The Phnom Penh Post

Nuclear sub sailors fired over prostitute, drugs

- Cleve Wootson Jr

THE British sailors who spend their lives in submarines safeguardi­ng the nation’s nuclear missiles are, without hyperbole, contenders for the most important job in the world.

The gravity of their mission is even evident in the names the British Royal Navy gave to the nuclear missileequ­ipped submarines that glide beneath the globe’s oceans: the Vanguard, the Victorious, the Vengeance, the Vigilant.

But several sailors on the HMS Vigilant have recently been dismissed after their mission devolved into more of a drug-fuelled booze cruise – transgress­ions that happened last month as the sub was docked in the United States to pick up nuclear weapons. According to the Associated Press, at least nine sailors tested positive for cocaine following “drug-fueled parties”. The Telegraph reported that one man had sex with a prostitute in a swimming pool.

“We do not tolerate drugs misuse by service personnel. Those found to have fallen short of our high standards face being discharged from service,” a Royal Navy spokesman said.

But, as British media pointed out, the problems aboard the Vigilant run deeper.

Aboard every Vanguard-class sub is a safe that only the commander and the executive officer can access. Inside is a “letter of last resort” – instructio­ns from the prime minister that detail what the crew should do if the United Kingdom is attacked with nuclear weapons.

Both command officers of the Vigilant have been embroiled in controvers­y because of sexual affairs with Vigilant

subordinat­es. The Navy has a strict “no touching” rule, according to the Evening Standard.

According to the Sun, Commander Stuart Armstrong, the sub’s captain, has been relieved of duty amid the investigat­ion, which includes a photo that surfaced of the woman he was allegedly intimate with wearing the captain’s uniform. The No2, Lieutenant Commander Michael Seal, also faces disciplina­ry action. Other members of the crew have threatened to resign over the widespread breaches in Royal Navy rules.

The Daily Mail did some math on what the recent developmen­ts mean for one of the free world’s strongest deterrents to nuclear war: “Around 10 percent of HMS Vigilant’s 168-strong crew have either been kicked out, quit, are under investigat­ion or have been removed in what is believed to be one of the biggest sex and drugs scandals to hit the Navy.”

The nuclear sub problems come as tensions around the world’s most dangerous weapons are heightenin­g.

Speaking in Seoul on Saturday, US Defense Secretary Jim Mattis said the threat of a nuclear attack by North Korea is growing.

“North Korea has accelerate­d the threat that it poses to its neighbours and the world through its illegal and unnec- essary missile and nuclear weapons programmes,” Mattis said, adding that he could not imagine a“condition under which the United States would accept North Korea as a nuclear power”.

And there have been reports that the United States and the world’s other nuclear powers are dusting off ColdWar deterrent protocols.

A few weeks ago, there were repeatedly denied reports that US Strategic Command – the government agency that maintains the nation’s nuclear weapons – has placed its B-52 bombers on 24-hour alert, a state of readiness not seen since 1991.

Crews at Louisiana’s Barksdale Air Force Base are conducting renovation­s near long-vacant “alert pads”, where during the Cold War aircraft capable of carrying nuclear weapons once sat ready on a continual basis. So-called strip alerts were discontinu­ed after the Soviet Union’s collapse.

The activity comes amid an escalating internatio­nal war of words, with potentiall­y catastroph­ic consequenc­es.

Although Donald Trump pledged to tame North Korea while he was running for president, the rogue state has not budged from its stated goal of becoming a full-fledged nuclear power equipped with weapons that can reach the US mainland.

Kim, the North Korean president, has said his nation needs nuclear weapons to stop the United States from asphyxiati­ng its economy and overturnin­g its government.

Coincident­ally, the scandal aboard the HMS Vigilant was happening at about the same time as Kim and Trump were sparring in the media. The sex scandals surfaced as the sub was docked in Kings Bay, Georgia, according to the Daily Mail.

The sailors were back and forth between the sub and the hotel, while the vessel was docked, and held several parties that raged out of control.

Rear Admiral Chris Parry, former commander of a Type 42 destroyer, told the Daily Mail: “This is not just a submarine, it is one of our deterrence submarines. It is absolutely disgracefu­l. People in the Navy should remember playing for our country on an internatio­nal level is a great privilege. It is a question of putting service before self.”

 ?? MICHAEL STOREY/WIKICOMMON­S ?? HMS in the Clyde area of Scotland in 1996.
MICHAEL STOREY/WIKICOMMON­S HMS in the Clyde area of Scotland in 1996.

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