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GIUK gap

The GIUK gap (sometimes written G-I-UK) is an area in the northern Atlantic Ocean that forms a naval choke point. Its name is an acronym for Greenland, Iceland, and the United Kingdom, the gap being the two stretches of open ocean among these three landmasses. It separates the Norwegian Sea and the North Sea from the open Atlantic Ocean. The term is typically used in relation to military topics. The area has for some nations been considered strategically important since the beginning of the 20th century.[1]

The GIUK gap in the North Atlantic (showing international boundaries as of 1983)

The strategic significance of the GIUK Gap to the Kingdom of Denmark edit

Comprising Greenland, the Faroe Islands and Denmark, the Kingdom of Denmark is an Arctic state alongside seven other countries whose territories cover the Arctic region.[2] All matters of foreign policy for both Greenland and the Faroe Islands fall within the jurisdiction of the Danish government.[3]

The Danish government has historically used its jurisdiction over foreign policy in both Greenland and the Faroe Islands to assist in securing the GIUK gap and the wider Arctic for its allies. In doing so, Denmark has arguably acquired a sense of goodwill from particularly the US government and NATO.[4] The Danish government views the Arctic as a central component of its foreign security policy and will continue to expand its spending, surveillance and military presence in the region.[5]

Despite the relatively small-sized population of the Kingdom of Denmark, roughly 6 million, the Danish government's close ties to Greenland and the Faroe Islands legitimises it as an inherently important Arctic actor on matters of geopolitical security and great-power tensions. Danish assertion of sovereignty in the GIUK gap and the wider Arctic is already a key concern to the Realm[6] and is expected to be an increasingly important component of Denmark's future responsibilities in NATO.[7]

The GIUK gap is also a key supply line between the US and its European allies. With war on-going in Ukraine, NATO and the US are showing renewed interest in the GIUK gap,[5] positioning Denmark to be a key player in matters of broader European security and increasing the gap's strategic importance to the Danish Realm.

Securing air and sea visibility in the GIUK Gap edit

Until 2007, the Faroe Islands were home to an air surveillance radar station, providing vital radar coverage during the Cold War.[8] In light of broader geopolitical changes, such as the war in Ukraine, the station is currently undergoing preparations to be reopened, closing an important surveillance gap in the GIUK gap.[9]

Maintaining thorough surveillance of the GIUK gap is crucial in order to ensure that sea lines of communication (SLOCs) and supply lines are uninterrupted between NATO's European members and the United States. Military bases, space bases, surveillance drones and radar installations in both Greenland and the Faroe Islands can help ensure proper visibility in the region, and assist in anti-submarine warfare (ASW) in case of actual conflict.[4][8][10] In 2021, Denmark unveiled a $250m investment in surveillance capabilities in Greenland and the Faroe Islands.[11]

Responding to requests from NATO for Denmark to play its part in securing Arctic waters, Denmark is taking further steps to equip its ASW-frigates with sonar equipment, making them better equipped to detect and track submarines in the Arctic Ocean, and particularly in the GIUK gap. In addition, the Danish government is equipping its Seahawk helicopters with sonar equipment and torpedoes. The upgrades have yet to be delivered, however, with delivery projections estimating 2024 at the earliest.[12]

Threats to critical seabed infrastructure edit

During the Cold War, Russia relied on the ability of its nuclear submarines to pass through the GIUK gap in order to ensure maximum military capability. The introduction of long-range precision strike weapons, however, have reduced the significance of the GIUK gap in relation to intercontinental attacks and made it possible for Russia to target North American sites from safer waters, such as the Norwegian Sea. Still, the GIUK gap remains the obvious access point for Russian military operations in the wider North Atlantic Ocean since most of Russia's highest quality naval capabilities are deployed in the Northern fleet, making the GIUK gap a significant transit route.[13]

For NATO allies, the GIUK gap is vital in terms of barrier defense for sea lines of communication protection. SLOCs are vulnerable in the North Atlantic both in the gap and beyond, and the US and NATO rely on the Kingdom of Denmark to assist in protecting this critical infrastructure, including the vast number of seabed data cables.[13][14][15]

