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Old 08-22-05, 11:53 PM   #1
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Default Red Star Rogue?

Reading the new issue of Military Heritage today I came across an ad for a new book called Red Star Rogue. Anyone heard of this?

http://www.redstarrogue.com/
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Old 08-23-05, 12:30 PM   #2
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No since Bill Nichols talk about in january

http://www.subsim.com/phpBB/viewtopic.php?t=27649
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Old 08-23-05, 05:49 PM   #3
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Thanks. Missed that one.
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Old 08-23-05, 06:09 PM   #4
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Hardcover huh?

How long does it take for the Paperback to come out?
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Old 08-23-05, 06:38 PM   #5
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I think it depends on sales. Sometimes never.
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Old 09-15-05, 09:09 AM   #6
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There was a fellow who claimed the events in Red Star Rogue were fabricated. Obviously he didn't check the references and has never read Dr. John P. Craven's book "The Silent War."

Dr. Craven was the chief civilian scientist on the Polaris project. He was the manager on NR-1; he was involved in the DSRV project and Sea Lab II. Dr. Craven formed Submarine Development Group One and was the head of the Navy's deep submergence program. Dr. Craven was in charge of the search for the K-129 and discovered the purpose of its last mission. In the chapter titled, “The Story of Two Submarines” he states without reservation, “the submarine was a rogue.” He also provides proof that the sub exploded while launching a ballistic missile at Hawaii.

Dr. Craven book was heavily censored, but if you read the chapter listed above, you will find enough information to make the case for Red Star Rogue. However, I was not under the same restrictions as Dr. Craven. Red Star Rogue proves Dr. Craven’s points. Here’s one example of what you will find in the book:

The University of Hawaii research vessel found the oil slick from the sub. It was laced with radioactive material. Our researchers at the U of Hawaii discovered the R/V was working along the Hawaiian Leeward Islands. Ask any quartermaster to show you the Pilot Chart for this area in the month of March. Based on the currents and winds in this area, we were able to use programs designed to track oil slicks and backtrack the path of the radioactive oil slick to a location, 400 miles SW of where the Soviet Navy had assigned K-129 to patrol. The location was an exact intersection of lines of latitude and longitude, on the surface, just within the 350-mile range of a Chinese missile launch, (K-129 was trying to mimic an attack from a Chinese submarine, thus starting a war between its two enemies, China and the U.S.). This is only one small item among hundreds of points we use to support the book.

I expect people to be critical; many are just looking for attention. But the book has a message, “If a group of radical Stalinists could hijack a nuclear weapon and come within inches of destroying a major American city in 1968. How difficult would it be for a similar group of well funded, radical Islamic terrorists to do the same thing in 2005?”
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Old 09-15-05, 09:50 AM   #7
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Default Re: Red Star Rogue

Quote:
Originally Posted by Red Star Rogue
I expect people to be critical; many are just looking for attention. But the book has a message, “If a group of radical Stalinists could hijack a nuclear weapon and come within inches of destroying a major American city in 1968. How difficult would it be for a similar group of well funded, radical Islamic terrorists to do the same thing in 2005?”
Very good idea for books (latest Di mercurio novel) or movies (james bond) but for human and technical reason impossible, perhaps with a great conspiracy in the highest level of the governements, oupss good for TV show (24Hours) but unthinkable in real life.
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Old 09-16-05, 05:43 PM   #8
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Who is this Nichols guy anyway? Does he belong to the USSVI?

The comments made about the book Red Star Rogue are inaccurate. The claim that K-129 was a rogue submarine was not made by the authors of the book but by Dr. John P. Craven (see credentials listed below) in his book The Silent War, Chapter 15, The Hunt for Red September: A Tale of Two Submarines.
During interviews with the authors of Red Star Rogue and the producers of ABC’s Night Line, Dr. Craven reaffirmed that the Soviet Golf submarine K-129 was indeed determined by the US Navy to be a rogue sub.
This important fact, along with many others is in Red Star Rogue, but apparently overlooked by the reviewer. The book goes beyond The Silent War to provide the answers to the questions of “Who and Why.” I’m a veteran submariner; I also belong to the USSVI. Many of our members have read both books and the reviews have been excellent. Check out the facts and make up your own mind.

Dr. John P. Craven:
Chief Scientist for the Polaris Program
Director of the Navy’s Deep Submergence Systems Project
Director of Sealab III - “Man in the Sea Program”
Project Director, NR-1 Nuclear Research Submarine
Project Manager, Deep Sea Rescue Vehicle
Director of Submarine Development Group One
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Old 09-17-05, 01:37 AM   #9
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bill nichols is a well respected guy here his nickname says it all SUBGURU

bill was posted to the USS nautilus SSN 571 and is generaly regarded as the father of subsim.

john cravenyes made the claims this was backed up by the CIA when they attempted the recovering of the submarine back in the late 60's now they declassified scorpion files why didnt they declassify the project jennifer finds? hmmm because the submarine had to have been rouge no need to scare the nation right.

