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N0KFQ  > TODAY    12.08.10 17:13l 48 Lines 2063 Bytes #999 (0) @ WW
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Subj: Today in History - Aug 12
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Sent: 100812/1451Z @:N0KFQ.#SWMO.MO.USA.NA #:14209 [Branson] FBB7.00i $:14209_N
From: N0KFQ@N0KFQ.#SWMO.MO.USA.NA
To  : TODAY@WW


Aug 12, 2000:
Russian sub sinks with 118 onboard

A Russian nuclear submarine sinks to the bottom of the Barents 
Sea on this day in 2000; all 118 crew members are later found 
dead. The exact cause of the disaster remains unknown.

The Kursk left port on August 10 to take part in war games with 
the Russian military. Russian ships, planes and submarines met 
up in the Barents Sea, which is above the Arctic Circle, to 
practice military maneuvers. On August 12, the Kursk was 
scheduled to fire a practice torpedo; at 11:29 a.m., before 
doing so, two explosions spaced shortly apart occurred in the 
front hull of the submarine and it plunged toward the bottom of 
the sea.

The Kursk was 500 feet long and weighed 24,000 tons. It had two 
nuclear reactors and could reach speeds of 28 knots. It was the 
largest attack submarine in the world, approximately three times 
the size of the largest subs in the United States Navy.

With the fate of the 118 Russian soldiers onboard the Kursk 
unknown, several nations offered to contribute to the rescue 
effort, but the Russian government refused any assistance. When 
divers finally reached the Kursk a week later, they found no 
signs of life. Under a great deal of pressure, Russian President 
Vladimir Putin agreed to raise the submarine from the sea bottom 
for an investigation, although no ship or object that size had 
ever before been recovered from the ocean floor. Furthermore, 
given that the Barents Sea is frozen for most of the year, the 
operation had only a small window in which to work.

Using $100 million, the best available technology and an 
international team of experts, the Kursk was raised on September 
26, 2001, about a year after the accident. Unfortunately, 
however, the team was forced to cut off the front hull from the 
rest of the sub in order to bring it to the surface, leaving the 
best evidence of what caused the explosions at the bottom of the 
sea.

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