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List of submarine and submersible incidents since 2000

This article describes major accidents and incidents involving submarines and submersibles since 2000.

USS San Francisco in a dry dock, after running aground in an underwater mountain 350 miles (560 km) south of Guam in 2005

2000s edit

2000 edit

Kursk explosion edit

In August 2000, the Russian Oscar II-class submarine Kursk sank in the Barents Sea when a leak of high-test peroxide in the forward torpedo room led to the detonation of a torpedo warhead, which in turn triggered the explosion of around half a dozen other warheads about two minutes later. This second explosion was equivalent to about 3–7 tons of TNT[1] and was large enough to register on seismographs across Northern Europe.[2] The explosion and the flooding by high pressure seawater killed the majority of the submarine's 118 sailors. Twenty-three survived in the stern of the submarine, but despite an international rescue effort, they died several days later either from a flash fire or suffocation due to a lack of oxygen. The Russian Navy was severely criticised in its home country by family members of the deceased crew for failure to accept international help promptly.

2001 edit

Ehime Maru and USS Greeneville collision edit

 
Greeneville in drydock at Pearl Harbor on 21 February 2001 after hitting and sinking Ehime Maru.

On 9 February 2001, the American submarine USS Greeneville accidentally struck and sank a Japanese high-school fisheries training ship, Ehime-Maru, killing nine of the thirty-five people aboard, including four students, 10 miles (16 km) off the coast of Oahu. The collision occurred while members of the public were on board the submarine observing an emergency surface drill.

A naval inquiry found that the accident was the result of poorly executed sonar sweeps, an ineffective periscope search by the submarine's captain, Commander Scott Waddle, bad communication among the crew and distractions caused by the presence of the 16 civilian guests aboard the submarine.

The Navy and the command of Greeneville have been criticized for making no immediate attempt to help the Japanese on Ehime Maru that survived the initial collision. Weather conditions were producing 8-to-12-foot (2.4 to 3.7 m) waves and the submarine's partially surfaced condition prevented the opening of deck hatches. These were cited as reasons for the submarine captain's choosing to stand off and remain close by.[3] While the U.S. Coast Guard directly responded, survivors resorted to automatically deployed life rafts from Ehime Maru.

2002 edit

USS Dolphin major flooding and fire edit

In May 2002, the U.S. Navy research submarine USS Dolphin experienced severe flooding and fires off the coast of San Diego, California. The ship was abandoned by the crew and Navy civilian personnel, who were rescued by nearby naval vessels. No one was seriously injured. Although severely damaged, the boat was towed back to San Diego for overhaul.

USS Oklahoma City collision with tanker edit

On 13 November 2002, USS Oklahoma City collided with the Leif Hoegh liquefied natural gas tanker Norman Lady, east of the Strait of Gibraltar. No one on either vessel was hurt, and there were no leaks from fuel tanks and no threat to the environment, but the submarine sustained damage to her periscope and sail area, and put into La Maddalena, Sardinia, for repairs. Her commanding officer, Commander Richard Voter, was relieved of his command on 30 November. One other officer and two enlisted crew members were also disciplined for dereliction of duty.

HMS Trafalgar edit

In November 2002, the Royal Navy's Trafalgar-class submarine, HMS Trafalgar, ran aground close to Skye, causing £5 million worth of damage to her hull and injuring three sailors. It was travelling 50 metres (160 ft) below the surface at more than 14 knots (26 km/h) when Lieutenant-Commander Tim Green, a student in the Submarine Command Course, ordered a course change that took her onto the rocks at Fladda-chùain, a small but well-charted islet.

A report issued in May 2008 stated that tracing paper (used to protect navigational charts) had obscured vital data during a training exercise. Furthermore, the officer in charge of the training exercise had not been tracking the submarine's position using all the available equipment. Commanders Robert Fancy and Ian McGhie were court martialled and reprimanded over the incident.[4]

2003 edit

HMAS Dechaineux flooding edit

On 12 February 2003, HMAS Dechaineux, a Collins-class submarine of the Royal Australian Navy (RAN) was operating near her maximum safe diving depth off the coast of Western Australia when a seawater pipe burst.[5] The high-pressure seawater flooded the lower engine room before the hose was sealed off. It was estimated that if the inflow had continued for another twenty seconds, the weight of the water would have prevented Dechaineux from returning to the surface.[5] The Navy recalled all of the Collins-class submarines to the submarine base HMAS Stirling after this potentially catastrophic event, and after naval engineers were unable to find any flaws in the pipes that could have caused the burst, they commanded that the maximum safe depth of these submarines be reduced.[5]

Great Wall 361 accident edit

In May 2003, China announced that the entire ship's crew (70 people) had been killed aboard the Ming-class Great Wall submarine 361 due to a mechanical malfunction.[6] The accident took place off the coast of Liaoning province in northeast China. The vessel was recovered and towed to an unidentified port, where the cause of the accident was identified. When the battery was running low, the submarine surfaced with a vent opening for oxygen, which was consumed heavily by the charging diesel engines. At the same time, a sea wave surged, and seawater started to flow into the opening vent that automatically closed to prevent flooding. There was no single device on the submarine to detect low oxygen level and the crew suffocated due to the diesel engines consuming all the oxygen present within the submarine. As a consequence, the Commander and the Political Commissar of the People's Liberation Army Navy were dismissed from service, as well as the Commander, Political Commissar and Chief of Staff of the Northern Fleet.

K-159 sinking edit

In August 2003, the Russian November-class submarine K-159 sank in the Barents Sea. This submarine had been decommissioned, and she was being towed away for scrapping. Of her skeleton crew of ten sailors, nine were killed.

USS Hartford grounding edit

On 25 October 2003, the American Los Angeles-class submarine USS Hartford ran aground in the harbor of La Maddalena, Sardinia, in the Mediterranean Sea. This grounding caused about nine million dollars' worth of damage to Hartford.

2004 edit

HMCS Chicoutimi fire edit

On 5 October 2004, the Canadian submarine HMCS Chicoutimi suffered from two fires after leaving Faslane harbour for Halifax harbour. One officer, Canadian Forces Lieutenant (Navy) Chris Saunders, died the following day while he was being flown via helicopter to a hospital in Ireland. Canadian Forces investigators concluded that poor insulation of some power cables caused the fires. The following board of inquiry found that the fire was caused by a series of events that caused electrical arcing at cable joints from seawater penetration at the joints.[7]

2005 edit

USS San Francisco collision with undersea terrain edit

On 8 January 2005, the Los Angeles-class submarine USS San Francisco, while underway and submerged, collided with an undersea seamount about 350 miles (560 km) south of Guam in the Marianas Islands. One of her sailors, Machinist mate 2nd Class (MM2(SS)) Joseph Allen Ashley, of Akron, Ohio, died from the injuries he suffered in the collision. This happened while San Francisco was on a high-speed voyage to visit Brisbane, Australia.

