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Did Our Silent Service Strike Back ?

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12/27~! SILENT SERVICE STRIKES BACK!

THE VEILED VICTORY OF 2017!

Published on Dec 27, 2017

The greatest Navy the world has ever known!!
 
 

 

 

Why was the USS Jimmy Carter flying the

Jolly Roger?

 
 
 
 

Somewhere in the depths of the Pacific Ocean, sometime in the last few weeks, the USS Jimmy Carter carried out an important mission for the nation. It was probably related to spying.

Here’s what we know. On Tuesday, a sharp eyed journalist, Ian Keddie, noted that the Seawolf-class attack submarine, USS Jimmy Carter, had returned to its Washington port while flying the Jolly Roger pirate flag. The Navy, whether by accident or by design, published the photo online.

The Jolly Roger’s significance is its celebration of a successful operation in face of the enemy. As an attack submarine, the on-paper primary mission of Jimmy Carter is finding and destroying enemy vessels. Yet since the end of the cold war, the Seawolf has been repurposed as an undersea intelligence gathering machine.

As Joseph Trevithick noted in a 2016 article for War is Boring, the USS Jimmy Carter received a presidential unit citation for an operation in 2013. That means it did something very important and very dangerous. We don’t know what that something was, but Trevithick convincingly argues that it was very likely related to intelligence gathering.

I strongly suspect the same is true of Carter’s most recent mission that earned the Jolly Roger. As my map below shows, there are numerous high-value target areas in reach of Carter’s home port. The red line leads to the Arctic, where Russian submarines like to hang around. The grey line leads to the Pacific Fleet headquarters of the Russian navy. The green line leads to waters off North Korea, and close to most of its missile launching sites. The purple line leads to China.

But what might the latest Jolly Roger effort have entailed?

A few things.

First, the Carter could have been employed to tap into undersea fiber-optic cables used for communications by adversary states like China, North Korea, and Russia. This is difficult work, like balancing an invisible needle at the bottom of an ocean haystack.

Alternatively, perhaps the Carter was gathering intelligence on the disposition and capabilities of Chinese, North Korean, or Russian military vessels and ports. This intelligence can be used to help plan future operations, and to ensure the U.S. is ready for any surprises those nations might be preparing. This, of course, is nothing new. As Sherry Sontag outlined in her excellent book, Blind Man’s Bluff, submarine-based espionage was a critical tool of U.S. intelligence for the duration of the Cold War. And as I noted last month, North Korea’s submarine capabilities are advancing. Perhaps the Carter was seeing just how far they’ve come?

Or seeing as it is designed to insert special operations forces, maybe the Carter was infiltrating or exfiltrating personnel onto or from foreign soil. Such capabilities extend a submarine’s utility to ground operations deep into enemy territory. That matters, because for all the power of spy satellites and cyber-espionage, there is a range of specific intelligence missions that necessitate boots on the ground. Sending a silent submarine a few miles off the coast and then having Navy SEALs swim ashore is sometimes less risky than infiltrating over land.

Ultimately, it’s impossible to say what the Jimmy Carter has been up to. Still, we are lucky her crew is on our side.

 


 

What did this US Navy submarine

accomplish? Flying the pirate flag raises

questions

 

Thomas Gibbons-Neff

September 14 2017

An image posted to a Pentagon media site and tweeted by Scottish journalist Ian Keddie, shows the USS Jimmy Carter, a Seawolf-class nuclear-powered submarine, returning to her home port in Washington on Tuesday flying the American flag alongside the unmistakable pirate skull and crossed bones, known as the Jolly Roger.

The 137-metre-long boat is one of three in its class and is specially modified to conduct some of America’s most covert underwater operations. That fact alone – as Keddie points out – makes the appearance of the black and white flag significant.

 

The USS Jimmy Carter. Photo: Wikicommons

The Jolly Roger’s presence on the conning tower of submarines goes back to 1914, at the beginning of World War I, when a British submarine, HMS E-9, commanded by Lieutenant Commander Max Horton sunk the German Battle Cruiser Hela, according to Richard Compton-Hall in his book Submarines at War 1939-45. Upon his return to port, Horton struck up the iconic pirate flag, signalling he had successfully sunk an enemy warship.

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Ali Kefford, in an article for the Mirror, said that Horton’s decision to fly the black flag stemmed from insults made roughly 14 years before by British Adm. Arthur Wilson, the then-Controller of the Navy. Wilson said submarines were an “underhand form of attack” and that their crews would be “treated as pirates in wartime.”

Wilson went on to say that the undersea boats were “weapons of a weaker power and can be no possible use to the Mistress of the Seas.”

