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The Wacko Story of How a Russian Nuclear-Powered Submarine Sank Twice

The K-429 was a nuclear-powered submarine that was launched in 1972. In 1983, the crew was given orders to sail for a series of training drills. The crew was alarmed, given that the K-429 was still undergoing structural repairs.

Charlie-class Submarine. Image Credit: Creative Commons.
Charlie-class Submarine. Image Credit: Creative Commons.

Submarines are inherently dangerous machines.

Designed for travel beneath the surface of the ocean in an environment that is incompatible with human life, submarines have a razor-thin margin for mechanical error.

Submarines are much safer today, but during World War II, while seemingly the entire globe was embroiled in conflict across the air, land, and sea, being in a submarine was just about the single most dangerous place you could be.

In the U.S. Navy, submariners had a 20 percent casualty rate – the most of any occupation in the U.S. military during the war.

In the Nazi Navy, the Kriegsmarine, submariners had a remarkable 75 percent casualty rate – again, the highest of any occupation in the Nazi war machine.

Through the Cold War, submarine technology improved while open conflict involving submarines became rare. Accordingly, submarines became much safer. But the margins for error were still thin, as the occasional incident demonstrated.

The Soviet K-429, a Charlie-I class nuclear submarine, for example, sank not once, but twice.

The K-429 Submarine

“Submarines are rarely given a second chance,” Boris Egorov wrote. “Once it sinks, the sea bottom becomes its grave. Sometimes it can be raised, but its service life is definitely over. There are exceptions, though.” Namely, the K-429.

The K-429 was a nuclear-powered submarine that was launched in 1972. In 1983, the crew was given orders to sail for a series of training drills. The crew was alarmed, given that the K-429 was still undergoing structural repairs.

The crew objected. The Soviet high command, commonly understood to have less reverence for human life than most other military organizations, didn’t care, ordering the K-429 to sea.

During the very first dive, a section of the K-429 was instantly flooded, killing 14 sailors, and causing the submarine to sink to the bottom of Sarannaya Bay, some 40 meters beneath the surface.

That the K-429 didn’t sink in the ocean, some 400 meters deep, was sheer luck.

But not everything went the crew’s way – they were unable to launch an SOS beacon to notify the Soviet Navy of the K-429’s situation and location.

The 106 surviving crew members were trapped on the ocean floor, and their comrades were unaware.

Eventually, two members of the crew crawled through the torpedo tubes, swam to the surface, and encountered a patrol boat. Crazy stuff. Soviet divers delivered breathing apparatuses to the K-429s crew, who then began to abandon the sub through the torpedo tubes and a non-flooded compartment.

“You couldn’t imagine what it was like to crawl in total darkness in a diving suit through the flooded torpedo section, which is almost nine meters long and just 53 cm wide. At one moment, you start to think that you’ll never get out of this iron tube. Fear starts to fetter your movements, occupy your mind and suppress your will,” said the K-429’s commander, Captain Nikolay Suvorov – who was scapegoated for the incident, court martialed, and sentenced to ten years of prison because, you know, Soviet Union.

The K-429 was raised from the bottom of Sarannaya Bay and docked for repairs.

There, in 1985, after 300 million rubles were invested, the K-429 sank right at the pier. Why? worker negligence. No one was killed. But the K-429 claimed the dubious distinction of having sunk twice.  

A port bow view of the Soviet Charlie I Class Nuclear-Powered Attack Submarine CHAKRA which is leased to India. Image Credit: Creative Commons.

A port bow view of the Soviet Charlie I Class Nuclear-Powered Attack Submarine CHAKRA which is leased to India.

Harrison Kass is the Senior Editor and opinion writer at 19FortyFive. An attorney, pilot, guitarist, and minor pro hockey player, Harrison joined the US Air Force as a Pilot Trainee but was medically discharged. Harrison holds a BA from Lake Forest College, a JD from the University of Oregon, and an MA from New York University. Harrison listens to Dokken.

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Written By

Harrison Kass is a Senior Defense Editor at 19FortyFive. An attorney, pilot, guitarist, and minor pro hockey player, he joined the US Air Force as a Pilot Trainee but was medically discharged. Harrison has degrees from Lake Forest College, the University of Oregon School of Law, and New York University’s Graduate School of Arts & Sciences. He lives in Oregon and regularly listens to Dokken.

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