The Russian fleet has in recent years strategically upgraded its capabilities for covert subsea operations related to the targeting of seabed infrastructure[13] and reports of Russian "mapping" of critical seabed infrastructure in the North Sea and the seabed around Denmark are increasing.[16][17] NATO intelligence and security officials confirm these reports, warning that Russia has both the intent and necessary capabilities to target critical seabed installations if they so choose.[18] While such infrastructure has always been associated with some risk, the dependency of Denmark and its allies on them are only increasing and is therefore posing a major threat in times of tension short of actual conflict.[8]

The September 2022 Nord Stream pipeline sabotage in the Baltic Sea proves the fragility of seabed infrastructure and underscore the need for the Danish government to maintain a strong Arctic responsibility in the GIUK gap.

Importance for the Royal Navy of the UK edit

The GIUK gap is particularly important to the UK's Royal Navy, as any attempt by northern European forces to break into the open Atlantic would have to be made either through the heavily defended English Channel, one of the world's busiest seaways,[19] or through one of the exits on either side of Iceland. As the British also control the strategic port of Gibraltar at the entrance to the Mediterranean, this means Spain, France, and Portugal are the only Continental European countries that possess direct access to the Atlantic Ocean that cannot easily be blocked at a choke point by the Royal Navy.

History edit

Since the beginning of the 20th century, the exploitation of the GIUK gap by northern forces and measures to patrol and secure the gap by opposing forces have played an important role in naval and in overall military planning.[citation needed]

World War II edit

From the start of World War II in 1939, German ships used the gap to break out from their bases in northern Germany (and from occupied Norway after April 1940) with a view to attacking Allied shipping convoys, but Allied blocking efforts in the North Sea and in the GIUK gap impeded such break-outs. British forces occupied the Faroe Islands in April 1940, and Iceland in May 1940; the United States took over effective control of Greenland in 1940. But the German Kriegsmarine profited greatly from the fall of France in June 1940, after which German submarines could operate from bases on the French coast.[citation needed]

The origin of the term "gap" dates to this period, when there was a gap in air coverage known as the Mid-Atlantic gap or the "Greenland air gap". This gap was an area that land-based aircraft could not reach and where, as a result, they could not carry out their anti-submarine duties.[citation needed]

Cold War edit

The GIUK gap again became the focus of naval planning in the 1950s, as it represented the only available outlet into the Atlantic Ocean for Soviet submarines operating from their bases on the Kola Peninsula. NATO worried that if the Cold War "turned hot", naval convoys reinforcing Europe from the U.S. would suffer unacceptable losses if Soviet submarines could operate in the North Atlantic. The United States and Britain based much of their post-war naval strategy on blocking the gap, installing a chain of underwater listening posts right across it during the 1950s – an example of a SOSUS "sound surveillance system". This deployment of sonar surveillance in the gap, and elsewhere, hampered the Soviet Northern Fleet's ability to deploy its submarines without detection.[20]

The Royal Navy's primary mission during the Cold War, excluding its nuclear deterrent role, involved anti-submarine warfare (ASW). The development of the Invincible-class ASW aircraft carriers stemmed from this doctrine: their primary mission involved anti-submarine warfare using Sea King helicopters. The Type 23 frigate originated as a pure ASW platform; its mission expanded following the Falklands War of 1982.[citation needed]

The largest Russian submarine drills through the GIUK gap were operations Aport and Atrina, in 1985 and 1987, respectively, when the Soviets deployed several SSNs near the U.S. coast before the 1985 Gorbachev–Reagan meeting.[21]

The Soviets planned to use the GIUK gap to intercept any NATO ships, especially aircraft carriers, heading towards the Soviet Union. Ships and submarines as well as Tupolev Tu-142 maritime-surveillance aircraft aimed to track any threatening ships.[citation needed]