An additional 97 sailors were injured in this accident, including two with dislocated shoulders.[8] The collision with the seamount was so severe that San Francisco nearly sank. Accounts from the scene related a desperate struggle for positive buoyancy after her forward ballast tanks had been ruptured. Several news web sites stated that the boat had hit an "uncharted sea mount" at a high speed. The captain of the submarine, Commander Kevin Mooney, was later relieved of his command after an investigation revealed that he had been using inadequate methods of ocean voyage planning.

San Francisco underwent a rapid deceleration from more than 25 knots (46 km/h) to a standstill, causing a section of her bow to collapse (including her sonar system along with the forward ballast tanks) and everything not tied down to fly forward in the boat. San Francisco returned to her base at Guam, where emergency repairs were carried out. Next, she steamed to the Puget Sound Naval Shipyard for more permanent repairs. The bow section of San Francisco was replaced with that of her sister ship, USS Honolulu, which had already been removed from service because of years of wear and tear.[9][10] This replacement of the bow of San Francisco was successful, and the vessel returned to active service in the Pacific Fleet, based at San Diego.

AS-28 emergency edit

On 5 August 2005, the Russian Priz-class deep-submergence rescue vehicle AS-28, while operating off the coast of the Kamchatka Peninsula, became entangled in a fishing net, or possibly by cables belonging to an underwater antenna assembly, at a depth of 190 metres (620 feet). Unable to free itself, the submarine was stuck with a depleting air supply.

After a multi-national effort, a Royal Navy team using a Scorpio ROV was able to free the submarine from the entanglement, allowing it to return to the surface. All seven crew members were rescued safely.

USS Philadelphia collision with MV Yasa Aysen edit

On 5 September 2005, USS Philadelphia was in the Persian Gulf about 30 nautical miles (60 km) northeast of Bahrain when she collided with the Turkish merchant ship MV Yasa Aysen. No injuries were reported on either vessel. The damage to the submarine was described as "superficial." The Turkish ship suffered minor damage to its hull just above her waterline, but the United States Coast Guard inspected the ship and found her to be still seaworthy. The commanding officer of Philadelphia, Commander Steven M. Oxholm, was relieved of his command following this collision.

2006 edit

Daniil Moskovsky fire edit

On 6 September 2006, the Russian Victor III-class submarine Daniil Moskovsky suffered a fire which resulted in the deaths of two crewmen (a warrant officer and a sailor). At the time of the incident the submarine was anchored off the Rybachiy peninsula, on Russia's north coast near the border with Norway. The fire was extinguished with no damage to the reactor (which had been scrammed as a precaution), and the submarine was towed to a base at Vidyayevo. The incident was reported as being caused by an electrical fire in the vessel's wiring.[11]

USS Minneapolis-Saint Paul incident edit

Four crew members were washed overboard from USS Minneapolis-Saint Paul by heavy waves on 29 December 2006 in Plymouth Sound, England. This resulted in the deaths of Senior Chief Thomas Higgins (chief of the boat) and Sonar Technician 2nd Class Michael Holtz. After the preliminary investigation, Commander Edwin Ruff received a punitive letter of reprimand, stating that the accident was avoidable, and he was reassigned to a shore-based post in Norfolk, Virginia.

2007 edit

USS Newport News collision with Japanese tanker Mogamigawa edit

On 8 January 2007, USS Newport News was transiting submerged in the Strait of Hormuz when she hit the Japanese tanker Mogamigawa.[12] She had been operating as part of Carrier Strike Group 8 (CSG-8), organised around the aircraft carrier USS Dwight D. Eisenhower[13] and dispatched to the Indian Ocean to help support operations in Somalia.

HMS Tireless edit

On 21 March 2007, two crew members of the Royal Navy's Trafalgar-class submarine, HMS Tireless were killed in an explosion caused by air-purification equipment in the forward section of the submarine. The submarine was in service in the Arctic Ocean and had to make an emergency surface through the pack ice. A third crewmember who suffered "non-life-threatening" injuries was airlifted to a military hospital at Elmendorf Air Force Base near Anchorage, Alaska. According to the Royal Navy, the accident did not affect the ship's nuclear reactor, and the ship sustained only superficial damage.[14]

2008 edit

HMS Superb edit

On 26 May 2008, the Royal Navy's Swiftsure-class submarine, HMS Superb hit an underwater rock pinnacle in the northern Red Sea, 80 miles (130 km) south of Suez, causing damage to sonar equipment. The submarine was decommissioned slightly earlier than planned as a result of the damage.[15][16]

Russian K-152 Nerpa gas leak edit

On 8 November 2008, at least 20 men died of asphyxiation from a gas leak on board the Russian nuclear submarine K-152 Nerpa, during trials in the Sea of Japan.[17] The submarine was leased to the Indian Navy in 2011 and was formally commissioned into service as INS Chakra in 2012.

2009 edit

 
USS Hartford in Bahrain a day after the collision

HMS Vanguard and Triomphant collision edit

Two nuclear submarines, the Royal Navy's HMS Vanguard and the French Navy's Triomphant, collided in February 2009. They were operating in the Atlantic Ocean at the time. No injuries or radiation leaks were reported.[18]

USS Hartford and USS New Orleans collision edit

USS Hartford collided with USS New Orleans on 20 March 2009 in the Strait of Hormuz.[19]

2010s edit

2010 edit

HMS Astute grounding edit

 
Astute aground with the emergency tow vessel Anglian Prince

On 22 October 2010, HMS Astute ran aground on a sand bank off the coast of the Isle of Skye in Scotland.[20] Commanding officer Andy Coles was relieved of his post after an inquiry concluded a series of errors led to the incident. At least two other unnamed officers received disciplinary action.[21]

2011 edit

HMCS Corner Brook grounding edit

HMCS Corner Brook ran aground in Nootka Sound off the coast of Vancouver Island on 4 June 2011, while conducting SOCT (Submarine Officer Training Course).[22] Minor injuries were sustained by two crew members and the submarine returned to CFB Esquimalt after the incident without escort or further incident.[22] A board of inquiry into the incident deemed commanding officer, Lieutenant-Commander Paul Sutherland, had responsibility for safe navigation of the submarine and was relieved of his command.

