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Huges Glomar Explorer
Posted on March 25th, 2009 3 comments
My grandfather worked on the Glomar Explorer, but I am not sure exactly what he did. I wonder if he had anything to do with Project Jennifer. I wish I could ask him. Perhaps my Grandma Beulah (still living) knows.Michael White Films made a documentary on Project Jennifer named, Azorian: The Raising of the K-129. According to page two of Michael White’s film biography, the film will be introduced Worldwide for the first time at MIPdoc, Cannes by its distributor PBS International in late March 2009.
3 responses to “Huges Glomar Explorer”
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Nicole March 28th, 2009 at 15:48
What a piece of history you’ve come from, I appreciate your Grandfathers’ (both of them) honorable service and participation in the freedom that I and his Great Grandchilren enjoy.
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PBS International lists Azorian: The Raising of the K-129 as a “new release”.
The following text was taken from the fact sheet.For over 6 years, the wreck of the Soviet submarine “K-129″ had lain in the dark abyss and shifting silt of the North Pacific. From its loss in March 1968 until its exposure in March 1974, the world was unaware that the Russians had lost a strategic missile submarine with its three one megaton thermo-nuclear warheads, and two nuclear-tipped torpedoes. The Soviet Government was equally unaware that the U.S. had located and photographed the wreck and was preparing the largest marine salvage operation in history to raise the K-129.
Project AZORIAN, which was eventually known inaccurately to the general public as “Project Jennifer,” was the CIA’s audacious attempt to recover the K-129 wreck using a specially designed salvage vessel, named the Hughes Glomar Explorer.
Representing the most modern missile-carrying submarine then in the Soviet inventory, the K-129 offered the U.S. a cornucopia of unique intelligence targets, ranging from nuclear weapons to cryptographic systems and other equipment. But retrieving it required $1.8 billion (in today’s dollars) and more than six years to design and build the equipment that could do the impossible.
To this day, Project AZORIAN is the deepest salvage operation ever attempted and was so far beyond the cutting edge of 1970’s technology that the Soviets considered it to be impossible. However a CIA team, drawn from America’s elite marine and aero-space companies designed a unique system to solve an incredible problem: how do you lift to the surface, a damaged 1,700 ton segment of submarine from a depth of 3 miles while being watch by a paranoid and highly sensitive Soviet intelligence apparatus?
A brief flurry of press attention in 1975 resulted in a special presidential gag order being put in place by then President Gerald Ford. This security provision has effectively blocked normal declassification systems and Freedom of Information Act requests to this day.
Finally, however, some mission members and senior engineers of Project AZORIAN have stepped out of the shadows to help tell this dramatic story in their own words. Utilizing extensive, accurate CGI reconstruction of the salvage attempt, plus never before seen film of the actual recovery itself, and based upon contemporaneous documents, AZORIAN: The Raising of K-129 provides the first factual and documented account of this unique event ever made available outside the confines of U.S. Intelligence agencies.
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The Glomar Explorer is in the news again.
The Associated Press: Gone fishing: Secret hunt for a sunken Soviet sub
National Security Archive on Project Azorian
CIA article
AFP: CIA opens files on project to raise Soviet sub
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