The advent of longer-ranged Soviet submarine-launched ballistic missiles (SLBMs) allowed the Soviet Navy to deploy their ballistic missile submarine (SSBNs) within protected bastions in the Barents Sea and reduced their need to transit the GIUK gap. The much reduced, post-Cold War Russian Navy has even less need to transit the GIUK gap.[citation needed]

Crossing the GIUK gap was a major strategic move for Ocean Venture in 1992, in which 84 NATO ships, including 4 US aircraft carriers, departed from their usual August exercise pattern, deployed a decoy south toward the mid-Atlantic, and then entered waters in a move that had historically been associated with a risk of destabilizing détente.[22][23]

Post-Cold War edit

In late October 2019, a week before Commander of the Northern Fleet Aleksandr Moiseyev and Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov met their Norwegian counterparts in Kirkenes, Norway, ten submarines of Russia's Northern Fleet, among them two diesel-electric and eight non-strategic nuclear, left their homebases in the Kola Peninsula to participate in submarine drills that were the largest, on the Russian side, since Cold War operations[when?] Aport and Atrina.[clarification needed] The main task of the submarines was reportedly testing Russian ability to breach the GIUK gap undetected and sail into the Atlantic Ocean. The drills were expected to last up to two months.[24][25]

Bird migration edit

The GIUK gap is also a route for migratory birds such as the northern wheatear to cross the Atlantic to reach Greenland and eastern Canada.

In popular culture edit

  • The 1960 British war film Sink the Bismarck! discusses the strategic importance of the GIUK gap during World War II naval operations in the Atlantic theatre, and depicts the Battle of the Denmark Strait between British and German forces. It is based on the novel The Last Nine Days of the Bismarck by C. S. Forester.
  • The GIUK line is mentioned in the film The Bedford Incident.
  • In Tom Clancy's first novel, The Hunt for Red October, the line was used to detect Soviet submarines entering the North Atlantic in pursuit of the rogue Typhoon-class submarine Red October, whose officers were defecting to the United States with clandestine stealth technology. The event causes significant political and military tension between the United States and the Soviet Union. The film adaptation also references the gap, with National Security Advisor Jeffrey Pelt (played by Richard Jordan) saying to the Soviet ambassador "Your aircraft have dropped enough sonar buoys so that a man could walk from Greenland to Iceland to Scotland without getting his feet wet."
  • In Clancy's second novel, Red Storm Rising, the line is featured more prominently after a war breaks out between NATO and the Warsaw Pact. The Soviet Union launches a surprise attack on the NATO airbase NAS Keflavik and invades Iceland. This causes the line to be destroyed, creating a gap in NATO's surveillance and allowing the Soviet Navy to enter the North Atlantic. The subsequent Soviet submarine attacks and air raids cause serious damage to Merchant Marine ships and naval vessels in Atlantic convoys, hindering NATO's war effort during the defense against the less-successful Soviet invasion of West Germany.
  • Early editions of the Harpoon naval warfare simulation were based around defending the GIUK Gap. Tom Clancy used the simulation to test the naval battles for Red Storm Rising.[26]
  • The location of Iceland in the gap made it a participant in the Cold War and a target for a nuclear strike, especially through the introduction of the aforementioned Keflavik atomic bomber NATO base. Halldór Laxness dramatized the tension of these geopolitics from the perspective of an Icelandic maid in the novel The Atom Station.

See also edit

Land:

  • Focșani Gate – Militarily and strategically important area in Romania and NATO
  • Fulda Gap – Cold War strategically important area
  • Suwałki Gap – Lithuania–Poland border area