2012 edit

USS Miami arson edit

On 23 May 2012, during a scheduled maintenance overhaul, USS Miami suffered extensive damage from a fire, which was later determined to have been part of a series of fires started deliberately by a civilian shipyard worker, Casey Fury, who was seeking time off from work. The Navy determined it would be uneconomical to repair the submarine and decided to decommission and scrap her instead.[23] Fury was sentenced to 17 years in jail.[24]

USS Montpelier collision with USS San Jacinto edit

USS Montpelier and the Aegis cruiser USS San Jacinto collided off the coast of north-eastern Florida on 13 October 2012 during an exercise while the submarine was submerged at periscope depth. There were no injuries aboard either ship. The initial assessment of damage was that there was a complete depressurisation of the sonar dome aboard San Jacinto. The investigation revealed that the principal cause of the collision was human error, poor teamwork by Montpelier watch team, and the commanding officer's failure to follow established procedures for submarines operating at periscope depth. Additionally, the investigation revealed contributing factors threaded among the various command and control headquarters that provide training and operational oversight within Fleet Forces Command.[25]

2013 edit

INS Sindhurakshak explosion and sinking edit

On 14 August 2013, the Indian Navy's INS Sindhurakshak Kilo-class Type 877EKM submarine sank after explosions caused by a fire took place on board when the submarine was berthed at Mumbai. The fire, followed by a series of ordnance blasts on the armed submarine, occurred shortly after midnight. The fire was put out within two hours. Due to damage from the explosions, the submarine sank at its berth with only a portion visible above the water surface.[26][27][28] Sailors on board reportedly jumped off to safety. The vessel was salvaged later and 18 dead bodies were recovered.[29]

Due to the explosion, the front section of the submarine was twisted, bent and crumpled, and water had entered the forward compartment. Another submarine, INS Sindhuratna, also sustained minor damage when the fire on Sindhurakshak caused its torpedoes to explode.[27][30] An enquiry into the incident found the cause of the incident to be violation of Standard Operating Procedures during torpedo loading.[29] This resulted in the explosion of two torpedoes during the incident while the remaining 14 torpedoes disintegrated.[29]

The navy was hopeful of using Sindhurakshak after it was salvaged, but on Navy Day 2015, Vice Admiral Cheema confirmed the Sindhurakshak would be disposed of.[31][32][33] After a period of use for the training of marine commandos, the submarine was sunk in 3000 metres of water in the Arabian Sea during June 2017.[34][35]

Russian K-150 Tomsk fire edit

On 16 September 2013, fifteen seamen were hospitalised after a fire on the Oscar-class submarine. The fire started during welding activity, as the sub was being repaired at the Zvezda shipyard near Vladivostok on the Sea of Japan. The fire was put out after five hours. A federal Investigative Committee said the fire had "caused damage to the health of 15 servicemen" and they remained in hospital. It gave no details about their condition.[36]

USS Jacksonville collision edit

On 10 January 2013, USS Jacksonville struck a suspected fishing trawler in the Persian Gulf and bent one of its periscopes.[37] The ship's commanding and executive officers were relieved for cause following the incident.[38]

2015 edit

HMS Talent collision edit

In early 2015, Trafalgar-class submarine HMS Talent entered Devonport Naval base in Plymouth with significant damage to its sail after striking ice.

2016 edit

Sinking of unknown North Korean submarine edit

On 11 March 2016, CNN and the U.S. Naval Institute News reported that unnamed US officials believed a North Korean submarine had been lost at sea in the Sea of Japan. According to reports, the U.S. military had been observing the submarine when it "stopped" before the North Korean navy was observed searching the area by American satellites, aircraft and ships.[39][40]

HMS Ambush collision edit

On 20 July 2016, while operating at periscope depth on a training exercise in the Strait of Gibraltar, HMS Ambush collided with a merchant ship, sustaining significant damage to the top of her conning tower. The merchant vessel did not sustain any damage. It was reported that no crew members were injured during the collision and that the submarine's nuclear reactor section remained completely undamaged.[41]

2017 edit

UC3 Nautilus sinking edit

On 11 August 2017, the privately owned midget submarine UC3 Nautilus sank off the coast of Denmark. Danish authorities believe its owner Peter Madsen allegedly scuttled the submarine to hide evidence in the murder of journalist Kim Wall.[42][43][44] In October 2017, Madsen admitted to dismembering Wall during their submarine trip[45] and was later convicted of her murder.

ARA San Juan edit

On the night of 16 November 2017, the Argentine Navy submarine ARA San Juan and her crew of 44 was reported missing in the San Jorge Gulf region.[46] Ships and long-range patrol aircraft from several nations, including Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Uruguay, Russia, the United Kingdom and the United States, were dispatched in a search and rescue mission. Rescue submersibles and parachute rescuers were deployed.[47][48] On 30 November, hopes of rescuing the crew alive were abandoned.[49]

On 16 November 2018, the company Ocean Infinity had located San Juan through a remote submersible. The wreck was 460 kilometres (290 miles) southeast of Comodoro Rivadavia at a depth of 907 metres (2,976 feet). The submarine's imploded wreckage was strewn up to 70 metres (230 feet) from the hull. All 44 crew members were lost with the submarine.

2019 edit

Losharik fire edit

On 1 July 2019, a fire on what it described as a Russian deep-water research submarine surveying the seabed near the Arctic killed 14 sailors. Russian officials faced accusations of trying to cover up the full details of the accident, and some Russian media criticised what they said was a lack of transparency, and drew parallels with the dearth of official information during the meltdown of a Soviet nuclear reactor in Chernobyl in 1986. One day later, the Russian government officially disclosed the incident on the submarine Losharik and acknowledged that the vessel had a nuclear reactor on board.[50]

2020s edit

2020 edit

Hoegh London collision with South Korean Navy submarine edit

On 15 July 2020, 05:00 UTC, Norwegian merchant ship Hoegh London (IMO 9342205) and South Korean Navy's Jang Bogo-class submarine collided near Gadeokdo island, Busan, South Korea.[51][52]

2021 edit

KRI Nanggala (402) sinking edit

On 21 April 2021, Indonesian Navy spokesperson First Admiral Julius Widjojono announced that KRI Nanggala had failed to report for a post-maneuver brief following a torpedo live fire exercise in the Bali Sea off the coast of Surabaya, about 95 km (51 nautical miles) north of Bali, in an area where the water is 700 metres (2,300 ft) deep.[53][54] The submarine was declared sunk on 24 April, 18:00 (GMT+7) by Commander of the Indonesian National Armed Forces Hadi Tjahjanto at a depth of 700–800 metres below sea level.[55]

At a press conference held on 25 April, the 53 crew were confirmed lost after the submarine was found at a depth of 839 metres (2,753 feet) below sea level by Indonesian navy ship KRI Rigel, broken up into three parts.[56] The Singapore Navy RSSV ship MV Swift Rescue's ROV took the submarine's first image.[57][58]

USS Connecticut (SSN-22) collision with seamount edit

On 2 October 2021, USS Connecticut (SSN-22) was damaged after she collided with a seamount[59] while maneuvering in the South China Sea.[60] About eleven sailors were injured, though no injuries were reported to be life-threatening, and the submarine's propulsion system and nuclear reactor were said to be operating normally.[61] After an investigation, the commanding officer, his executive officer, and the chief of the boat were all relieved of duty.[62]

2023 edit

Titan implosion edit

On 18 June 2023, Titan, a private submersible operated by OceanGate, went missing in international waters in the North Atlantic Ocean off the coast of Newfoundland, Canada. The submersible was on a tourist expedition to view the wreck of the Titanic with five people onboard. Communication was lost with the submersible 1 hour and 45 minutes into its dive to the wreck site; authorities were notified when it did not resurface at its scheduled time later that day. On 22 June, following the discovery of a debris field containing parts of the Titan approximately 488 m (1,600 ft) from the bow of the Titanic by a remotely operated underwater vehicle (ROV), it was presumed that the pressure chamber had imploded during or after its descent, killing all onboard instantly.[63]

Russian B-237 "Rostov-na-Donu" missile attack edit

On 13 September 2023, Russian Kilo-class submarine B-237 "Rostov-na-Donu" was hit by a missile during the ongoing Russo-Ukrainian War, while docked at Sevastopol Shipyard in Crimea. The missile is suspected to be either a Storm Shadow or SCALP. These are essentially identical air launched cruises missiles, and are expected to have been launched from a Ukrainian Sukhoi Su-24. Russia claimed that 10 missiles were fired, of which 3 managed to penetrate the dockyards defences, hitting both the Submarine and the landing ship Minsk.

