Project Azorian: The History of the CIA Operation to Recover a Sunken Soviet Submarine

Given that there’s such little margin for error in a submersible, many submarine losses remain sources of intrigue and mystery, and few rival the disappearance of the Soviet submarine K-129 in 1968. The Cold War was in high gear, and under the waters of the world’s oceans, Soviet and American submarines were in intense competition, pushing the boundaries of new technologies. Some of these submarines carried nuclear missiles that carried more destructive power than all the bombs dropped by the U.S. Army Air Force throughout World War II, including the nuclear bombs dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki. Other submarines, the hunter-killers, were designed to find and destroy these missile-carrying submarines. All of these submarines engaged in their activities while aiming to avoid detection by the other side, establishing a clandestine conflict that was carried out far from the gaze of the public but still strategically vital. If either side could gain a notable advantage, it could abruptly change the fragile balance of power.

Both sides lost submarines in the 1960s, but when the Soviets lost K-129 in 1968, it triggered one of the most interesting episodes of the Cold War, and something that reads like the plot of a techno-thriller. A race developed between the Americans and Soviets to locate the wreck, and when the Americans found it, they realized the submarine sunk in one of the deepest parts of the ocean, far beyond the depths at which conventional divers or submarines could operate. As a result, the CIA, aided by eccentric billionaire Howard Hughes, clandestinely began a lengthy and incredibly expensive project to build equipment that might allow them to recover and examine parts of the sunken submarine.

That operation, Project Azarian, is still controversial over 50 years later.

Starte noch heute mit diesem Buch für 0 €

  • Hole dir während der Testphase vollen Zugriff auf alle Bücher in der App
  • Keine Verpflichtungen, jederzeit kündbar
Jetzt kostenlos testen
Mehr als 52 000 Menschen haben Nextory im App Store und auf Google Play 5 Sterne gegeben.

  1. Neu

    Die Panzer: Die Geschichte und das Vermächtnis von Nazideutschlands berühmtesten Panzern des Zweiten Weltkriegs

    Charles River Editors

  2. Neu

    Das mittelalterliche Russland: Die Geschichte und das Erbe der Gruppen, die den russischen Staat im Mittelalter entwickelten

    Charles River Editors

  3. Neu

    The Biggest Tank Battles of the World Wars: Tank Warfare in History’s Deadliest Conflicts

    Charles River Editors

  4. Neu
    3.5

    Sigmund Freud and Carl Jung: The Pioneering Lives and Works of History’s Most Influential Psychologists

    Charles River Editors

  5. Neu

    Imperial Germany’s Colonization in Africa: The History of the German Efforts and Conflicts to Colonize Parts of Africa

    Charles River Editors

  6. Neu
    4.0

    The Empires of India: The History of the Dynasties that Ruled India Before the British

    Charles River Editors

  7. Neu

    The Disappearance of the USS Thresher: The History of the American Nuclear Submarine that Sank at the Height of the Cold War

    Charles River Editors

  8. Neu

    Winston Churchill’s Great Escapes: The Story of the British Bulldog’s Death-Defying Life Before He Became Prime Minister

    Charles River Editors

  9. Neu

    The Myths of India: The History and Legacy of Mythology across the Indian Subcontinent

    Charles River Editors

  10. Neu

    World War II in the Arctic: The History of the Aleutian Islands Campaign and Nazi Germany’s Arctic Invasion of the Soviet Union

    Charles River Editors

  11. Neu
    3.8

    Hans-Ulrich Rudel: The Life and Legacy of the Luftwaffe’s Deadliest Stuka Pilot

    Charles River Editors

  12. Neu

    The Assassinated Presidents: The Lives and Deaths of Abraham Lincoln, James Garfield, William McKinley, and John F. Kennedy

    Charles River Editors