References edit

  1. ^ Pincus, Rebecca (27 May 2020). "Towards a New Arctic". The RUSI Journal. 165 (3): 50–58. doi:10.1080/03071847.2020.1769496. ISSN 0307-1847. S2CID 219741469.
  2. ^ "The Arctic Council". Arctic Council. Retrieved 4 May 2023.
  3. ^ "Rigsfællesskabet". Statsministeriet (in Danish). Retrieved 4 May 2023.
  4. ^ a b Henriksen, A. & Rahbek-Clemmensen, J. (2017), Grønlandskortet: Arktis’ betydning for Danmarks indflydelse i USA, Centre for Military Studies, Copenhagen University
  5. ^ a b "Udenrigs- og Sikkerhedspolitisk Strategi 2022". Udenrigsministeriet (in Danish). Retrieved 4 May 2023.
  6. ^ Choi, Tim (2020). "Not for Sale: Trump, Greenland and Danish Naval Diplomacy". Canadian Naval Review. 15 (3): 2–4.
  7. ^ Kristensen, K. S. & Byrjalsen, N., (2022), Efter Freden: Ukrainekrigens betydning for dansk og europæisk sikkerhed, Centre for Military Studies, Copenhagen University
  8. ^ a b c "Gauging the Gap: The Greenland–Iceland–United Kingdom Gap – A Strategic Assessment". IISS. Retrieved 4 May 2023.
  9. ^ Ritzau/The Local (9 June 2022). "Denmark to 'close surveillance gap' with new Faroe Islands radar". The Local.
  10. ^ "Søværnets nye fregatter". Forsvaret (in Danish). Retrieved 4 May 2023.
  11. ^ "Denmark raises investment in Arctic surveillance to counter Russian build-up". Financial Times. 14 February 2021. Retrieved 4 May 2023.
  12. ^ Pilgaard, Ronja (2 May 2023). "Forsvaret har taget to små skridt i retning af at kunne bekæmpe ubåde". Berlingske.dk (in Danish). Retrieved 4 May 2023.
  13. ^ a b c "The GIUK Gap's strategic significance". IISS. Retrieved 4 May 2023.
  14. ^ "Forsvarsanalytiker: Dansk forsvar står ved en skillevej, og det kommende forsvarsforlig bliver afgørende". Forsvar. 17 August 2022. Retrieved 4 May 2023.
  15. ^ "Politikere vil have bedre bevogtning i vores farvande: 'Beredskabet på havet er ikke godt nok'". DR (in Danish). 4 May 2023. Retrieved 5 May 2023.
  16. ^ "Russia 'mapping' critical energy infrastructure, say Dutch intelligence agencies". POLITICO. 20 February 2023. Retrieved 4 May 2023.
  17. ^ Larsen, Morten Soendergaard. "Russian 'Ghost Ships' Are Turning the Seabed Into a Future Battlefield". Foreign Policy. Retrieved 4 May 2023.
  18. ^ "NATO warns Russia could target undersea pipelines and cables". POLITICO. 3 May 2023. Retrieved 5 May 2023.
  19. ^ . Maritime and Coastguard Agency. 2007. Archived from the original on 31 August 2010. Retrieved 17 April 2010.
  20. ^ Sasgen, P. (2009). Stalking the Red Bear: The True Story of a U.S. Cold War Submarine's Covert Operations Against the Soviet Union. St. Martin's Press. p. 44. ISBN 978-1-4299-6697-9. Retrieved 13 March 2018.
  21. ^ "Операции "Апорт" и "Атрина"". podlodka.info. 7 January 2007. Retrieved 9 November 2019.
  22. ^ CSF 2017 | John F. Lehman: The Role of U.S. Naval War College in Resolving Conflict, U.S. Naval War College, 7 August 2017, retrieved 26 November 2018 – via YouTube
  23. ^ Barrett, Sharon (June 1993). "Ocean Venture 92: An Assessment of a Maritime Prepositioning Force/Joint Logistics Over the Shore Instream Offload Exercise" (PDF). Naval Postgraduate SchoolThesis. (PDF) from the original on 1 August 2020.
  24. ^ "Russian subs honing stealth skills in major North Atlantic drill, says". thebarentsobserver.com. 29 October 2019. Retrieved 9 November 2019.
  25. ^ "Russia Sends Ten Subs Into North Atlantic In Drill Unprecedented In Size Since Cold War". thedrive.com. 29 October 2019. Retrieved 9 November 2019.
  26. ^ "Harpoon Naval Warfare Simulation Game – AGSI – Harpoon Commanders Edition (HCE)".[permanent dead link]