On 20 September, photos emerged that showed two large holes in the pressure hull, expected to be an entry and exit hole. Ukraine and outside sources assessed that the two vessels were damaged beyond repair, while Russia's Defence Ministry claimed that both vessels would be repaired and returned to service. Casualties are unknown, although Ukrainian sources claimed 24 personnel were injured on the submarine and 62 killed aboard Minsk. [64][65][66][67]

References edit

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External links edit

list, submarine, submersible, incidents, since, 2000, this, article, describes, major, accidents, incidents, involving, submarines, submersibles, since, 2000, francisco, dock, after, running, aground, underwater, mountain, miles, south, guam, 2005, contents, 2. This article describes major accidents and incidents involving submarines and submersibles since 2000 USS San Francisco in a dry dock after running aground in an underwater mountain 350 miles 560 km south of Guam in 2005 Contents 1 2000s 1 1 2000 1 1 1 Kursk explosion 1 2 2001 1 2 1 Ehime Maru and USS Greeneville collision 1 3 2002 1 3 1 USS Dolphin major flooding and fire 1 3 2 USS Oklahoma City collision with tanker 1 3 3 HMS Trafalgar 1 4 2003 1 4 1 HMAS Dechaineux flooding 1 4 2 Great Wall 361 accident 1 4 3 K 159 sinking 1 4 4 USS Hartford grounding 1 5 2004 1 5 1 HMCS Chicoutimi fire 1 6 2005 1 6 1 USS San Francisco collision with undersea terrain 1 6 2 AS 28 emergency 1 6 3 USS Philadelphia collision with MV Yasa Aysen 1 7 2006 1 7 1 Daniil Moskovsky fire 1 7 2 USS Minneapolis Saint Paul incident 1 8 2007 1 8 1 USS Newport News collision with Japanese tanker Mogamigawa 1 8 2 HMS Tireless 1 9 2008 1 9 1 HMS Superb 1 9 2 Russian K 152 Nerpa gas leak 1 10 2009 1 10 1 HMS Vanguard and Triomphant collision 1 10 2 USS Hartford and USS New Orleans collision 2 2010s 2 1 2010 2 1 1 HMS Astute grounding 2 2 2011 2 2 1 HMCS Corner Brook grounding 2 3 2012 2 3 1 USS Miami arson 2 3 2 USS Montpelier collision with USS San Jacinto 2 4 2013 2 4 1 INS Sindhurakshak explosion and sinking 2 4 2 Russian K 150 Tomsk fire 2 4 3 USS Jacksonville collision 2 5 2015 2 5 1 HMS Talent collision 2 6 2016 2 6 1 Sinking of unknown North Korean submarine 2 6 2 HMS Ambush collision 2 7 2017 2 7 1 UC3 Nautilus sinking 2 7 2 ARA San Juan 2 8 2019 2 8 1 Losharik fire 3 2020s 3 1 2020 3 1 1 Hoegh London collision with South Korean Navy submarine 3 2 2021 3 2 1 KRI Nanggala 402 sinking 3 2 2 USS Connecticut SSN 22 collision with seamount 3 3 2023 3 3 1 Titan implosion 3 3 2 Russian B 237 Rostov na Donu missile attack 4 References 5 External links2000s edit2000 edit Kursk explosion edit Main article Kursk submarine disaster In August 2000 the Russian Oscar II class submarine Kursk sank in the Barents Sea when a leak of high test peroxide in the forward torpedo room led to the detonation of a torpedo warhead which in turn triggered the explosion of around half a dozen other warheads about two minutes later This second explosion was equivalent to about 3 7 tons of TNT 1 and was large enough to register on seismographs across Northern Europe 2 The explosion and the flooding by high pressure seawater killed the majority of the submarine s 118 sailors Twenty three survived in the stern of the submarine but despite an international rescue effort they died several days later either from a flash fire or suffocation due to a lack of oxygen The Russian Navy was severely criticised in its home country by family members of the deceased crew for failure to accept international help promptly 2001 edit Ehime Maru and USS Greeneville collision edit Main article Ehime Maru and USS Greeneville collision nbsp Greeneville in drydock at Pearl Harbor on 21 February 2001 after hitting and sinking Ehime Maru On 9 February 2001 the American submarine USS Greeneville accidentally struck and sank a Japanese high school fisheries training ship Ehime Maru killing nine of the thirty five people aboard including four students 10 miles 16 km off the coast of Oahu The collision occurred while members of the public were on board the submarine observing an emergency surface drill A naval inquiry found that the accident was the result of poorly executed sonar sweeps an ineffective periscope search by the submarine s captain Commander Scott Waddle bad communication among the crew and distractions caused by the presence of the 16 civilian guests aboard the submarine The Navy and the command of Greeneville have been criticized for making no immediate attempt to help the Japanese on Ehime Maru that survived the initial collision Weather conditions were producing 8 to 12 foot 2 4 to 3 7 m waves and the submarine s partially surfaced condition prevented the opening of deck hatches These were cited as reasons for the submarine captain s choosing to stand off and remain close by 3 While the U S Coast Guard directly responded survivors resorted to automatically deployed life rafts from Ehime Maru 2002 edit USS Dolphin major flooding and fire edit In May 2002 the U S Navy research submarine USS Dolphin experienced severe flooding and fires off the coast of San Diego California The ship was abandoned by the crew and Navy civilian personnel who were rescued by nearby naval vessels No one was seriously injured Although severely damaged the boat was towed back to San Diego for overhaul USS Oklahoma City collision with tanker edit On 13 November 2002 USS Oklahoma City collided with the Leif Hoegh liquefied natural gas tanker Norman Lady east of the Strait of Gibraltar No one on either vessel was hurt and there were no leaks from fuel tanks and no threat to the environment but the submarine sustained damage to her periscope and sail area and put into La Maddalena Sardinia for repairs Her commanding officer Commander Richard Voter was relieved of his command on 30 November One other officer and two enlisted crew members were also disciplined for dereliction of duty HMS Trafalgar edit In November 2002 the Royal Navy s Trafalgar class submarine HMS Trafalgar ran aground close to Skye causing 5 million worth of damage to her hull and injuring three sailors It was travelling 50 metres 160 ft below the surface at more than 14 knots 26 km h when Lieutenant Commander Tim Green a student in the Submarine Command Course ordered a course change that took her onto the rocks at Fladda chuain a small but well charted islet A report issued in May 2008 stated that tracing paper used to protect navigational charts had obscured vital data during a training exercise Furthermore the officer in charge of the training exercise had not been tracking the submarine s position using all the available equipment Commanders Robert Fancy and Ian McGhie were court martialled and reprimanded over the incident 4 2003 edit HMAS Dechaineux flooding edit On 12 February 2003 HMAS Dechaineux a Collins class submarine of the Royal Australian Navy RAN was operating near her maximum safe diving depth off the coast of Western Australia when a seawater pipe burst 5 The high pressure seawater flooded the lower engine room before the hose was sealed off It was estimated that if the inflow had continued for another twenty