Scottish Daily Mail

The men on the sub compiled what they called a ‘crush depth rape list’. They told me: ‘You are No.6 so if anything goes wrong you better run’

From the age of 12, Sophie dreamed of a career in the Navy. But the reality as a Faslane-based submariner was a nightmare that drove her to the brink...

- By Inderdeep Bains

SOPHIE Brook can remember the precise moment she decided she would join the Royal Navy. Aged just 12, on a day out during a family holiday in Devon, she watched in awe as two military helicopter­s performed a majestic bow salute – when the aircraft simultaneo­usly dip their noses mid-air.

Below were those to whom they were paying such striking tribute: a class passing out from the Royal Naval College in Dartmouth.

‘My dad, who had been in the Navy as a pilot flying Gazelle helicopter­s, explained what was going on, and that was it for me,’ Sophie recalls.

‘From then on – having seen the impressive nature of it all – I never really looked back.’

Sophie’s dream was realised. In 2011, aged 18, and with an A and three B grades at A-level in her back pocket, she turned down an offer to study economics at the prestigiou­s London School of Economics for a military career, first joining the Navy and then the Submarine Service three years later.

She was sure she was embarking on an exciting career that would fulfil all her expectatio­ns.

Instead, she claims she was abused, both physically and mentally. Called a ‘c***’, at times on an hourly basis, she was often punched and hit by one male colleague, and subjected to vicious sexual harassment by others.

One senior officer delighted in inserting his genitals into her pocket. Another exposed himself to her, and another forcibly kissed her. Devastatin­gly, she discovered she was number six on a so-called ‘crush depth rape list’, in which male submariner­s ranked female colleagues in the order they should be raped in the case of a catastroph­ic event at sea.

So sustained was Sophie’s alleged mistreatme­nt – which usually took place in the claustroph­obic enclosure of a submarine, from which there was no escape – that she began to self-harm and became suicidal. And so extreme was the abuse that she and other female personnel would allegedly attempt to break their own limbs without success to avoid going on patrol.

Sophie was one of the first women to join the fleet, made history as the first female warfare officer and was even tipped to become the first female captain of a submarine. Today, the 30-year-old former lieutenant still bears the mental scars of her treatment.

‘It was so close to being good. I was nearly the first female commander of a submarine in the world. I was the first female to have charge of a dived sub in the world. But from day one I had no support.’

When Sophie volunteere­d, the Ministry of Defence was actively recruiting women to join the Submarine Service, having scrapped its long-standing ban on female officers.

Yet she says it was clear from the start that she was not welcome. More than this, the male leadership on board was, she claims, ‘toxic’.

‘When you’re on patrol, senior officers are God. There’s no ringing home and complainin­g. You can’t report them.

‘You can’t say I’m not happy with someone’s behaviour. You can’t send an email. For that time they are God to you. They control whether you sleep, eat, they control everything. They would use that as a tactic of bullying. There was a toxic leadership.’

Such power, it seems, went to the heads of some personnel.

On one of her earliest patrols, Sophie was one of three women in a crew of 365, she claims she was confronted by an ‘aggressive’ officer who threw a clipboard at her in a fit of rage.

‘He would swear, including calling me a c***, as would other senior personnel. On an hourly basis I could be called a c***. But I was determined not to give up.’

Indeed, Sophie would need all her strength for what lay ahead. While she performed the crucial task of manning the sub’s periscope, she was physically manhandled and assaulted. ‘[The senior

‘One of three women in a crew of 365’

‘I was taught my lesson with a punch’

officers] would try to get you to take your eyes off the periscope, which isn’t allowed. If you did, you then got a punch to the kidney. They would also insert [their genitals] into your pocket.

‘If you then took your eyes off [the periscope], you would get punched.

‘The first time I said “What are you doing?” and I was taught my lesson with a punch.’

Those male colleagues – her senior officers – would, she claims, lick her ears and blow on her neck. But there was no recourse to HR or any union, as Sophie says today: ‘We were on a deterrent patrol [which can last for months] and you don’t get off unless you are dead. One way or another I had to cope with another 100 days with these people.

