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  2. Submarine incident off Kola Peninsula - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Submarine_incident_off...

    The submarine Incident off Kola Peninsula was a collision between the US Navy nuclear attack submarine USS Grayling and the Russian Navy nuclear ballistic missile submarine K-407 Novomoskovsk some 150 km (90 mi) north of the Russian naval base of Severomorsk, on 20 March 1993.

  3. Decommissioning of Russian nuclear-powered vessels - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Decommissioning_of_Russian...

    The decommissioning of Russian nuclear-powered vessels is an issue of major concern to the United States and to Scandinavian countries [1] near Russia.From 1950 to 2003, the Soviet Union and its major successor state, Russia, constructed the largest nuclear-powered navy in the world, [2] with more ships than all other navies combined: [3] 248 submarines (91 attack submarines, 62 cruise missile ...

  4. List of lost Russian or Soviet submarines - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_lost_Russian_or...

    These Russian or Soviet submarines either suffered extensive crew casualties or were entirely lost to enemy action or to "storm or perils of the sea." A dagger (†) indicates that the boat was lost. A dagger (†) indicates that the boat was lost.

  5. Komsomolets Nuclear Submarine Memorial Society - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Komsomolets_Nuclear...

    The Komsomolets Nuclear Submarine Memorial Society (Russian: Общество памяти атомной подводной лодки ВМФ Комсомолец), literally Society Remembering Atomic Underwater Boat VMF Komsomolets is a charitable non-profit organization providing assistance to the families of Soviet and Russian submariners lost at sea.

  6. Kursk submarine disaster - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kursk_submarine_disaster

    Kursk was a Project 949A Antey (Oscar II-class) submarine, twice the length of a 747 jumbo jet, and one of the largest submarines in the Russian Navy.. On the morning of 12 August 2000, Kursk was in the Barents Sea, participating in the "Summer-X" exercise, the first large-scale naval exercise planned by the Russian Navy in more than a decade, and also its first since the dissolution of the ...

  7. Olenya Bay - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Olenya_Bay

    Map of the Northern Fleet bases. A Russian naval, formerly Soviet, base is located on the shores of the bay. [1] The base supports GUGI (Russian: Главное управление глубоководных исследований (ГУГИ), transcribed as Glavnoye upravlenie glubokovodnikh issledovanii or GUGI) with its objective to operate submarines that are able to dive deep into the ...

  8. Russian submarine Murmansk (K-206) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Russian_submarine_Murmansk...

    K-206 Murmansk was a nuclear-powered Oscar-class submarine of the Soviet Navy, and later the Russian Navy. [1] [2] [6] She was the second of the two Oscar I (the Soviet classification was Project 949 Granit) vessels constructed, the other being K-525. A further 11 submarines of an improved class, Project 949A (Antey) (called Oscar II by NATO ...

  9. List of sunken nuclear submarines - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_sunken_nuclear...

    The Soviet submarine K-129 carried nuclear ballistic missiles when it was lost with all hands, but as it was a diesel-electric submarine, it is not included in the list. (K-129 was partly recovered by the U.S. Project Azorian.) The two USN submarines belonged to Submarine Force Atlantic, in the U.S. Atlantic Fleet.