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The Sinking of the Ehime Maru: Not An Accident
by Jared Israel [3-5-2001]

It is now three weeks since the U.S. submarine Greeneville shot up 405 feet 
from the ocean depths and rammed a Japanese teaching trawler, the Ehime Maru. 
Nine people on the trawler were killed. Four were teenagers.

>From the start the question was: how could the sub commander not know there 
was a ship nearby? Especially since this was a nuclear submarine. How could 
the commander not check thoroughly before performing a dangerous emergency 
procedure, a "rapid ascent"?

For two weeks the Navy stonewalled. Information emerged in dribs and drabs. 
We learned there were civilians on board, but the Navy said: so what?

"Adm. FARGO: These embarkations for civilian people are very routine, and 
they would not affect the procedures that we use to surface the submarine in 
any way, shape or form." (CBS EVENING NEWS, February 11, 2001) 

Routine? One of the civilians went on TV and with cheerful idiocy revealed 
that he had actually been at the controls when the sub hit – but: 

"I mean, what's important to know here is you don't do anything on this 
vessel without someone either showing you how to do it, telling you how to do 
it, or escorting you around." (Washington Post, 2-15-2001)

The presence of a group of 16 oil executives and their wives on board was 
dismissed in the press as no big deal:

"The Navy routinely invites dignitaries aboard its vessels to bolster public 
support for its missions. In 1999 the Pacific Fleet's subs hosted 1,132 
civilians on 45 trips."(Time, February 26, 2001)

There's that word "routine" again. The implications of routinely allowing 
'dignitaries' (i.e., oil executives) to handle nuclear submarines during 
dangerous procedures for the sake of Public Relations were apparently lost on 
the mass media. As George Szamuely wrote:

"The idea is to show off our military wares to wealthy, ignorant but 
self-important civilians with a view to winning their support for even more 
lavish funding of the Pentagon. So dazzled are the visitors by all the 
high-tech gadgets on display, by the death-defying skills of our servicemen, 
and by the elaborate military maneuvers worthy of a Hollywood summer 
blockbuster that they become ardent lobbyists for the military." ("What if 
they sank an American ship" by George Szamuely.)

And the question remained, nagging: how could the commander of that submarine 
not check thoroughly before performing this "rapid ascent"? What was 
happening on that submarine?

Why didn't they see the ship? The answer came: they did.

"Sonar crew on the submarine USS Greeneville detected the Japanese fishing 
boat Ehime Maru 71 minutes before the submarine collided with the vessel 
while surfacing, the Navy has told the US National Transportation Safety 
Board." (London Times, 2-21-2001)

But if a sonar operator spotted the ship 71 minutes before the collision why 
didn't he spot it again just prior to the 'rapid ascent'?

"Board member John Hammerschmidt also said late yesterday that the crew 
member responsible for tracking sonar contacts stopped performing that task 
within an hour of the collision because of the presence of 16 civilian guests 
in the submarine's control room." (London Times, 2-21-2001)

Would the sonar operator of a nuclear-armed sub decide on his own that 
"because of the presence of 16 civilian guests in the submarine's control 
room" he was not going to continue "tracking sonar contacts" and stop 
"performing that task"? On a military vessel? And this is why the sub's 
commander didn't know there was a ship nearby?

Common sense suggests that a) A sonar operator who did this after spotting a 
ship would be court-marshaled for gross negligence and b) the sonar operator 
would surely go to jail if he failed to warn his commander that he had seen a 
ship and c) in any case, why didn't the commander thoroughly check before 
engaging in a dangerous "rapid ascent?"

Now comes a new revelation which indicates that the near-universal 
description of this as an accident was a conscious lie. The following comes 
from the National Safety Board people investigating the "accident":

"The 190-foot fisheries training vessel was traveling in a south-southeast 
direction at 11 knots (about 12 1/2 m.p.h.), nearly parallel to the 
southbound course of the submerged 360-foot Greeneville. 

"The much-faster submarine passed the Ehime Maru but reversed course to the 
north to prepare for an emergency surfacing drill. The drill was a 
demonstration for 16 civilian guests aboard, the Navy said. 

"When the vessels were about two miles apart, the Greeneville made a series 
of zigzag turns, continuing in a north-northwest direction before ascending 
to an initial periscope depth five minutes before the impact. After 11/2 
minutes at periscope depth, the Greeneville descended, going in the same 
direction as the Ehime Maru. It reached 405 feet in two minutes and turned 
northward. 

"The Greeneville then shot to the surface in 50 seconds, coming up under the 
Ehime Maru, the NTSB data show. The submarine ripped the bottom out of the 
Ehime Maru, which sank within minutes." (Philadelphia Inquirer, 3/3/01)

The commander of the Greeneville stalked the Ehime Maru and positioned his 
sub close to the trawler before ordering the "rapid ascent." That is 
established fact.

The only question now is: why? What was going on on the submarine Greeneville?

A Likely Scenario
There were 16 guests on board the Greeneville that day. These were VIPS – oil 
company execs and their wives. The trip had been arranged by one Richard 
Macke, former Commander of the Pacific Fleet. Macke was forced to resign his 
post following public outcry over an amazing remark he made when three US 
troops rented a car and kidnapped and raped a 12 year old Okinawan girl:

"I think it was absolutely stupid," he told reporters. "I've said several 
times, for the price they paid to rent the car, they could have had a girl."

One assumes Commander Macke would not respond this way if a 12 year old child 
from his home town had been raped. The distinguishing feature in this 
instance was that the child was Okinawan, i.e., Asian. Because of this 
incident the Navy rightfully forced Macke into early retirement.

The VIPs he invited for a joy ride on the Greeneville were executives who had 
made contributions to a fund to fix up the US Missouri, the ship on which 
Japan surrendered in World War II.

Let's try and imagine the scene. They are all sitting there, partying and 
hanging out and talking about Pearl Harbor and the USS Missouri and then they 
spot this boat. And maybe somebody comments, "I bet it's one of those damn 
foreign trawlers, grabbing our fish." And someone, perhaps the captain, has a 
great idea. "Why not get real close to that ship and then perform a rapid 
ascent maybe 100 yards away? Break out of the water. Scare everyone on board 
to death."

And then, assuming the captain is not an actual madman, he miscalculated. 

***

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