‘Given it was senior officers doing it, there was no point in trying to do anything. I had no choice. I remember coming back from that patrol and getting off at Faslane, on the Clyde, seeing my parents – and I just cried. They asked me what was happening and I couldn’t tell them.’

One older officer, claims Sophie, continuall­y harassed her. She recounts one incident which took place on a submarine during her twenties. While she was off duty, he would push 50p coins through a vent – dubbed the ‘glory hole’ – near her bed.

‘He would say “That’s for a blow job”. Sometimes he would put naked pictures of models from lads’ magazines and push them through it as well. ‘It was a constant campaign of sexual bullying. It wasn’t because he wanted to have sex with me, he wanted to humiliate me.

‘He would come up behind you and pretend to have sex with you. There would be anything between five and ten people present and he would hang off a bar [inside the submarine] behind you while making humping motions.’

Sophie was so disturbed that when she gained her coveted Dolphins in October 2014 – the prestigiou­s insignia awarded to qualified submariner­s – she couldn’t bring herself to put them on. ‘When I qualified, I walked into my cabin and threw them on the floor. I didn’t put them on for weeks.’

The most basic of requests became an opportunit­y to sexually harass her, she says – such as when she was subjected to lewd comments from one officer after she asked to be excused from a wardroom full of men to attend a medical appointmen­t.

‘He said “If it’s for a cervical examinatio­n we can just do that on the wardroom table for you and we can all have a go”.

‘I just walked out. I felt completely humiliated,’ says Sophie, emotional at the memory. As for the horrendous ‘crush depth rape list’, Sophie – along with two other whistleblo­wers, who previously served in the Navy and corroborat­e her story – reports it was common across the entire service. It has since become the subject of an MoD investigat­ion.

‘There is [a list] for men and one for women, but you feel a lot more vulnerable when you are one of a handful women among hundreds of men.

‘It is something they would agree among themselves. They would say [to me] “You are number six… so if anything goes wrong, you better run”.’

Sophie, who today lives in West Sussex and works in her family’s car dealership business, also recounts her experience­s at the Navy’s traditiona­l Trafalgar night dinner attended by 200 people at Faslane. There, one lieutenant shouted lewd comments at her – including ‘You love c***’ – and the other five women present.

‘It is the biggest social night of the year. There are only officers there, ranging from admiral to midshipman – so the very senior to the very bottom. And not one said anything.’ On one occasion aboard

‘Trapped with them for 100 days’

HMS Vigilant, which was embroiled in a sex and drugs scandal in 2017 when nine members, including the second-in-command, were dismissed, Sophie says she returned to her cabin to find a married colleague exposing himself on her bed. On another submarine in 2019, Sophie, then 27, claims she was disturbed from her sleep by a large-set senior officer climbing on to her bed. She woke to find him kissing her. Stunned, she told him to get off.

Eventually, she says she went to a superior, adding: ‘I was on the verge of tears. I said I just need to tell someone.’ That superior, she says, discourage­d her from reporting it. ‘He said, “we can do something about it. But you need to understand if we report this, he will be removed from the boat, and this will generate press interest”.

‘I just thought I don’t want to be the centre of any scandal.’

It’s a decision she bitterly regrets to this day. ‘After that, I didn’t want to return to my cabin, I spent the next 18 hours on watch on the bridge.

‘I remember it vividly. It was raining. It sounds stupid but I could just stand there and cry and no one could tell.

‘But I was crying and crying… There was nowhere to go.

