From:

http://www.worldnetdaily.com/bluesky_smith/20000823_xcsof_the_kursks.shtml

K-141 is down.  The Kursk, an Antyey type 949A nuclear attack
submarine, was lost in the Barents Sea.  The Kursk, one of eight
active Oscar II class submarines, was the pride of the Russian
Navy and the leading edge of the new Northern Fleet.

Commissioned in 1995, the Kursk was the Northern Fleet's most
powerful weapon.  It made a high-profile voyage to the
Mediterranean in September 1999 and was due to return later this
year as part of a planned Russian nuclear task group deployment
to the Middle East.  The August Russian naval exercise in the
Barents Sea was designed to provide the west with good reason to
remember the Kursk.

Reports now show the exercise was intended to showcase the Kursk
as she performing her two primary roles, killing American
carriers and submarines.  The Russian Navy exercise also drew a
small crowd of interested observers in the form of two U.S. Los
Angeles attack submarines, loitering in the shallow polar sea
over 50 miles from the Kursk.

That fateful morning the Kursk reportedly completed a successful
firing of her main killer, the Chelomey Granit missile, NATO code
named SS-N-19 Shipwreck.  The Kursk and her sister boats carry 24
Shipwreck missiles.  The missiles are stored on each side of the
huge submarine in banks of 12, hidden between the layers of the
boat's thick twin hull skin.  The Shipwreck missiles are stored
in launching tubes external to the inner pressure hull were the
118 crewmembers worked and lived.

The Shipwreck missile fired by the Kursk that Saturday morning
contained a 1,600-pound conventional warhead.  It reportedly
scored a direct hit against a Russian hulk target over 200 miles
away.  The Shipwreck is intended to strike U.S. carriers but can
also be targeted against U.S. cities.  Russian Naval sources
indicate that the Shipwreck missile can be armed with an H-bomb
warhead equal to one half million tons of TNT, more than enough
to flatten Los Angeles or New York City.

That fateful August Saturday, in the dim afternoon light of the
arctic summer sun, the Kursk began her last performance, the
simulated destruction of a U.S. submarine using the 100-RU Veder
missile.  The Veder, NATO code named SS-N-16A Stallion, is a
rocket-boosted torpedo.  The Stallion is launched from the huge
26 diameter torpedo tubes installed on each Oscar II class
submarine.

The Stallion is so secret that no picture of the weapon has ever
been published.  The Stallion is fired from the submarine's
torpedo tube but flies like a missile.  The Stallion rocket
booster ignites underwater once the weapon is clear of the
submarine, sending the missile to the surface.  The missile then
flies to the target under rocket power where it finally ejects a
lightweight torpedo at supersonic speed.

The mini-torpedo then uses its own little parachute, slowing to
drop gently into the water directly above the target.  The
mini-torpedo then homes in on the target submarine for the final
kill.  The conventional Stallion fired by the Kursk was armed
with a mini-220 pound explosive warhead.  Janes Defense reports
that the missile can also be armed with a mini-nuclear warhead
equal to 200,000 tons of TNT.

According to Janes Defense, the last moments of the Kursk were
recorded as she prepared to fire the Stallion.  Seismologists in
Norway told Janes that a monitoring station registered two
explosions at the time the Kursk sank.  The first registered 1.5
on the Richter scale.  A second, stronger explosion measuring 3.5
on the Richter scale equivalent to 1-2 tons of TNT was recorded
just over 2 minutes later.

The Stallion rocket motor may have ignited inside the sealed
torpedo tube just before firing.  The Stallion may have jammed
itself inside the torpedo tube as it was fired.  In any event,
the underwater rocket appears to have ignited inside the inner
manned pressure hull.

The force of the Stallion rocket motor would have twisted the
huge torpedo tube, melting through the metal walls within
seconds.  Just enough time for alarms to sound and men to die.
Then the small 220-pound warhead exploded, blowing a gaping hole
in the twisted skin of the attack submarine.  The submarine
immediately fell forward as the icy water rushed to fill the
forward weapon bay.

The last moments of the Kursk and most of her crew were filled
with fire and ice as the vessel plunged into the cold arctic
depths.  The rush of cold water did not extinguish the fire since
the Stallion rocket booster was designed to burn without air.
The exploding warhead would have sent huge flaming chunks of the
rocket booster into the forward weapon control room.

The force of the 14,000-ton submarine striking the bottom on the
damaged torpedo bay was the final blow, detonating one of the
many weapons inside upon impact.  The force of the explosion
inside the twin hull submarine ripped the starboard side open
back to the sail.  The manned areas forward of the reactor
compartment, including the control room and living quarters,
rapidly flooded, leaving no time for personnel in those
compartments to escape.

This may not be the end of the story.  There are now suggestions
that the west should help Russia raise the Kursk.  Yet, despite
being broke, Russia continues to build and deploy the Oscar II
submarine force.  There are seven active Oscar II class boats.
The latest, K-530 the Belgorod, is still under construction at
the Severodvinsk Shipyard.  Budget cutbacks have slowed progress
on the boat to a standstill but construction continues.  There
are rumors that China is interested in buying K-530.

The Kursk sailed the Mediterranean in late 1999 as a show of flag
to Russian allies such as Syria, Libya and Serbia.  At the same
time the Kursk was touring the Mediterranean in 1999, a Pacific
Fleet Oscar II submarine was quietly cruising the western
seaboard of the United States, within missile range of
California, Oregon and Washington.

While we all mourn the passing of K-141 and her crew, we should
also reflect on exactly what her mission was.


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             Kadosh, Kadosh, Kadosh, YHVH, TZEVAOT

  FROM THE DESK OF:                    <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
                      *Mike Spitzer*     <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
                         ~~~~~~~~          <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

   The Best Way To Destroy Enemies Is To Change Them To Friends
       Shalom, A Salaam Aleikum, and to all, A Good Day.
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