seconds the weight of the water would have prevented Dechaineux from returning to the surface 5 The Navy recalled all of the Collins class submarines to the submarine base HMAS Stirling after this potentially catastrophic event and after naval engineers were unable to find any flaws in the pipes that could have caused the burst they commanded that the maximum safe depth of these submarines be reduced 5 Great Wall 361 accident edit See also Chinese submarine 361 In May 2003 China announced that the entire ship s crew 70 people had been killed aboard the Ming class Great Wall submarine 361 due to a mechanical malfunction 6 The accident took place off the coast of Liaoning province in northeast China The vessel was recovered and towed to an unidentified port where the cause of the accident was identified When the battery was running low the submarine surfaced with a vent opening for oxygen which was consumed heavily by the charging diesel engines At the same time a sea wave surged and seawater started to flow into the opening vent that automatically closed to prevent flooding There was no single device on the submarine to detect low oxygen level and the crew suffocated due to the diesel engines consuming all the oxygen present within the submarine As a consequence the Commander and the Political Commissar of the People s Liberation Army Navy were dismissed from service as well as the Commander Political Commissar and Chief of Staff of the Northern Fleet K 159 sinking edit In August 2003 the Russian November class submarine K 159 sank in the Barents Sea This submarine had been decommissioned and she was being towed away for scrapping Of her skeleton crew of ten sailors nine were killed USS Hartford grounding edit Main article USS Hartford grounding On 25 October 2003 the American Los Angeles class submarine USS Hartford ran aground in the harbor of La Maddalena Sardinia in the Mediterranean Sea This grounding caused about nine million dollars worth of damage to Hartford 2004 edit HMCS Chicoutimi fire edit On 5 October 2004 the Canadian submarine HMCS Chicoutimi suffered from two fires after leaving Faslane harbour for Halifax harbour One officer Canadian Forces Lieutenant Navy Chris Saunders died the following day while he was being flown via helicopter to a hospital in Ireland Canadian Forces investigators concluded that poor insulation of some power cables caused the fires The following board of inquiry found that the fire was caused by a series of events that caused electrical arcing at cable joints from seawater penetration at the joints 7 2005 edit USS San Francisco collision with undersea terrain edit On 8 January 2005 the Los Angeles class submarine USS San Francisco while underway and submerged collided with an undersea seamount about 350 miles 560 km south of Guam in the Marianas Islands One of her sailors Machinist mate 2nd Class MM2 SS Joseph Allen Ashley of Akron Ohio died from the injuries he suffered in the collision This happened while San Francisco was on a high speed voyage to visit Brisbane Australia An additional 97 sailors were injured in this accident including two with dislocated shoulders 8 The collision with the seamount was so severe that San Francisco nearly sank Accounts from the scene related a desperate struggle for positive buoyancy after her forward ballast tanks had been ruptured Several news web sites stated that the boat had hit an uncharted sea mount at a high speed The captain of the submarine Commander Kevin Mooney was later relieved of his command after an investigation revealed that he had been using inadequate methods of ocean voyage planning San Francisco underwent a rapid deceleration from more than 25 knots 46 km h to a standstill causing a section of her bow to collapse including her sonar system along with the forward ballast tanks and everything not tied down to fly forward in the boat San Francisco returned to her base at Guam where emergency repairs were carried out Next she steamed to the Puget Sound Naval Shipyard for more permanent repairs The bow section of San Francisco was replaced with that of her sister ship USS Honolulu which had already been removed from service because of years of wear and tear 9 10 This replacement of the bow of San Francisco was successful and the vessel returned to active service in the Pacific Fleet based at San Diego AS 28 emergency edit Main article AS 28 On 5 August 2005 the Russian Priz class deep submergence rescue vehicle AS 28 while operating off the coast of the Kamchatka Peninsula became entangled in a fishing net or possibly by cables belonging to an underwater antenna assembly at a depth of 190 metres 620 feet Unable to free itself the submarine was stuck with a depleting air supply After a multi national effort a Royal Navy team using a Scorpio ROV was able to free the submarine from the entanglement allowing it to return to the surface All seven crew members were rescued safely USS Philadelphia collision with MV Yasa Aysen edit On 5 September 2005 USS Philadelphia was in the Persian Gulf about 30 nautical miles 60 km northeast of Bahrain when she collided with the Turkish merchant ship MV Yasa Aysen No injuries were reported on either vessel The damage to the submarine was described as superficial The Turkish ship suffered minor damage to its hull just above her waterline but the United States Coast Guard inspected the ship and found her to be still seaworthy The commanding officer of Philadelphia Commander Steven M Oxholm was relieved of his command following this collision 2006 edit Daniil Moskovsky fire edit On 6 September 2006 the Russian Victor III class submarine Daniil Moskovsky suffered a fire which resulted in the deaths of two crewmen a warrant officer and a sailor At the time of the incident the submarine was anchored off the Rybachiy peninsula on Russia s north coast near the border with Norway The fire was extinguished with no damage to the reactor which had been scrammed as a precaution and the submarine was towed to a base at Vidyayevo The incident was reported as being caused by an electrical fire in the vessel s wiring 11 USS Minneapolis Saint Paul incident edit Four crew members were washed overboard from USS Minneapolis Saint Paul by heavy waves on 29 December 2006 in Plymouth Sound England This resulted in the deaths of Senior Chief Thomas Higgins chief of the boat and Sonar Technician 2nd Class Michael Holtz After the preliminary investigation Commander Edwin Ruff received a punitive letter of reprimand stating that the accident was avoidable and he was reassigned to a shore based post in Norfolk Virginia 2007 edit USS Newport News collision with Japanese tanker Mogamigawa edit On 8 January 2007 USS Newport News was transiting submerged in the Strait of Hormuz when she hit the Japanese tanker Mogamigawa 12 She had been operating as part of Carrier Strike Group 8 CSG 8 organised around the aircraft carrier USS Dwight D Eisenhower 13 and dispatched to the Indian Ocean to help support operations in Somalia HMS Tireless edit On 21 March 2007 two crew members of the Royal Navy s Trafalgar class submarine HMS Tireless were killed in an explosion caused by air purification equipment