her corpse, which Soviet negotiators could have used as proof of American bad faith in the negotiations. Following the orders of Atlantic Fleet Commanders, the Gato's Captain falsified patrol reports to indicate he had discontinued his patrol two days before the collision. President Nixon was not apprised of the accident. Thus the Navy was able to continue high-risk operations despite the fears Soviet and American leaders often expressed that World War III World War III (abbreviated WWIII), or the Third World War, is a term used to describe a hypothetical conflict on the scale of World War I and World War II, or even larger, such as a nuclear holocaust. would begin with just such an incident. Submarine collisions aren't just a part of Cold War history: in March 1993 the USS Grayling collided with a Russian Delta IV missile submarine, prompting President Clinton to give Russian President Boris Yelstin a formal apology. The book presents an eclectic complement of true life characters, such as the colorful boat skippers who competed to pull off even more daring feats of underwater brinkmanship brink·man·ship also brinks·man·ship n. The practice, especially in international politics, of seeking advantage by creating the impression that one is willing and able to push a highly dangerous situation to the limit rather than concede. , scientists who made the missions feasible, and the spooks who rode the boats operating custom built spy gear. Men who participated in some of the most successful and secret espionage activities in U.S. history finally receive a long overdue tip of the hat. One of these operations, authorized by President Carter and culminating in the Reagan years, was another telephone cable tapping operation, this time in the Barents Sea. Traveling northward from San Francisco, under the North Pole, and into the Barents, the USS Parche successfully placed a sophisticated nuclear powered tap pod on the ocean floor that would continuously record from hundreds of phone lines for a year. It was this tapping operation that yielded an intelligence take that officials dubbed the "big casino." In response to a 1983 NATO exercise called Able Archer in which NATO forces practiced release procedures for tactical nuclear weapons, the Soviets placed their conventional and nuclear forces on alert. It was all caught on tape, providing an unparalleled look deep into the Soviet defense system and the minds of the men who controlled it. Lock the doors and draw the shades, because this book is a well written, highly readable account of man and machine working together to do the impossible for the highest of stakes. DAVID AYER, a former enlisted sailor aboard the USS Haddo, is now a screenwriter whose most recent project was Universal Studios' World War II submarine adventure U-571. |
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