For the British subs operating out of Malta during World War II, flags were supplied by Carmela Cassar, a business executive who maintained a lace shop supplied by the city’s surrounding convents, according to Compton-Hall. Her flags were 30 by 24 cms and “beautifully embroidered.”

 

When the submarines failed to return, her flags were sometimes all that remained.

The USS Jimmy Carter flying the Jolly Roger flag. Photo: Twitter/@IanJKeddie

While the tradition stayed mostly with the British submarine fleets, Compton-Hall writes that Allied submarines also occasionally flew the Jolly Roger.

After World War II, the flag popped up sporadically, appearing on the Churchill-class HMS Conqueror upon its return from the Falkland Islands in 1982. During its deployment, the Conqueror sank an Argentine cruiser with two torpedoes.

So why did it a US submarine return home flying an undoubtedly British tradition? Much is unclear. US submarine activity is rarely discussed by the Pentagon, and the vessels operate in almost complete secrecy.

While it’s unlikely the Carter torpedoed an enemy ship or fired one of its cruise missiles, the flag could represent the success of a more covert mission. The Carter can insert commandos, deploy unmanned submersible vehicles, and likely splice undersea cables all while using specially outfitted thrusters to almost hover off the seafloor.

One of the Seawolf class’s namesake participated in the Cold War-era operation Ivy Bells that saw US submarines tapping Soviet underwater communication lines.

Washington Post

 


 

The Buzz

USS Jimmy Carter: The Most Secret

Nuclear Powered Spy Submarine on Earth

 

December 27, 2017

While General Dynamics Electric Boat was still putting the submarine together in 2001, NSA director Lt. Gen. Michael Hayden laughed off claims about breaking into undersea cables in an interview with the Wall Street Journal. “I’m not going to sit here and dissuade you from your views,” Hayden said, before refusing to comment on Jimmy Carter‘s mission. Two years later, the Journal again reported that the submarine’s role suggested an undersea spook, citing “people knowledgeable about it.” After more than a decade of apparently very active service, little else has slipped out about the ship or her operations.

On January 20, 2013, the Seawolf-class attack submarine USS Jimmy Carter left her home port in Bangor, Washington. Less than two months later, the submarine appeared at Pearl Harbor in Hawaii for repairs.

It was all quite mysterious. During her time at sea, we don’t know where Jimmy Carter was or what her crew of nearly 150 were precisely doing. The Seawolf class is one of the most secretive weapons in America’s arsenal, and information about the Navy’s “Silent Service” is difficult to discover. . . by design.

(This first appeared in 2016.) 

We know Jimmy Carter was on some kind of mission, which the ship’s official annual history vaguely referred to as Mission 7. “Performed under a wide range of adverse and extremely stressful conditions without external support, this deployment continued USS Jimmy Carter‘s tradition of excellence in pursuit of vital national security goals,” the history stated.

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In this vessel’s official chronology, the mission warrants as much mention as a picnic in July and the crew’s Halloween party three months later. But Mission 7 was enough to earn the sailors a Presidential Unit Citation, which rewards “extraordinary heroism in action against an armed enemy,” according to an official Navy description.

As the last of the Seawolf-class attack submarines, Jimmy Carter is unique. During her construction, the Pentagon added a special one-hundred-foot-long, 2,500-ton module called the Multi-Mission Platform. By the sailing branch’s own admission, this space can accommodate undersea drones, SEALs and much more.

More importantly, the hourglass-shaped section might allow specially trained teams to find and tap undersea communications lines and plant listening devices on the ocean floor. It’s more than likely that the submarine is one of the Pentagon’s most stealthy spies.

Another clue is the Presidential Unit Citation for Mission 7. For the sailing branch, this is akin to giving the boat itself a Navy Cross, the service’s second highest award. The criteria makes it clear that the mission must have been “extremely difficult and hazardous.” But the Secretary of the Navy’s citation for the sub’s 2013 performance is equally obtuse.

Along with sailors from the even more obscure Detachment Undersea Research and Development, Jimmy Carter “successfully completed extremely demanding and arduous independent submarine operations of vital importance to the national security of the United States,” is how the memo described the operation. Both units “overcame numerous obstacles to safely execute these demanding and complex tasks without incident.”

Two pictures attached to the report show the ship’s captain, Cmdr. Brian Elkowitz, and other officers holding the framed citation and associated pennant. In both cases, Navy censors blacked out one individual’s face, ostensibly for privacy reasons.