giuk, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, february, 2008, learn. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources GIUK gap news newspapers books scholar JSTOR February 2008 Learn how and when to remove this message The GIUK gap sometimes written G I UK is an area in the northern Atlantic Ocean that forms a naval choke point Its name is an acronym for Greenland Iceland and the United Kingdom the gap being the two stretches of open ocean among these three landmasses It separates the Norwegian Sea and the North Sea from the open Atlantic Ocean The term is typically used in relation to military topics The area has for some nations been considered strategically important since the beginning of the 20th century 1 The GIUK gap in the North Atlantic showing international boundaries as of 1983 Contents 1 The strategic significance of the GIUK Gap to the Kingdom of Denmark 1 1 Securing air and sea visibility in the GIUK Gap 1 2 Threats to critical seabed infrastructure 2 Importance for the Royal Navy of the UK 3 History 3 1 World War II 3 2 Cold War 3 3 Post Cold War 4 Bird migration 5 In popular culture 6 See also 7 ReferencesThe strategic significance of the GIUK Gap to the Kingdom of Denmark editComprising Greenland the Faroe Islands and Denmark the Kingdom of Denmark is an Arctic state alongside seven other countries whose territories cover the Arctic region 2 All matters of foreign policy for both Greenland and the Faroe Islands fall within the jurisdiction of the Danish government 3 The Danish government has historically used its jurisdiction over foreign policy in both Greenland and the Faroe Islands to assist in securing the GIUK gap and the wider Arctic for its allies In doing so Denmark has arguably acquired a sense of goodwill from particularly the US government and NATO 4 The Danish government views the Arctic as a central component of its foreign security policy and will continue to expand its spending surveillance and military presence in the region 5 Despite the relatively small sized population of the Kingdom of Denmark roughly 6 million the Danish government s close ties to Greenland and the Faroe Islands legitimises it as an inherently important Arctic actor on matters of geopolitical security and great power tensions Danish assertion of sovereignty in the GIUK gap and the wider Arctic is already a key concern to the Realm 6 and is expected to be an increasingly important component of Denmark s future responsibilities in NATO 7 The GIUK gap is also a key supply line between the US and its European allies With war on going in Ukraine NATO and the US are showing renewed interest in the GIUK gap 5 positioning Denmark to be a key player in matters of broader European security and increasing the gap s strategic importance to the Danish Realm Securing air and sea visibility in the GIUK Gap edit Until 2007 the Faroe Islands were home to an air surveillance radar station providing vital radar coverage during the Cold War 8 In light of broader geopolitical changes such as the war in Ukraine the station is currently undergoing preparations to be reopened closing an important surveillance gap in the GIUK gap 9 Maintaining thorough surveillance of the GIUK gap is crucial in order to ensure that sea lines of communication SLOCs and supply lines are uninterrupted between NATO s European members and the United States Military bases space bases surveillance drones and radar installations in both Greenland and the Faroe Islands can help ensure proper visibility in the region and assist in anti submarine warfare ASW in case of actual conflict 4 8 10 In 2021 Denmark unveiled a 250m investment in surveillance capabilities in Greenland and the Faroe Islands 11 Responding to requests from NATO for Denmark to play its part in securing Arctic waters Denmark is taking further steps to equip its ASW frigates with sonar equipment making them better equipped to detect and track submarines in the Arctic Ocean and particularly in the GIUK gap In addition the Danish government is equipping its Seahawk helicopters with sonar equipment and torpedoes The upgrades have yet to be delivered however with delivery projections estimating 2024 at the earliest 12 Threats to critical seabed infrastructure edit During the Cold War Russia relied on the ability of its nuclear submarines to pass through the GIUK gap in order to ensure maximum military capability The introduction of long