Shoigu’s
Assessment: Secret Weapon Nuclear Sub to Be Repaired and Relaunched
Soon
In
the headquarters of the Northern Fleet, a commission is investigating
the causes of the incident. The Defense Minister held a closed
meeting in the headquarters with the military and the designers of
the submarine. Right afterward, he reported to the President.
The
families of the 14 Russian servicemen who
died after a fire broke out on a nuclear submarine have
reportedly been told that their relatives averted a “planetary
catastrophe” before they passed away.
Russian
servicemen 'averted
planetary catastrophe'
during nuclear submarine
incident, military official
claims at funeral
8
July, 2019
A
high-ranking military official is said to have made the comment at a
funeral for the crew in St Petersburgh days after the accident in
the Barents
Sea earlier
this week.
The
incident remains shrouded in mystery after the Russian government
refused to reveal the submarine’s name and its mission, claiming
them as state secrets.
However,
the Kremlin has said the incident was sparked by a fire in the
battery compartment of the submarine.
Defense
minister Sergei Shoigu said earlier this week that the onboard
nuclear reactor was “operational” after the crew took “necessary
measures” to protect it.
His
deputy Andrei Kartapolov also claimed the “hero” submariners
sealed a hatch to contain the blaze.
The
Kremlin has not revealed what exactly occurred, or whether a major
incident was averted by the servicemen's actions.
Paying
tribute to the crew at the memorial, the unnamed military official
said the submariners had prevented a much bigger tragedy, Russian
news outlet Open
Media reported.
“Today
we are seeing off the crew of a research deep water apparatus, who
died while performing a combat mission in the cold waters of the
Barents Sea. Fourteen dead, 14 lives,” he is quoted as saying. “At
the cost of their lives, they saved the lives of their comrades,
saved the ship, did not allow a planetary catastrophe.”
The
Independent was
unable to verify the comments, which did not elaborate on the cause
of the accident or how disaster was averted.
Severeal
sources have identified the vessel as the A-31, or the Losharik
submersible; a nuclear-powered unarmed vessel capable of deep sea
missions.
Its
exact design is shrouded in secrecy, but it is believed to be an
experimental 70m-long craft operating in conjunction with a larger
mothership submarine. Developed over 15 years beginning in 1988, it
is described as the Russian military’s most advanced deep water
vessel.
Some
descriptions suggest that it is associated with maritime special
forces missions, including spying on ocean-bed cables. It is thought
to be capable of diving to depths of up to 6,000m.
Local
news agency Severpost reported
that the smaller submarine was likely tethered to the larger
Podmoskovye atomic submarine when it emerged from the Barents Sea at
the mouth of the Kola Bay.
Citing
an unnamed fisherman, the publication claimed the submarine was
travelling quickly back towards base, but without obvious signs of
distress.
What
remains unclear is how many of the servicemen survived the initial
incident, and how many died on the way to hospital.
Reports
that five crew members were receiving treatment in a military
hospital in Severomorsk were confirmed by Mr Shoigu.
The
ministry of defence later named the 14 dead. Calling them "Heroes
of Russia", it said they were called. Denis Dolonsky and Nikolai
Filin; first-rank captains Vladimir Abankin, Denis Oparin, Andrei
Voskresensky, Konstantin Somov and Konstantin Ivanov; second-rank
captains Alexander Avdonin, Alexander Vasilyev, Sergei Danilchenko
and Dmitry Solovyev; third-rank captains Viktor Kuzmin and Vladimir
Sukhinichev; and captain lieutenant Mikhail Dubkov.
They
were buried in Serafimov cemetery nearby a monument to the 118
Russian killed when the Kursk nuclear submarine sank in 2000, the
year Vladimir
Putin became
president.
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