Admiral Victor Dygalo a man who had launched the first russian SLBM belived a US submarine seawolf was to blame ramming and sink K129 after all seawolf did go to yokasuka for "repairs to her bow"

as for the K129 the soviets reaction to it when the world found out was thus "we dont know about it" infact the soviet president said to the americans if they would drop the story so would the USSR.

K129 herself was an elderly golf class SSB (diesel powerd missil submarine) she was obsolete by this time the russians are well on the way to developing yankee SSBN

K129 had three nuclear missiles but when craven survayed the wreck he noted only two thus giving him the rouge theroy

we should all know that if a nuclear missile is attempted to be armed by a third party without launch autherisation then it is boobey trapped ie the missile explodes stopping any further attempt to launch
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Old 09-17-05, 07:44 AM   #10
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I've read Craven's The Silent War. Craven doesn't claim absolutely that K129 was a 'rogue' sub. What he says is, "There existed a possibility, small though it might be, that the skipper of this rogue submarine was attempting to launch...a ballistic missile with a live warhead in the direction of Hawaii....There is also a small probability that this launch attempt doomed the sub."

I think it's much more likely that K129 was lost after an explosion in one of the missile tubes, much like what happened to the Yankee-class sub K219 in October 1986 off of Bermuda. (Unless, of course, you believe the 'Hostile Waters' conspiracy theory that K219 sank after colliding with an American sub -- If you believe that, then you must also believe that a U.S. sub torpedoed Kursk. )

Unlike Craven, Sewell and Richmond, in Red Star Rogue, assert that K129 DID try to launch a missile at Hawaii, and that a 'failsafe' boobytrap DID destroy the sub. The subtitle of their book, "The Untold Story of a Soviet Submarine's Nuclear Strike Attempt on the U.S." says it all.

Craven devotes just two pages on the 'rogue submarine' theory. K129 isn't even listed in the index. What Sewell and Richmond has done is to take a hypothetical theory and spin it into a yarn of 'fact', using unsubstantiated claims and suppositions to try and hold their story together.

Bubble Head asked, "Who is this Nichols guy anyway? Does he belong to the USSVI?"

As to my qualifications, I am a former U.S. Navy submarine officer. After leaving the Navy, I was responsible for testing the Trident II missile launcher equipment during its development; prepared and gave briefings to the CNO's Nuclear Safety Study Group on SSBN nuclear weapon safety-related operational incidents; worked for nearly 10 years on highly-classified DARPA programs; and am now a engineer/scientist helping to build America's ballistic missile defense system, to shoot down 'rogue' missiles such as the ones Red Star Rogue claims K129 tried to launch at the U.S. in 1968.

Perhaps the fact that the USSVI is making money by selling Red Star Rogue directly through the authors' website has something to do with Mr. Bubblehead's opinion about the book.

'Nuff said.
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Old 09-17-05, 09:27 AM   #11
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yup thanks bill didnt realise you were in that deep
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Old 09-18-05, 09:40 AM   #12
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Review below:


Cold War thriller is for real, author writes
By JULES WAGMAN
SPECIAL TO THE TOLEDO BLADE


RED STAR ROGUE: THE UNTOLD STORY OF A SOVIET SUBMARINE'S NUCLEAR STRIKE ATTEMPT ON THE U.S. By Kenneth Sewell, with Clint Richmond. Simon & Schuster. 306 pages, $25.


Red Star Rogue reads like a spy thriller, except that nuclear engineer and submarine veteran Kenneth R. Sewell says it's true. A rogue Soviet Golf-type submarine blew up in the Pacific March 7, 1968, while attempting to launch a nuclear missile at Pearl Harbor, 350 miles away.

Starting with known facts, adding interviews with Russian and American military and civilian officials, and topping off with his own conjectures and deductions, Sewell develops a story of how we escaped nuclear war by a countdown that exploded.

The facts: Soviet missile submarine K-129 sails from its Siberian base Feb. 24, 1968. Just before sailing, 11 men join the 83-man crew. The mission is routine until K-129 fails to report crossing the International Date Line March 1.

Instead of patrolling its assignment, K-129 approaches Pearl Harbor. On March 7, about 350 miles northwest of Pearl, K-129 surfaces and prepares to fire.

At zero, the missile is torn by an explosion which puts a 10-foot hole in the missile compartment. The explosion dooms K-129, which plunges three miles to the bottom.