range precision strike weapons however have reduced the significance of the GIUK gap in relation to intercontinental attacks and made it possible for Russia to target North American sites from safer waters such as the Norwegian Sea Still the GIUK gap remains the obvious access point for Russian military operations in the wider North Atlantic Ocean since most of Russia s highest quality naval capabilities are deployed in the Northern fleet making the GIUK gap a significant transit route 13 For NATO allies the GIUK gap is vital in terms of barrier defense for sea lines of communication protection SLOCs are vulnerable in the North Atlantic both in the gap and beyond and the US and NATO rely on the Kingdom of Denmark to assist in protecting this critical infrastructure including the vast number of seabed data cables 13 14 15 The Russian fleet has in recent years strategically upgraded its capabilities for covert subsea operations related to the targeting of seabed infrastructure 13 and reports of Russian mapping of critical seabed infrastructure in the North Sea and the seabed around Denmark are increasing 16 17 NATO intelligence and security officials confirm these reports warning that Russia has both the intent and necessary capabilities to target critical seabed installations if they so choose 18 While such infrastructure has always been associated with some risk the dependency of Denmark and its allies on them are only increasing and is therefore posing a major threat in times of tension short of actual conflict 8 The September 2022 Nord Stream pipeline sabotage in the Baltic Sea proves the fragility of seabed infrastructure and underscore the need for the Danish government to maintain a strong Arctic responsibility in the GIUK gap Importance for the Royal Navy of the UK editSee also Armed forces of Scotland GUIK gap The GIUK gap is particularly important to the UK s Royal Navy as any attempt by northern European forces to break into the open Atlantic would have to be made either through the heavily defended English Channel one of the world s busiest seaways 19 or through one of the exits on either side of Iceland As the British also control the strategic port of Gibraltar at the entrance to the Mediterranean this means Spain France and Portugal are the only Continental European countries that possess direct access to the Atlantic Ocean that cannot easily be blocked at a choke point by the Royal Navy History editSince the beginning of the 20th century the exploitation of the GIUK gap by northern forces and measures to patrol and secure the gap by opposing forces have played an important role in naval and in overall military planning citation needed World War II edit From the start of World War II in 1939 German ships used the gap to break out from their bases in northern Germany and from occupied Norway after April 1940 with a view to attacking Allied shipping convoys but Allied blocking efforts in the North Sea and in the GIUK gap impeded such break outs British forces occupied the Faroe Islands in April 1940 and Iceland in May 1940 the United States took over effective control of Greenland in 1940 But the German Kriegsmarine profited greatly from the fall of France in June 1940 after which German submarines could operate from bases on the French coast citation needed The origin of the term gap dates to this period when there was a gap in air coverage known as the Mid Atlantic gap or the Greenland air gap This gap was an area that land based aircraft could not reach and where as a result they could not carry out their anti submarine duties citation needed Cold War edit The GIUK gap again became the focus of naval planning in the 1950s as it represented the only available outlet into the Atlantic Ocean for Soviet submarines operating from their bases on the Kola Peninsula NATO worried that if the Cold War turned hot naval convoys reinforcing Europe from the U S would suffer unacceptable losses if Soviet submarines could operate in the North Atlantic The United States and Britain based much of their post war naval strategy on blocking the gap installing a chain of underwater listening posts right across it during the 1950s an example of a SOSUS sound surveillance system This deployment of sonar surveillance in the gap and elsewhere hampered the Soviet Northern Fleet s ability to deploy its submarines without detection 20 The Royal Navy s primary mission during the Cold War