War Is Boring obtained these documents through the Freedom of Information Act. Every year, all ships, subs, squadrons of aircraft and commands on land are required to turn a historical report over to the Naval History and Heritage Command in Washington, D.C. But there’s no requirement that the narrative go into any great or specific detail. And Jimmy Carter‘s history is more a record of the secrecy surrounding the ship’s than her actual activities.

While already guarded about submarines in general, the Navy is especially tight-lipped about the Seawolf-class boats. Originally intended to be the most advanced undersea attackers, Washington slashed the program after the Cold War and the threat of equally high-tech Soviet submarines appeared to evaporate.

Instead of a planned fleet of nearly 30 ships, the Pentagon bought just three for more than $3 billion each. At more than 350 feet long and with a submerged displacement of more than 9,100 tons, the Seawolf class is the most expensive attack submarine ever built and the second most expensive undersea vessel of any type.

The sailing branch eventually grouped together the USS SeawolfConnecticut and Jimmy Carter as the core of Submarine Development Squadron Five. The unit’s spartan Web site states it is responsible for testing new undersea listening gear and remote-controlled submersibles, either tethered to a larger sub or able to operate on their own.

The group is also in charge developing new tactics for fighting in the Arctic, a region where submarines can easily hide from their opponents. Despite their current mission, each ship still has eight torpedo tubes, which can also fire Harpoon anti-ship and Tomahawk cruise missiles.

The unit makes no mention of intelligence gathering. But while the name implies a solely experimental function, the sailing branch routinely uses these types of monikers for special or elite groups. The near legendary terrorist-hunting SEAL Team Six is officially called the Naval Special Warfare Development Group. The service describes the spy ships it runs together with the U.S. Air Force as “missile range instrumentation ships.” The squadron responsible for flying around the president and his staff is now simply called Marine Helicopter Squadron One, but still uses the acronym HMX-1—a nod to its “experimental” origins.

Further lending credibility to Jimmy Carter‘s real spying mission, the Navy retired the equally shadowy USS Parche just four months before putting the new submarine into action. The sailing branch says Parche is the most decorated ship ever, with nine Presidential Unit Citations among other awards.

Completed in 1974 as a Sturgeon-class attack sub, the Pentagon specifically upgraded the Parche to break into Soviet communications lines. Between 1978 and 1979, the submarine reportedly tapped into cables in the Sea of Okhotsk north of Japan as part of a mission dubbed Operation Ivy Bells.

“The Navy, with strong input from the NSA, was first sending Parche to Okhotsk to plant a second recording pod. . . to greatly increase capacity at the tap site,” Sherry Sontag and Christopher Drew wrote in Blind Man’s Bluff: The Untold Story of American Submarine Espionage“She was being sent, in part, to prove herself before anyone dared to send her to that other, far more dangerous sea.

Success at Okhotsk paved the way for missions in the far more crowded—and therefore dangerous—Barents Sea. To hide from Moscow’s sub-hunters, Parche hid under the cover of the Arctic ice as she sneaked into congested shipping lanes.

Nearly a decade later, the Navy sent Parche off for another overhaul. In 1991, the sailing branch sent the newly refurbished sub to join Submarine Development Squadron Five.

Though their book was published before the submarine was finished, Sontag and Drew explained that Jimmy Carter‘s expanded mid-section was to make room for the same gear Parche had carried into Soviet waters. No doubt the Navy and its partners at the NSA have made improvements since then.

While General Dynamics Electric Boat was still putting the submarine together in 2001, NSA director Lt. Gen. Michael Hayden laughed off claims about breaking into undersea cables in an interview with the Wall Street Journal. “I’m not going to sit here and dissuade you from your views,” Hayden said, before refusing to comment on Jimmy Carter‘s mission.

Two years later, the Journal again reported that the submarine’s role suggested an undersea spook, citing “people knowledgeable about it.” After more than a decade of apparently very active service, little else has slipped out about the ship or her operations.

We could easily have to wait another decade or more for there to be any real confirmation—likely from a book like Sontag and Drew’s rather than the Navy—about Jimmy Carter‘s unique history and details about Mission 7.

Joseph Trevithick is a reporter for War is Boring, where this article first appeared.

 

 

 

 

Note:  
I do not necessarily endorse any products or sevices mentioned in these videos or subsequent written material by the original authors. I do not intend to, nor do I, derive any profits or income from posting this material. I may not agree with everything presented in this material , however I may find that there is sufficient valuable information to justify bringing it forward for you to sift through inorder to expand your awarness and to trigger your desire to dig deeper to learn more.  I present this material for informational, research and educational purposes only.  It is presented for your edification, you filter as you see fit for your perspective. May God’s blessings and wisdom be upon you.

 
 
 



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