Tuesday, February 17, 2009

Did France's Secrecy Cause a Nuclear Submarine Collision?

Le Triomphant-class submarineA collision between a British nuclear-powered submarine carrying multiple nuclear warheads and a French nuclear submarine armed with a similar payload may have been the result of lack of communication between France and NATO nations, according to a former British submarine commander whose revelations were partially corroborated by an official at the French navy.

Sometime on Feb. 3 or 4, the British HMS Vanguard and France's Le Triomphant collided in the mid-Atlantic.

The accident probably happened because the two submarines were not aware of each other.

NATO operates a traffic control system that alerts allied nations to the deployment zones of friendly submarines.

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3 comments:

  1. Blaming France for not being in NATO - from the opinions of a retired UK submariner - is not definitive reporting.

    France see advantages from having a nuclear deterent that is not part of the Anglo dominated NATO command structure.

    Not telling the many countries of NATO where its submarines are is a prudent French security measure - in France's national interests.

    One non fatal SLBM-SLBM collision event in more than 30 years of SLBM operating which may or may not be due to Fench policies - is probably a fair tradeoff for France.

    Pete

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  2. Hi Pete,

    I don't think you can blame France for not knowing where the NATO submarines are.
    France doesn't tell NATO so NATO doesn't tell France.

    They are working on a solution to prevent this from happening again.

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  3. I agree Kobus

    If France the US and UK at a minimum shared positional information in the Atlantic that would be an improvement. I choose those countries because they are the only Western countries operating the high value SLBM "Boomer" subs.

    Pete

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