excluding its nuclear deterrent role involved anti submarine warfare ASW The development of the Invincible class ASW aircraft carriers stemmed from this doctrine their primary mission involved anti submarine warfare using Sea King helicopters The Type 23 frigate originated as a pure ASW platform its mission expanded following the Falklands War of 1982 citation needed The largest Russian submarine drills through the GIUK gap were operations Aport and Atrina in 1985 and 1987 respectively when the Soviets deployed several SSNs near the U S coast before the 1985 Gorbachev Reagan meeting 21 The Soviets planned to use the GIUK gap to intercept any NATO ships especially aircraft carriers heading towards the Soviet Union Ships and submarines as well as Tupolev Tu 142 maritime surveillance aircraft aimed to track any threatening ships citation needed The advent of longer ranged Soviet submarine launched ballistic missiles SLBMs allowed the Soviet Navy to deploy their ballistic missile submarine SSBNs within protected bastions in the Barents Sea and reduced their need to transit the GIUK gap The much reduced post Cold War Russian Navy has even less need to transit the GIUK gap citation needed Crossing the GIUK gap was a major strategic move for Ocean Venture in 1992 in which 84 NATO ships including 4 US aircraft carriers departed from their usual August exercise pattern deployed a decoy south toward the mid Atlantic and then entered waters in a move that had historically been associated with a risk of destabilizing detente 22 23 Post Cold War edit In late October 2019 a week before Commander of the Northern Fleet Aleksandr Moiseyev and Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov met their Norwegian counterparts in Kirkenes Norway ten submarines of Russia s Northern Fleet among them two diesel electric and eight non strategic nuclear left their homebases in the Kola Peninsula to participate in submarine drills that were the largest on the Russian side since Cold War operations when Aport and Atrina clarification needed The main task of the submarines was reportedly testing Russian ability to breach the GIUK gap undetected and sail into the Atlantic Ocean The drills were expected to last up to two months 24 25 Bird migration editThe GIUK gap is also a route for migratory birds such as the northern wheatear to cross the Atlantic to reach Greenland and eastern Canada In popular culture editThe 1960 British war film Sink the Bismarck discusses the strategic importance of the GIUK gap during World War II naval operations in the Atlantic theatre and depicts the Battle of the Denmark Strait between British and German forces It is based on the novel The Last Nine Days of the Bismarck by C S Forester The GIUK line is mentioned in the film The Bedford Incident In Tom Clancy s first novel The Hunt for Red October the line was used to detect Soviet submarines entering the North Atlantic in pursuit of the rogue Typhoon class submarine Red October whose officers were defecting to the United States with clandestine stealth technology The event causes significant political and military tension between the United States and the Soviet Union The film adaptation also references the gap with National Security Advisor Jeffrey Pelt played by Richard Jordan saying to the Soviet ambassador Your aircraft have dropped enough sonar buoys so that a man could walk from Greenland to Iceland to Scotland without getting his feet wet In Clancy s second novel Red Storm Rising the line is featured more prominently after a war breaks out between NATO and the Warsaw Pact The Soviet Union launches a surprise attack on the NATO airbase NAS Keflavik and invades Iceland This causes the line to be destroyed creating a gap in NATO s surveillance and allowing the Soviet Navy to enter the North Atlantic The subsequent Soviet submarine attacks and air raids cause serious damage to Merchant Marine ships and naval vessels in Atlantic convoys hindering NATO s war effort during the defense against the less successful Soviet invasion of West Germany Early editions of the Harpoon naval warfare simulation were based around defending the GIUK Gap Tom Clancy used the simulation to test the naval battles for Red Storm Rising 26 The location of Iceland in the gap made it a participant in the Cold War and a target for a nuclear strike especially through the introduction of the aforementioned Keflavik atomic bomber NATO base Halldor Laxness