U.S. spy satellites record the explosions. A few days later, a University of Hawaii oceanographic vessel happens onto a radioactive oil slick. In port, agents, believed to be federal, confiscate its logs and swear everyone to secrecy.

On March 21 the Soviets begin hunting for K-129 1,700 miles northwest of Hawaii. By April Moscow concedes the sub is lost. In mid-July, spy sub USS Halibut leaves Pearl Harbor to find K-129. Halibut locates it, takes 22,000 photographs, and is awarded a presidential citation.

A year later the CIA contracts with a Howard Hughes company to build a ship to raise K-129. The cover story says the ship, the Glomar Explorer, would mine the seabed.

In 1974, the ship sails. Its claw seizes the sub and brings it to the surface, where it is put into the central bay. Six bodies are buried at sea.

When the story broke in 1975, Washington said the sub fell apart as it was brought up and only the bow was saved. Sewell says the entire sub was recovered. He points out that in 1993 K-129's bell from the conning tower was returned to the Russians, refuting the story that only the sub's bow was retrieved.

The U.S. role in all this remains shrouded in official secrecy.

Why did this happen? Sewell conjectures:

Yuri Andropov, head of the KGB, and Mikhail Suslov, Communist Party ideologue, plotted to get China and the U.S. into a war from which Moscow would benefit. Their plan: send a sub to fire a nuclear missile at Pearl Harbor and make it look as though the Chinese did it.

The KGB controlled Soviet nuclear weapons. It also had special military teams similar to our Rangers. Such a team would carry out the scheme.

The plotters have all the codes except the one which controlled the fail-safe system. The 11-man team seizes the sub by March 1, sails to within 350 miles of Hawaii - the Chinese would have had to do that - and surfaces the sub to get at the fail-safe mechanism.

The effort fails and K-129 pays with its life for the failed attempt.

Such is the story in brief but there are many interesting twists. The conjecture seems a bit far-fetched, but makes great reading. Washington is expected to continue stonewalling.
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Old 09-18-05, 10:01 AM   #13
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Another review:



Books to Avoid: Red Star Rogue
This book purports to be non-fiction, but I have my doubts. It recounts the story of the Golf submarine that was raised by Glomar Explorer; according to the authors, this submarine was destroyed as it attempted to launch a nuclear missile at Hawaii.

I'll spoil the suspense. The authors believe, or at least say they believe, that plotters in the Kremlin put a KGB special-action team aboard the submarine; these people attempted to launch the missile; they failed to disable all the packages that would prevent unauthorized launch, and the missile self-destructed and took the sub with it.

The goal of this action was to provoke a nuclear exchange between the US and China.

Once we get past that part, a good section of the end of the book talks about the mission to raise the sub from the ocean floor.

To say the least, the arguments were unpersuasive. The book seems to be based on rumors and allegations and "we know it's true!" from people in the former Soviet Union. The authors pick and choose their rumors. They dismiss the rumors that the Golf was sunk by US forces; they choose the rumors that support the notion of a launch attempt. Gaping logical flaws are papered over; for example, the KGB controlled the warheads of nuclear weapons, but for some reason were unable to explain to their special forces team how to launch the missiles without blowing themselves up. They also fail to present any plausible actions by the KGB plotters that would definitively pin the blame on the launch on China instead of the USSR. Other logical problems abound. When data are lacking the authors don't hesitate to conjecture, and their conjecture is that the launch was authorized at the very top of the KGB chain of command.

The end of the book would be funny if it weren't so irritating. The authors wrap all of cold war history from 1968 onwards around this purported launch attempt; their prose is full of "therefore the answer must be..." that support their thesis when even thin documentation isn't available; any number of more logical conclusions are possible and what's lacking is not proof, but common sense.

Red Star Rogue, by Sewell and Richmond. Give it a miss.
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Old 09-18-05, 11:28 AM   #14
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personaly i dont belive the missile theroy after reading some reviews and things i mean if they didtry to launch a missile and it exploded the sub would have sunk in less that 10 mins maybe even less than 5 and when halibut went down and took pictures there was a bloke outside the submarine

my view is that a battery exploded while the golf was re charging on the surface

but that doesnt explain how she could be over 300 miles off course :hmm:
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Old 09-18-05, 11:39 AM   #15
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Kapitain
personaly i dont belive the missile theroy after reading some reviews and things i mean if they didtry to launch a missile and it exploded the sub would have sunk in less that 10 mins maybe even less than 5 and when halibut went down and took pictures there was a bloke outside the submarine

my view is that a battery exploded while the golf was re charging on the surface

but that doesnt explain how she could be over 300 miles off course :hmm:
How do you know she was off course? :hmm:
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