‘I was just ashamed that it was happening and that the drama was surroundin­g me. After all, I was the one that was pushing to show that women could work harmonious­ly alongside men.’ She says the reality, however, is that the women who stood up for themselves or reported incidents were dubbed ‘dangerous girls’. They were then ostracised, making it impossible to complete their training. ‘In the control area, they had a “chick of the day” – a naked picture of a women that would change at midnight to signify another day done on patrol. ‘One woman formally complained and it was taken down but she was then put on a Basic Submarine Qualificat­ion ban – so no one could help her in her training. ‘That is what would have happened to me [if I complained]. I would have been frozen out.’ Sophie and the two other whistleblo­wers all say female submariner­s essentiall­y had a ‘target on their backs’ and were routinely pestered for sex by their colleagues. ‘The men were like vultures whenever a new female would come in. No one – right up to the highest ranks in the military – respected the women,’ says Sophie. It’s perhaps unsurprisi­ng that her mental health suffered. She resorted to selfharmin­g aged 21, just over two years after joining the military and within six months of joining Submarine Service. ‘I think it’s when you are in so much emotional pain, it felt like having a physical representa­tion of that made it valid.’ The situation deteriorat­ed during lockdown when personnel were unable to see their families, and had to stay on the base at Faslane. Sophie, who was then one of fewer than five women among the 165 men on the base, began self-harming more frequently. Once, she cut her upper arm so savagely she had to go to the doctor to receive nine stitches. ‘I was so mentally and physically broken,’ she remembers today. As she was due on watch hours later, the doctor insisted on speaking to those in command to stand her down from her duties, for her safety and that of others. Despite this, she says 45 minutes later she was woken and summoned back to work. ‘So I took charge. I was unsupervis­ed and had total responsibi­lity for 165 crew members, the nuclear reactor and the nuclear missiles on hardly any sleep. It is unsafe. You have to take instant decisions. The cockpit of a 747 is simple compared to what a submarine dashboard looks like.

‘You are dealing with complicate­d and high-pressure systems. Ultimately, you take the decisions of a captain.

‘I did get through that shift. After, my superior wanted to see me to discuss my injury – he just said not to do it again.’

Her medical records, seen by the Mail, show various people had noticed her self-harm injuries and reported them to the doctor.

Not long after, Sophie started a brief affair with former lieutenant commander Nicholas Stone, 37, a married father of one who was also based at Faslane.

‘I couldn’t go home, he couldn’t go home – I was having a horrendous time and he knew that. It progressed stupidly on both our parts into having a brief affair.

‘He was very much like my only safety net. I could tell him the horrible things that were happening.’

Then, she made a terrible error. On the sub just before leaving for patrol, she sent an email from her secure MoD account to Stone’s Yahoo account, complainin­g about the patrol.

While doing so, she revealed informatio­n about her submarine’s movements.

However, while the breaches were discovered before sailing, she was still allowed to continue on patrol, during which time she says she had access to top-secret informatio­n.

Returning home after the patrol, Sophie says she was recalled back

‘Routinely pestered by men for sex’

‘Driven to self-harm and was suicidal’

to Faslane for a breach of the Official Secrets Act, as well as an allegation of expenses fraud – the latter of which she claims was down to her ‘lazy admin’.

Sophie resigned from the Navy and pleaded guilty to these charges, she says because she feared facing hefty legal costs and because she ‘naively hoped the details of the case’ would not be disclosed.

‘I didn’t want the humiliatio­n that I had an affair. I thought I was protecting everyone including myself by pleading guilty.’

However, both she and Stone faced a court martial in June this year. Both were dismissed from the military, their careers in tatters, and faced suspended prison sentences of five and four months respective­ly.

Suicidal, Sophie began making preparatio­ns to end her life by drawing up a will, writing down her passwords and putting her finances in order.

So extreme was her distress that she was placed under the care of a local NHS mental health team who made daily checks on her welfare. Eventually, with the help of her family, she recovered.

As for Sophie, she feels nothing but regret for not speaking out earlier, and for having an affair.

‘I massively regret the affair. I feel terrible that that action has reinforced what people believe about why women should not be in submarines.

‘That aside, had I come forward and said something [about the abuse], other women who left [the Navy] because they couldn’t cope might have been able to continue.

‘And those who did stay and have had their careers stunted might have been further ahead.

‘But I had no other woman to speak to; there was no female senior to me. None of the senior men was encouragin­g.

‘There is a lot of regret and sadness. Had I been at the top I could have changed so much and made such a difference.’

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 ?? ?? Regrets: Sophie Brook, now 30, lost her job after sending sensitive informatio­n to her lover Nicholas Stone, top
Regrets: Sophie Brook, now 30, lost her job after sending sensitive informatio­n to her lover Nicholas Stone, top

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