dramatized the tension of these geopolitics from the perspective of an Icelandic maid in the novel The Atom Station See also editBattle of the Denmark Strait Naval battle during the Second World War Broad Fourteens Area of the southern North Sea Communication with submarines Submarine communication Long Forties Zone of North Sea Mid Atlantic gap Area outside airplane range in World War II SOSUS Cold War era passive fixed array undersea surveillance system Western Approaches Area of the Atlantic ocean lying immediately to the west of Ireland and parts of Great Britain Luzon Strait Strait between Luzon and Taiwan Strait of Malacca Strait between the Malay Peninsula and the Indonesian island of Sumatra Strait of Gibraltar Strait connecting the Atlantic to the Mediterranean Turkish Straits Two waterways in TurkeyPages displaying short descriptions of redirect targets Land Focșani Gate Militarily and strategically important area in Romania and NATO Fulda Gap Cold War strategically important area Suwalki Gap Lithuania Poland border areaReferences edit Pincus Rebecca 27 May 2020 Towards a New Arctic The RUSI Journal 165 3 50 58 doi 10 1080 03071847 2020 1769496 ISSN 0307 1847 S2CID 219741469 The Arctic Council Arctic Council Retrieved 4 May 2023 Rigsfaellesskabet Statsministeriet in Danish Retrieved 4 May 2023 a b Henriksen A amp Rahbek Clemmensen J 2017 Gronlandskortet Arktis betydning for Danmarks indflydelse i USA Centre for Military Studies Copenhagen University a b Udenrigs og Sikkerhedspolitisk Strategi 2022 Udenrigsministeriet in Danish Retrieved 4 May 2023 Choi Tim 2020 Not for Sale Trump Greenland and Danish Naval Diplomacy Canadian Naval Review 15 3 2 4 Kristensen K S amp Byrjalsen N 2022 Efter Freden Ukrainekrigens betydning for dansk og europaeisk sikkerhed Centre for Military Studies Copenhagen University a b c Gauging the Gap The Greenland Iceland United Kingdom Gap A Strategic Assessment IISS Retrieved 4 May 2023 Ritzau The Local 9 June 2022 Denmark to close surveillance gap with new Faroe Islands radar The Local Sovaernets nye fregatter Forsvaret in Danish Retrieved 4 May 2023 Denmark raises investment in Arctic surveillance to counter Russian build up Financial Times 14 February 2021 Retrieved 4 May 2023 Pilgaard Ronja 2 May 2023 Forsvaret har taget to sma skridt i retning af at kunne bekaempe ubade Berlingske dk in Danish Retrieved 4 May 2023 a b c The GIUK Gap s strategic significance IISS Retrieved 4 May 2023 Forsvarsanalytiker Dansk forsvar star ved en skillevej og det kommende forsvarsforlig bliver afgorende Forsvar 17 August 2022 Retrieved 4 May 2023 Politikere vil have bedre bevogtning i vores farvande Beredskabet pa havet er ikke godt nok DR in Danish 4 May 2023 Retrieved 5 May 2023 Russia mapping critical energy infrastructure say Dutch intelligence agencies POLITICO 20 February 2023 Retrieved 4 May 2023 Larsen Morten Soendergaard Russian Ghost Ships Are Turning the Seabed Into a Future Battlefield Foreign Policy Retrieved 4 May 2023 NATO warns Russia could target undersea pipelines and cables POLITICO 3 May 2023 Retrieved 5 May 2023 The Dover Strait Maritime and Coastguard Agency 2007 Archived from the original on 31 August 2010 Retrieved 17 April 2010 Sasgen P 2009 Stalking the Red Bear The True Story of a U S Cold War Submarine s Covert Operations Against the Soviet Union St Martin s Press p 44 ISBN 978 1 4299 6697 9 Retrieved 13 March 2018 Operacii Aport i Atrina podlodka info 7 January 2007 Retrieved 9 November 2019 CSF 2017 John F Lehman The Role of U S Naval War College in Resolving Conflict U S Naval War College 7 August 2017 retrieved 26 November 2018 via YouTube Barrett Sharon June 1993 Ocean Venture 92 An Assessment of a Maritime Prepositioning Force Joint Logistics Over the Shore Instream Offload Exercise PDF Naval Postgraduate SchoolThesis Archived PDF from the original on 1 August 2020 Russian subs honing stealth skills in major North Atlantic drill says thebarentsobserver com 29 October 2019 Retrieved 9 November 2019 Russia Sends Ten Subs Into North Atlantic In Drill Unprecedented In Size Since Cold War thedrive com 29 October 2019 Retrieved 9 November 2019 Harpoon Naval Warfare Simulation Game AGSI Harpoon Commanders Edition HCE permanent dead link Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title GIUK gap amp oldid 1223182486, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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