in the forward section of the submarine The submarine was in service in the Arctic Ocean and had to make an emergency surface through the pack ice A third crewmember who suffered non life threatening injuries was airlifted to a military hospital at Elmendorf Air Force Base near Anchorage Alaska According to the Royal Navy the accident did not affect the ship s nuclear reactor and the ship sustained only superficial damage 14 2008 edit HMS Superb edit On 26 May 2008 the Royal Navy s Swiftsure class submarine HMS Superb hit an underwater rock pinnacle in the northern Red Sea 80 miles 130 km south of Suez causing damage to sonar equipment The submarine was decommissioned slightly earlier than planned as a result of the damage 15 16 Russian K 152 Nerpa gas leak edit Main article 2008 Russian submarine accident On 8 November 2008 at least 20 men died of asphyxiation from a gas leak on board the Russian nuclear submarine K 152 Nerpa during trials in the Sea of Japan 17 The submarine was leased to the Indian Navy in 2011 and was formally commissioned into service as INS Chakra in 2012 2009 edit nbsp USS Hartford in Bahrain a day after the collision HMS Vanguard and Triomphant collision edit Main article HMS Vanguard and Le Triomphant submarine collision Two nuclear submarines the Royal Navy s HMS Vanguard and the French Navy s Triomphant collided in February 2009 They were operating in the Atlantic Ocean at the time No injuries or radiation leaks were reported 18 USS Hartford and USS New Orleans collision edit Main article USS Hartford and USS New Orleans collision USS Hartford collided with USS New Orleans on 20 March 2009 in the Strait of Hormuz 19 2010s edit2010 edit HMS Astute grounding edit nbsp Astute aground with the emergency tow vessel Anglian Prince On 22 October 2010 HMS Astute ran aground on a sand bank off the coast of the Isle of Skye in Scotland 20 Commanding officer Andy Coles was relieved of his post after an inquiry concluded a series of errors led to the incident At least two other unnamed officers received disciplinary action 21 2011 edit HMCS Corner Brook grounding edit HMCS Corner Brook ran aground in Nootka Sound off the coast of Vancouver Island on 4 June 2011 while conducting SOCT Submarine Officer Training Course 22 Minor injuries were sustained by two crew members and the submarine returned to CFB Esquimalt after the incident without escort or further incident 22 A board of inquiry into the incident deemed commanding officer Lieutenant Commander Paul Sutherland had responsibility for safe navigation of the submarine and was relieved of his command 2012 edit USS Miami arson edit On 23 May 2012 during a scheduled maintenance overhaul USS Miami suffered extensive damage from a fire which was later determined to have been part of a series of fires started deliberately by a civilian shipyard worker Casey Fury who was seeking time off from work The Navy determined it would be uneconomical to repair the submarine and decided to decommission and scrap her instead 23 Fury was sentenced to 17 years in jail 24 USS Montpelier collision with USS San Jacinto edit USS Montpelier and the Aegis cruiser USS San Jacinto collided off the coast of north eastern Florida on 13 October 2012 during an exercise while the submarine was submerged at periscope depth There were no injuries aboard either ship The initial assessment of damage was that there was a complete depressurisation of the sonar dome aboard San Jacinto The investigation revealed that the principal cause of the collision was human error poor teamwork by Montpelier watch team and the commanding officer s failure to follow established procedures for submarines operating at periscope depth Additionally the investigation revealed contributing factors threaded among the various command and control headquarters that provide training and operational oversight within Fleet Forces Command 25 2013 edit INS Sindhurakshak explosion and sinking edit On 14 August 2013 the Indian Navy s INS Sindhurakshak Kilo class Type 877EKM submarine sank after explosions caused by a fire took place on board when the submarine was berthed at Mumbai The fire followed by a series of ordnance blasts on the armed submarine occurred shortly after midnight The fire was put out within two hours Due to damage from the explosions the submarine sank at its berth with only a portion visible above the water surface 26 27 28 Sailors on board reportedly jumped off to safety The vessel was salvaged later and 18 dead bodies were recovered 29 Due to the explosion the front section of the submarine was twisted bent and crumpled and water had entered the forward compartment Another submarine INS Sindhuratna also sustained minor damage when the fire on Sindhurakshak caused its torpedoes to explode 27 30 An enquiry into the incident found the cause of the incident to be violation of Standard Operating Procedures during torpedo loading 29 This resulted in the explosion of two torpedoes during the incident while the remaining 14 torpedoes disintegrated 29 The navy was hopeful of using Sindhurakshak after it was salvaged but on Navy Day 2015 Vice Admiral Cheema confirmed the Sindhurakshak would be disposed of 31 32 33 After a period of use for the training of marine commandos the submarine was sunk in 3000 metres of water in the Arabian Sea during June 2017 34 35 Russian K 150 Tomsk fire edit On 16 September 2013 fifteen seamen were hospitalised after a fire on the Oscar class submarine The fire started during welding activity as the sub was being repaired at the Zvezda shipyard near Vladivostok on the Sea of Japan The fire was put out after five hours A federal Investigative Committee said the fire had caused damage to the health of 15 servicemen and they remained in hospital It gave no details about their condition 36 USS Jacksonville collision edit On 10 January 2013 USS Jacksonville struck a suspected fishing trawler in the Persian Gulf and bent one of its periscopes 37 The ship s commanding and executive officers were relieved for cause following the incident 38 2015 edit HMS Talent collision edit In early 2015 Trafalgar class submarine HMS Talent entered Devonport Naval base in Plymouth with significant damage to its sail after striking ice 2016 edit Sinking of unknown North Korean submarine edit On 11 March 2016 CNN and the U S Naval Institute News reported that unnamed US officials believed a North Korean submarine had been lost at sea in the Sea of Japan According to reports the U S military had been observing the submarine when it stopped before the North Korean navy was observed searching the area by American satellites aircraft and ships 39 40 HMS Ambush collision edit On 20 July 2016 while operating at periscope depth on a training exercise in the Strait of Gibraltar HMS Ambush collided with a merchant ship sustaining significant damage to the top of her conning tower The merchant vessel did not sustain any damage It was reported that no crew members were injured during the collision and that the submarine s nuclear reactor section remained completely undamaged 41 2017 edit UC3 Nautilus sinking edit On 11 August 2017 the privately owned midget submarine UC3 Nautilus