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By Christopher Stevens for the Daily Mail. Packed into a small, isolated compartment at the back of the Kursk nuclear submarine, 23 Russian sailors sat huddled in the dark and cold β and waited to die. The front of their vessel had just exploded, ending the lives of 95 of their fellow crew. Now, trapped m below the surface, lying on the sea bed beyond the reach of rescuers, the sailors waited as freezing waters filled their steel tomb.
Though almost 20 years have passed since the Kursk catastrophe gripped the world in August , British submariner Commodore David Russell still asks himself if he could have saved those benighted men. In those fateful few days, while the trapped seamen clung to life on the seabed and after much obstruction from the Russians, he and his team of Royal Navy and Norwegian experts had flown urgently to the Barents Sea off Russia's northern coast.
Though many will remember the tragedy, few know that this singular British officer led a desperate effort to save the crew. In fact, they were about to begin a complex and highly classified operation to free the desperate sailors when he learned that they were too late. The stricken Kursk had flooded. The entire crew of was dead. David Russell's doomed efforts are now the basis of a major film opening this week.
David Russell's right doomed efforts are now the basis of a major film opening this week. The Kursk was the pride of Russia's Northern Fleet. The ft vessel weighed nearly 20, tons and, with its two nuclear-powered reactors, could travel at 33 knots without the need to surface. Its 24 missiles could be armed with thermonuclear warheads 30 times more powerful than the bomb that destroyed Hiroshima. But the missiles and torpedoes could also be fitted with conventional high-explosive warheads, and it was these that contributed to the tragedy.
The Kursk was taking part in naval exercises, Russia's first in more than a decade. In a display intended to demonstrate Moscow's ability to sink enemy aircraft carriers, the Kursk's mission was to approach a target undetected and fire two torpedoes. But Russia's navy was facing savage cutbacks and β in a chilling echo of the explosion at Chernobyl β these probably led to the disaster. The sub's torpedoes were partly propelled by hydrogen peroxide, which can cause an explosion if it leaks.