The Jerusalem Post

Rescuers find debris thought to be from Indonesian submarine

Navy says depth of wreck will present many difficulti­es to salvage vessel

- • By SULTAN ANSHORI and STANLEY WIDIANTO

DENPASAR, Indonesia (Reuters) – Search teams have recovered debris believed to be from an Indonesian submarine missing for days in the Bali Sea, defense officials said on Saturday, as hopes dwindled for the 53 crew who were expected to have run out of oxygen in the early hours.

Indonesian Navy Chief of Staff Yudo Margono said the exact location of the 44-year-old submarine was unknown but its presence had been detected and the search would continue.

The KRI Nanggala-402 lost contact on Wednesday as it prepared for a torpedo drill.

“We are still carrying out the search... the depth of the sea we have detected is at 850 meters, which is very tricky and presents many difficulti­es,” he told reporters, adding that he expected the dive-in depth taken by the vessel had led to cracks.

“We have found debris floating around the submarine’s last location,” Yudo said.

Rescuers have sent more than a dozen search helicopter­s and ships to the area where contact was lost, with the United States, Australia, Singapore, Malaysia, and India providing assistance.

According to Yudo, the submarine had only enough air to last until around dawn on Saturday if it had lost power, but that this could be stretched for five days if the vessel had retained electricit­y.

But even that assessment on oxygen was optimistic, according to experts, because it assumed the submarine had not been crushed by water pressure.

“Now it’ll be up to the investigat­ors to establish the chronology of events and determine the cause. At the same time, plans would have been made to assess the feasibilit­y of retrieving the sub at such extreme depth,” said Collin Koh, research fellow at the Institute of Defence and Strategic Studies.

Indonesia’s navy has said it is investigat­ing whether the submarine lost power during a dive and could not carry out emergency procedures as it descended to a depth of 600-700 meters, well beyond its survivable limits.

Indonesian navy R.-Adm. (ret.) Frans Wuwung, who had previously headed the submarine’s machinery room, told MetroTV that he believed a blackout was likely and could have caused the crew to panic.

“A blackout means the vessel’s equipment cannot be moved,” said the admiral, who told reporters he had experience­d a blackout on the same submarine in 1985.

One of those on board was the commander of the Indonesian submarine fleet, Harry Setiawan.

Indonesia operates five submarines — two German-built Type 209s including Nanggala and three newer South Korean vessels.

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