sank off the coast of Denmark Danish authorities believe its owner Peter Madsen allegedly scuttled the submarine to hide evidence in the murder of journalist Kim Wall 42 43 44 In October 2017 Madsen admitted to dismembering Wall during their submarine trip 45 and was later convicted of her murder ARA San Juan edit On the night of 16 November 2017 the Argentine Navy submarine ARA San Juan and her crew of 44 was reported missing in the San Jorge Gulf region 46 Ships and long range patrol aircraft from several nations including Argentina Brazil Chile Uruguay Russia the United Kingdom and the United States were dispatched in a search and rescue mission Rescue submersibles and parachute rescuers were deployed 47 48 On 30 November hopes of rescuing the crew alive were abandoned 49 On 16 November 2018 the company Ocean Infinity had located San Juan through a remote submersible The wreck was 460 kilometres 290 miles southeast of Comodoro Rivadavia at a depth of 907 metres 2 976 feet The submarine s imploded wreckage was strewn up to 70 metres 230 feet from the hull All 44 crew members were lost with the submarine 2019 edit Losharik fire edit On 1 July 2019 a fire on what it described as a Russian deep water research submarine surveying the seabed near the Arctic killed 14 sailors Russian officials faced accusations of trying to cover up the full details of the accident and some Russian media criticised what they said was a lack of transparency and drew parallels with the dearth of official information during the meltdown of a Soviet nuclear reactor in Chernobyl in 1986 One day later the Russian government officially disclosed the incident on the submarine Losharik and acknowledged that the vessel had a nuclear reactor on board 50 2020s edit2020 edit Hoegh London collision with South Korean Navy submarine edit On 15 July 2020 05 00 UTC Norwegian merchant ship Hoegh London IMO 9342205 and South Korean Navy s Jang Bogo class submarine collided near Gadeokdo island Busan South Korea 51 52 2021 edit KRI Nanggala 402 sinking edit Main article KRI Nanggala 402 On 21 April 2021 Indonesian Navy spokesperson First Admiral Julius Widjojono announced that KRI Nanggala had failed to report for a post maneuver brief following a torpedo live fire exercise in the Bali Sea off the coast of Surabaya about 95 km 51 nautical miles north of Bali in an area where the water is 700 metres 2 300 ft deep 53 54 The submarine was declared sunk on 24 April 18 00 GMT 7 by Commander of the Indonesian National Armed Forces Hadi Tjahjanto at a depth of 700 800 metres below sea level 55 At a press conference held on 25 April the 53 crew were confirmed lost after the submarine was found at a depth of 839 metres 2 753 feet below sea level by Indonesian navy ship KRI Rigel broken up into three parts 56 The Singapore Navy RSSV ship MV Swift Rescue s ROV took the submarine s first image 57 58 USS Connecticut SSN 22 collision with seamount edit On 2 October 2021 USS Connecticut SSN 22 was damaged after she collided with a seamount 59 while maneuvering in the South China Sea 60 About eleven sailors were injured though no injuries were reported to be life threatening and the submarine s propulsion system and nuclear reactor were said to be operating normally 61 After an investigation the commanding officer his executive officer and the chief of the boat were all relieved of duty 62 2023 edit Titan implosion edit Main article Titan submersible implosion On 18 June 2023 Titan a private submersible operated by OceanGate went missing in international waters in the North Atlantic Ocean off the coast of Newfoundland Canada The submersible was on a tourist expedition to view the wreck of the Titanic with five people onboard Communication was lost with the submersible 1 hour and 45 minutes into its dive to the wreck site authorities were notified when it did not resurface at its scheduled time later that day On 22 June following the discovery of a debris field containing parts of the Titan approximately 488 m 1 600 ft from the bow of the Titanic by a remotely operated underwater vehicle ROV it was presumed that the pressure chamber had imploded during or after its descent killing all onboard instantly 63 Russian B 237 Rostov na Donu missile attack edit Main article Russian submarine B 237 On 13 September 2023 Russian Kilo class submarine B 237 Rostov na Donu was hit by a missile during the ongoing Russo Ukrainian War while docked at Sevastopol Shipyard in Crimea The missile is suspected to be either a Storm Shadow or SCALP These are essentially identical air launched cruises missiles and are expected to have been launched from a Ukrainian Sukhoi Su 24 Russia claimed that 10 missiles were fired of which 3 managed to penetrate the dockyards defences hitting both the Submarine and the landing ship Minsk On 20 September photos emerged that showed two large holes in the pressure hull expected to be an entry and exit hole Ukraine and outside sources assessed that the two vessels were damaged beyond repair while Russia s Defence Ministry claimed that both vessels would be repaired and returned to service Casualties are unknown although Ukrainian sources claimed 24 personnel were injured on the submarine and 62 killed aboard Minsk 64 65 66 67 References edit This Earthquake Hasn t Even Happened Yet But It Has a Name Archived from the original on 18 October 2006 Retrieved 20 November 2017 Archived copy PDF www eas slu edu Archived from the original PDF on 25 April 2005 Retrieved 13 January 2022 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Marine Accident Brief MAB 05 01 PDF National Transportation Safety Board Report National Transportation Safety Board 29 September 2005 pp 27 28 Retrieved 23 November 2017 Royal Navy is condemned over crash of nuclear submarine P amp J 23 May 2008 a b c Australian Associated Press 23 July 2005 Navy forced to reduce subs diving depth The Age Retrieved 19 April 2009 Becker Jeffrey Liebenberg David Mackenzie Peter December 2013 Behind the Periscope Leadership in China s Navy Defense Technical Information Center p 81 Archived from the original on 20 November 2015 Board of Inquiry HMCS Chicoutimi fires Part II Findings Archived from the original on 18 May 2006 Retrieved 4 March 2006 http www navy mil submit display asp story id 18257 Archived 11 December 2019 at the Wayback Machine NNS050509 14 USS San Francisco Investigation Completed US Navy USS Honolulu Holds Final Change of Command Ceremony Archived 13 September 2007 at the Wayback Machine 14 December 2006 Nose of USS Honolulu to go to USS San Francisco The Honolulu Advertiser Two killed in Russian sub blaze BBC News 7 September 2006 Retrieved 9 November 2008 U S sub collides with Japan ship CNN 8 January 2007 Affairs This story was written by Mass Communication Specialist 1st Class Carla Morton USS Dwight D Eisenhower Public Eisenhower Strike Group Completes JTFEX 06 2 Archived from the original on 25 February 2021 Retrieved 20 November 2017 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link CS1 maint numeric names authors list link Oxygen device sparked sub blast BBC News 22 March 2007 Retrieved 22 March 2007 UK submarine hits Red Sea rocks BBC News 27 