You probably just heard a robot in your head right? And depending on when you grew up there is one particular robot voice that you heard. Perhaps you grew up in the 1960’s and heard “EXTERMINATE!!!” or you grow up instead in the 1970’s and it was Mel Blanc’s “Twikispeak” or maybe you grew up in the 1980’s or the 2000’s (and later!) and heard Anthony Daniel’s charming English butler like C3P0 voice.
Tell us in the comments below if this was the case.
In response to the January 23, 1968 North Korea seizure of the USS Pueblo and crew, the Johnson Administration sent an armada of ships and up to nine subs, both nuclear-powered and diesel/electric, into the Sea of Japan. The operation was known as “Formation Star,” the largest build-up of U.S. naval forces around the Korean peninsula since the Korean War. This U.S. naval show-of-force was led by the USS Enterprise, the world’s first nuclear-powered aircraft carrier and the largest warship in the world at the time.
Less known are the stories of the two submarines sent in response to the Pueblo Incident—the USS Segundo and USS Swordfish—both of which failed to execute their missions as planned. In the case of the Segundo, her detection by the North Koreans off the coast of Wonsan, North Korea nearly led to the deaths of the entire crew. And while not life-threatening, the failed Swordfish mission led to a cascade of Cold War events including, according to one author, the sinking of a U.S. sub in retaliation for the sinking of a Soviet sub, which the Russians had falsely attributed to ramming by the USS Swordfish.
In August 2000, decades after the resolution of the Pueblo crisis, a
small California newspaper interviewed Russ Noragon, a member of the
USS Segundo crew. In what a staff writer at the Ventura County Star
described as a “top-secret mission that might be the stuff of a Tom
Clancy spy novel,” Noragon described how his sub had to submerge to
the bottom of the sea off the coast of Wonsan, North Korea to avoid
capture by the North Koreans. At the time, Noragon was a Machinists
Mate (MM); a Chief before retirement.
In an
article titled “Local Submariner Recalls Time on Bottom,” Noragon
told how he and the other 79 men on board had barely escaped with
their lives when the Segundo and crew nearly ran out of air. The
incident occurred on the day the Pueblo was hijacked in international
waters off the coast of North Korea. Noragon said his sub was
“ordered to attempt a rescue of the 83 sailors aboard the
intelligence vessel USS Pueblo…,” the planning of which began
immediately, he said. According to the Segundo’s Chief of the Boat
(COB), there were five special ops on board, but their role was
unknown to the crew.
But
instead of completing their mission undetected, Noragon said North
Korean sonar-equipped patrol boats discovered his sub at periscope
depth shortly after it arrived in the area. They then began
bombarding the Segundo with depth charges, forcing it to the sea
bottom with its engines and most of its equipment shut down. After a
couple of days on the ocean floor, “It was miserable,” Noragon
said. “We all got terrible headaches from the lack of oxygen.”
Noragon, who was assigned to the engine room, said he didn’t even know the depth of the water, only the tenseness of the situation. Meanwhile, the crew covered everything on board with a “special powder” (presumably lithium hydroxide) that absorbed the carbon dioxide in the air that built up in the close quarters. Some fresh air was pumped in from the submarine’s reserve tanks, but only enough to keep the air breathable.
To avoid detection,
Noragon said the crew, who “spoke in whispers,” were ordered to
stay in their bunks when not on watch, in what submariners call
“silent running.” The seriousness of the situation became all too
apparent when classified materials and equipment were readied for
destruction. Noragon said he really got nervous when the radiomen
brought out all of the Segundo’s cryptography gear and the weighted
bags and hammers. At which point, Noragon said to himself, “Oh,
this is not good.” When the commanding officer of the Segundo, Cdr.
David A. Fudge, realized that rescuing the Pueblo crew was no longer
possible, Noragon said his crewmates devised an escape plan.
With
North Korean vessels at the surface lying in wait, Fudge had the crew
eject hollow can targets, alternating between the sub’s bow and
stern. As each target pinged the North Korean sonar, the Segundo
moved a little. “We had all these bubbles down there,” Noragon
recalls. “Pretty soon, there were so many targets, they [the North
Koreans] didn’t know which was real and which were a decoy.” This
allowed the Segundo and crew to finally escape. Now fifty years
later, the ill-effects of this failed mission remain with the
surviving members of the crew.
About
ten days after the Pueblo seizure, the USS Swordfish raced to the Sea
of Japan from her homeport at Pearl Harbor. The sub’s belated
departure might have been to compensate for the withdrawal of Segundo
from the area, or perhaps it was sent to help confront the Soviets
who by then had sent an armada of their own ships and subs to
confront Operation “Formation Star.”
Unfortunately,
in early March, Swordfish struck a block of ice that had drifted
south, bending her mast back at a 45-degree angle; so she departed
the area for the U.S. Naval Base at Yokosuka for repairs, which
required ten days. However, when the Japanese press noticed the
arrival of a damaged submarine on the surface—a rare event—they
requested an explanation from the U.S. Navy. To avoid disclosing the
Swordfish’s secret mission—all submarines on special operations
were classified—the Navy said the Swordfish had come to Yokosuka
for some much-needed R&R. But what about the damage? As the Navy
explained, the “damage was likely caused by hyoryubutsu,”
meaning flotsam or wreckage, not ice.
When a photo of the Swordfish with a bent mast appeared in an article in a Japanese newspaper, the Russians smelled a rat. About a week earlier, K-129, their nuclear-armed Project 629A (NATO reporting name Golf II) diesel-electric powered submarine, sank without explanation. Had the Swordfish intentionally rammed a Soviet submarine, resulting in the death of all 98 men on board? When the Russians confronted the Americans, the Pentagon would only say that the Swordfish was about 2,000 miles from where their Soviet submarine sank—no mention was made of Swordfish’s secret Pueblo mission. According to Ed Offley, the author of “Scorpion Down: Sunk by the Soviets, Buried by the Pentagon,” the Soviets intentionally sank a U.S. submarine, the USS Scorpion, in retaliation for the Swordfish’s sinking of their submarine about two months earlier. For the Silo, Bill Streifer.