Soviet submarine K-159

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K-159
Career Naval Ensign of the Soviet Union
Laid down: 15 August 1962
Launched: 6 June 1963
Commissioned: 9 October 1963
Decommissioned: 30 May 1989
Fate: Sank while under tow 28 August 2003
General characteristics
Class and type: November class submarine
Displacement: 3,065 tonnes surfaced
4,750 tonnes submerged
Length: 107.4 m (352 ft 4 in)
Beam: 7.9 m (25 ft 11 in)
Draft: 5.65 m (18 ft 6 in)
Propulsion: 2 × VM-A reactors, 140 MW
Speed: 23.3 knots (43.2 km/h) surfaced
30 knots (56 km/h) submerged
Complement: 104 officers and men
Armament: 8 × 533 mm (21 in) torpedo tubes
Service record
Part of Northern Fleet

K-159 was a Projekt 627 Kit (NATO reporting name November) class submarine of the Soviet Red Banner Northern Fleet. Her keel was laid down on 15 August 1962 at the Sevmash Shipyard. She was launched on 6 June 1963, and commissioned on 9 October 1963.

Contents

[edit] Radioactive discharge accident

On 2 March 1965, K-159 suffered an accident involving radioactive discharges into her steam generators, almost certainly primary coolant leaks from the tubes into the steam chest and thence into the turbines, contaminating her entire propulsion plant. If so, the leaking tubes were plugged, because she continued to operate for another two years before entering the shipyard from 1967 through 1968 for overhaul and to have her steam generators replaced. She returned to the shipyard from 1970 through 1972 for further repairs and refuelling, and then again from 1979 through 1980 for still more repairs.

[edit] Decommissioning and after-service life

K-159 was decommissioned on 30 May 1989 and laid up in Gremikha; her reactors were not defuelled. She remained in layup with little or no maintenance for 14 years. Her outer hull rusted until in many places it had "the strength of foil"[1].

The poor condition of Russia's fleet of decommissioned nuclear submarines concerns many other countries, and in the summer of 2003, five countries made a combined donation of more than US$200 million in support of decommission and disposal of those hulks. In anticipation of receiving those funds, Admiral Gennady Suchkov, Commander of the Northern Fleet, decided to tow all the 16 laid up submarines from Gremikha to shipyards where they would be dismantled. K-159 was the 13th hulk to be towed.

Because K-159’s hull was rusted through in so many places, it was kept afloat by spot-welding large empty tanks to her sides as pontoons. Those tanks, however, were manufactured in the 1940s, were not air-tight, and were no better maintained than the submarine's hull.

[edit] Foundering and sinking

On 28 August 2003, K-159 and her pontoons were manned by ten Russian sailors and taken under tow to Polyarny. That crew kept the pontoons pressurized and the submarine hull pumped out, but during the early morning hours of 30 August they encountered a squall that ripped away one of the pontoons. K-159 did not sink immediately, but was clearly in distress. Northern Fleet was notified at 0120, and Admiral Suchkov arrived at headquarters 20 minutes later. Suchkov made no attempt to rescue the submarine crew.[citation needed] By 0300 the wreck had sunk in the Barents Sea, 238 meters down, with nine of her crew and 800 kilograms of spent nuclear fuel containing some 20 petabecquerels (600 kilocuries) of radioactivity.[citation needed]

The Military Prosecutor General's office brought charges against Captain Second Class Sergei Zhemchuzhnov who was overseeing the towing operation. President of Russia Vladimir Putin removed Suchkov from service on the recommendation of Navy Chief of Staff Vladimir Kuroyedov. Putin appointed Vice Admiral Sergey Simonenko acting Commander of the Northern Fleet. Before that, he headed the headquarters of the Northern Fleet.

The Russian government is considering plans to raise the wreck of K-159. Admiral Kuroyedov believes that "we should not leave nuclear objects lying on the seabed".[citation needed] Initial plans were to do so in August or September 2004, but they were postponed. In 2007, the British Ministry of Defence began preparations for a salvage operation[1]

[edit] Legal actions

Shortly after the loss of the submarine, four widows filed a lawsuit against the Russian Defence Ministry demanding compensation of one million rubles (about $37,500) each in moral damages, a lawyer acting for them said earlier. The Ministry objected to the suit, saying that the widows should press charges against Suchkov, who was convicted by a court martial of criminal negligence leading to the submariners' deaths.[2]

[edit] Crew

K-159's last crew
K-159's last crew
  • Captain Second Rank Sergej Lappa - Commanding Officer of K-159
  • Captain Third Rank Mikhail Gurov - Electromechanical Compartment Leader
  • Captain Third Rank Yurij Zhadan - Maneuvering Division Officer
  • Captain Third Rank Oleg Andreev - Damage Control Officer
  • Senior Lieutenant Sergej Sokolov - Electrotechnical Division Officer
  • Senior Warrant Officer Aleksandr Aleshkin - Senior Boatswain
  • Warrant Officer Roman Kurinnyj - Chief of Chemical Service/Shipboard Dosimetry Specialist
  • Senior Lieutenant Maksim Tsibul'skij - Remote Guidance Group Leader
  • Chief Petty Officer Andrej Knyazev - Remote Guidance Group Machinist
  • Petty Officer 1st Class Evgenij Smirnov - Turbine Section Leader

The bodies of Smirnov and Zhadan were recovered immediately. Tsibul'skij was rescued alive and recovered in the Severomorsk Military Hospital. The other seven were presumably trapped in the wreck.

[edit] References

  1. ^ "British to help raise Russian nuclear sub", The Sunday Times, 2007-01-21. Retrieved on 2007-01-21. "...may be raised from the ocean bed next summer with the help of British experts." 

[edit] See also

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