Soviet submarine technology in the seventies and early
eighties continued to advance dramatically. Both missile and attack boats
attained a surprising degree of operational quietness, essential to effective
deployment on the world ocean, whereas America’s attack submarines, ghosting
about off the coasts of the Soviet Union, found themselves detected with
increasing frequency. Construction of major combatants continued. The Kremlin’s
decision in 1983–1984 to resume building heavy ships led to construction of the
sixty-five thousand–ton supercarrier Tbilsi. This ship (renamed Admiral
Kuznetsov) represented another quantum leap in Soviet naval technology. It
entered service in 1989 well ahead of U.S. naval intelligence estimates.
By the mid-eighties, strategic-missile submarines of the
vastly improved Delta class appeared, together with the first of the huge
Typhoons, near battleship-size undersea craft with no fewer than twenty
intercontinental ballistic-missile tubes. The Red Flag continued to find
friendly anchorages everywhere from Port Said to Cam Ranh Bay. Fainter hearts
in Washington, fixated on U.S.-Soviet détente, were intimidated. In 1978
President Carter and his people declined to send a carrier task force to the
western Indian Ocean in support of Somalia, which had just thrown out Soviet
advisers and closed down a strategic Soviet naval base adjacent to the Red Sea.
When nearby Soviet client Ethiopia threatened the Somalis with invasion, the
Carter administration decided that it “did not want to engage in ‘a bluffing
game’” with the Ethiopians that “would be perceived as a defeat for the United
States” if the Soviet fleet suddenly appeared in force to back their African
ally.
A few individuals in the U.S. naval intelligence community
suspected something sinister might be behind growing Soviet naval capabilities,
especially in undersea warfare. But not until early 1985, when a woman named
Barbara Walker reported to the FBI that her ex-husband, John, their son, John’s
brother, and a handful of other people had formed a Soviet spy ring, were
suspicions corroborated. Since the late sixties John Walker, former submariner,
watch officer at the U.S. Atlantic Fleet headquarters in Norfolk, and communication
expert, had been passing to the Russians information on U.S. submarine
technology, operating schedules, and communication lists that “had given
America its priceless edge” over the rapidly expanding Soviet Navy. When a
high-ranking KGB official defected in the summer of 1985, he told his American
debriefers that the Walker spy ring “was the most important espionage victory
in KGB history.” It soon transpired that Soviet naval technology had also been
immeasurably assisted by Norwegian and Japanese firms, including a Toshiba
subsidiary that had surreptitiously sold the Russians large computer-guided
milling machines that made smoother and quieter propeller blades.
Still, despite these intelligence setbacks, Gorshkov and his
sailors seemed poised to sustain the astonishing status they had won over the
past decade and a half. The momentum of massive construction continued
unabated. Yet within five years the Soviet fleet would begin a decline as swift
and remarkable as its rise, while the revolutionary country that sustained it
crashed in ruins.
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