May 2008 Retrieved 24 September 2017 Superb submarine s final service BBC News 26 September 2008 Retrieved 24 September 2017 At least 20 die in accident on Russian nuclear sub Reuters Nuclear subs collide in Atlantic BBC News BBC 16 February 2009 Retrieved 16 February 2009 Ships collide in St of Hormuz 5th fleet public affairs 20 March 2009 Archived from the original on 23 March 2009 Retrieved 20 March 2009 Couzens Jo Williams Richard 23 October 2010 Grounded Nuclear Submarine Is Towed Free Sky News Archived from the original on 10 January 2016 Retrieved 31 July 2015 Hopkins Nick 24 April 2012 Navy submarine ran aground after series of errors inquiry finds The Guardian ISSN 0261 3077 Retrieved 20 June 2023 a b Canadian submarine runs aground near Vancouver Island AHN 6 June 2011 Archived from the original on 13 June 2011 Fire stricken submarine USS Miami is decommissioned Retrieved 20 November 2017 Shipyard worker who set fire to nuclear submarine sentenced to 17 years in jail The Guardian 16 March 2013 ISSN 0261 3077 Retrieved 20 June 2023 1 ABC News 13 October 2012 Explosion Partly Sinks Indian Naval Submarine The New York Times 14 August 2013 Retrieved 14 August 2013 a b INS Sindhurakshak fire set off torpedoes causing minor damage to INS Sindhuratna fate of 18 sailors on board uncertain DNA India 14 August 2013 Retrieved 14 August 2013 Fears for 18 as Indian navy submarine explodes and sinks in Mumbai The Guardian 14 August 2013 Retrieved 14 August 2013 a b c Blast in Submarine Sindhurakshak was Due to Lapses in Procedure Says Navy 25 September 2014 Retrieved 29 September 2015 INS Sindhurakshak A Sindhughosh class submarine with latest weapons IBN Live 14 August 2013 Archived from the original on 17 August 2013 Retrieved 14 August 2013 Mumbai 4 December 2015 Submarine Sindhurakshak to be disposed of soon Vice Admiral The Indian Express Retrieved 9 March 2016 Indian Navy hopeful of using submarine that sank Hindustan Times 3 December 2013 Archived from the original on 4 December 2013 Retrieved 3 December 2013 Possible reuse of Sindhurakshak being explored The Hindu 3 December 2013 Retrieved 3 December 2013 Singh Rahul 10 July 2017 Defunct submarine Sindhurakshak finally disposed of Hindustan Times New Delhi Retrieved 11 September 2017 Rajput Rashmi 5 September 2017 Navy sinks graveyard INS Sindhurakshak The Indian Express Retrieved 11 September 2017 Fire on Russian sub injured 15 investigators Reuters Retrieved 17 September 2013 dead link Navy Sub Goes Bump in the Night and Loses Its Periscope ABC Retrieved 9 March 2015 Commander Task Force 54 Public Affairs 10 February 2013 USS Jacksonville Commanding Officer and Executive Officer Relieved of Duty Navy News Service US Navy Archived from the original on 23 September 2015 Retrieved 10 January 2016 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint numeric names authors list link First on CNN U S says North Korean submarine missing U S Official North Korean Submarine is Missing Presumed Sunk UK nuclear submarine collides with merchant vessel off Gibraltar BBC News 21 July 2016 Retrieved 21 July 2016 Inventor may have deliberately sunk submarine in missing journalist case police say Australian Broadcasting Corporation 13 August 2017 Retrieved 20 November 2017 Oltermann Philip agency 22 August 2017 Woman s body found as Danish police search for missing journalist The Guardian Retrieved 20 November 2017 via www theguardian com Orange Richard 25 April 2018 Peter Madsen sentenced to life for murdering journalist Kim Wall The Guardian Retrieved 29 April 2018 Kennedy Merrit 30 October 2017 Police Danish Inventor Admits To Dismembering Journalist Kim Wall NPR org Retrieved 29 October 2020 Desaparecio un submarino argentino y se desplego un operativo de rescate 17 November 2017 Archived from the original on 3 July 2018 Retrieved 20 November 2017 La Armada Argentina perdio contacto con el submarino ARA San Juan Retrieved 20 November 2017 Elite Royal Navy rescue team sent as possible calls detected from missing Argentine submarine The Telegraph 19 November 2017 Submarino ARA San Juan la Armada dio por finalizado el operativo de rescate y ya no busca sobrevivientes La Nacion in Spanish 30 November 2017 Archived from the original on 30 November 2017 Retrieved 30 November 2017 Russia accused of cover up over lethal submarine fire Reuters Retrieved 15 July 2019 Norwegian car carrier collided with Korean submarine Maritime Bulletin Mikhail Voytenko July 17 2020 Retrieved August 23 2020 해군 잠수함 노르웨이 상선 충돌사고 교신 오류 가 원인 in Korean Newsis August 20 2020 Retrieved August 23 2020 Rahmat Ridzwan 21 April 2021 Indonesian Navy submarine missing in Bali Sea Janes Retrieved 21 April 2021 Pattisina Edna C Puttranto Angger 21 April 2021 Kapal Selam KRI Nanggala 402 Hilang di Utara Bali kompas id Retrieved 21 April 2021 Aditya Nicholas 24 April 2021 Daftar 6 Benda Milik KRI Nanggala 402 yang Ditemukan Pelurus Tabung Torpedo hingga Alas Shalat KOMPAS com Retrieved 25 April 2021 Mahadzir Dzirhan 24 April 2021 UPDATED Indonesian Navy Finds Missing Submarine Wreckage All Aboard Dead USNI News Retrieved 20 June 2023 Siregar Kiki 25 April 2021 Missing Indonesian submarine has sunk objects recovered Military chief Channel News Asia Archived from the original on 25 April 2021 Retrieved 26 April 2021 Photos show missing Indonesian navy submarine found broken up on seabed The Guardian Reuters 26 April 2021 Archived from the original on 26 April 2021 Retrieved 26 April 2021 Burns Robert 1 November 2021 Officials Damaged US Navy Sub Struck Underwater Mountain Military com Retrieved 2 November 2021 US Nuclear Sub Damaged in Underwater Collision in South China Sea October 7 2021 Daily News Brief 7 October 2021 Retrieved 7 October 2021 Sam LaGrone 7 October 2021 UPDATED Attack Submarine USS Connecticut Suffers Underwater Collision in South China Sea USNI News Geoff Ziezulewicz 4 November 2021 USS Connecticut s leadership fired following undersea mountain collision Navy Times Titan sub implosion What we know about catastrophic event BBC News 19 June 2023 Retrieved 23 June 2023 Russian Submarine Hit By Missile Rostov On Don Gone Naval news Retrieved 29 March 2024 Satellite images show damage to Russian naval vessels struck in Ukraine attack Reuters Retrieved 29 March 2024 RUSSIAN OFFENSIVE CAMPAIGN ASSESSMENT SEPTEMBER 25 2023 Understanding War Retrieved 29 March 2024 Amran Rachel 13 September 2023 UPDATE Explosions reported at marine plant in occupied Sevastopol 24 reported injured The Kyiv Independent Archived from the original on 25 December 2023 Retrieved 13 September 2023 External links editAmerican Society of Safety Engineers Journal of Professional Safety Submarine Accidents A 60 Year Statistical Assessment C Tingle Sept 2009 Pages 31 39 Ordering full article https www asse org professionalsafety indexes 2009 php or Reproduction less graphics tables http www allbusiness com government government bodies offices government 12939133 1 html Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title List of submarine and submersible incidents since 2000 amp oldid 1217763508, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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