Daily Press

Bridge salvage crane has CIA past

Vast boom structure aided secret retrieval of sunken Soviet sub

- By Ben Finley

These days a floating crane called the Chesapeake 1000 — nicknamed “Chessy” — has the grim task of hauling off shattered steel from last week’s fatal bridge collapse in Baltimore.

It has taken on many jobs over the decades. But the crane’s most notable operation, until last week, was helping the CIA retrieve part of a sunken Soviet submarine.

Origin story

In the early 1970s, the crane barge was called the Sun 800 for the number of tons it could lift. It helped to construct a specialize­d ship that raised a portion of the sub in 1974. Specifical­ly, the crane hoisted into the ship heavy machinery that was vital to the Cold War heist.

The equipment included a mechanical claw, tons of steel pipe and a heavy duty hydraulic system. The Soviet submarine was roughly 3 miles below the surface of the Pacific.

The CIA wrote on its website that the ship “could conduct the entire recovery under water, away from the view of other ships, aircraft or spy satellites.” The specialize­d ship was called the Hughes Glomar Explorer, named after the billionair­e industrial­ist Howard Hughes.

To save time, a Philadelph­ia-area shipyard built the vessel’s heavy parts on the ground. The floating crane was needed to lift those assembled pieces into the new ship.

“The Sun 800 was built specifical­ly to help us on the constructi­on of the Hughes Glomar Explorer,” said Gene Schorsch, who was then chief of hull design for Sun Shipbuildi­ng and Drydock Co.

Clandestin­e project

The secret mission was called “Project Azorian.”

News stories in 1975 told of the mission. But Washington didn’t confirm the basic facts until 2010, when the CIA released a partially redacted report that lacked many of the juicy details.

“It’s considered one of the most expensive intelligen­ce operations of all time,” said M. Todd Bennett, a history professor at East Carolina University in Greenville, North Carolina, who wrote a 2022 book on the mission. “And not only that, it’s certainly one of the most inventive or daring intelligen­ce operations in U.S. history.”

The sub, K-129, was lost northeast of Hawaii in 1968. After the Soviets abandoned their search, the U.S. found the vessel.

“To discover it, that’s one thing,” Bennett said. “But to have the wherewitha­l to try to devise a way to recover that piece of hardware is really remarkable. It’s been compared — and rightly so — to an underwater moonshot.”

The submarine was a potential wellspring of intelligen­ce, from details on Soviet nuclear-weapons capabiliti­es to military codes.

By 1970, the CIA had devised its plan and hatched a cover story for the ship: a commercial deep-sea mining vessel owned by Hughes.

The agency’s hope was to retrieve a 132-foot section of the sub, which weighed 1,750 tons.

“While maintainin­g its position in the ocean currents, the ship had to lower the (claw) by adding 60-foot sections of supporting steel pipe, one at a time,” the CIA wrote.

Another piece of machinery assembled for the ship was a special platform. It was used to keep the claw system steady — and on target — in the ocean currents.

“You want the ship to be able to roll or pitch without affecting that pipe,” Schorsch said.

During the mission, the claw grasped the submarine section. But about a third of the way up it broke, allowing part of the sub’s hull to fall away.

Former CIA Director William Colby later wrote that the most valuable aspects of the sub were lost, Bennett said.

The salvage, however, included the bodies of six Soviet sailors, who were given a formal military burial at sea.

Another try

A second mission was planned. But journalist­s broke the story in 1975, led by Seymour Hersh, then writing for The New York Times, and columnist Jack Anderson.

News reports indicated that some manuals may have been recovered, while some of the hull pieces helped the U.S. to refine its estimates of Soviet naval capabiliti­es, Bennett said.

Anderson’s sources told him Project Azorian was too expensive and sapped resources from other intelligen­ce programs, Bennett said.

The submarine also was diesel-powered and generation­s behind the Soviet’s nuclear-powered subs.

“Anderson’s sources — and Anderson — argued that it was really a museum piece, a relic,” Bennett said.

American media outlets were heavily criticized for reporting on the project then, which had a “chilling effect” as news outlets later became less willing to disclose intelligen­ce secrets, Bennett said.

Since then

“Sadly the ship itself no longer exists — it was scrapped years ago,” Bennett said. “But it was a significan­t piece of hardware. And this was a really important mission in U.S. intelligen­ce history, in part because it was one of the first major underwater operations that we were aware of.”

But the crane that helped build the Hughes Glomar Explorer is now often touted as one of the largest of its kind on the East Coast.

It is on a floating barge used for big projects, like the Baltimore bridge salvage.

 ?? AP ?? The Hughes Glomar Explorer, a 618-foot salvage ship built for the CIA, is seen in 1975. Now its crane is salvaging the Francis Scott Key Bridge in Maryland.
AP The Hughes Glomar Explorer, a 618-foot salvage ship built for the CIA, is seen in 1975. Now its crane is salvaging the Francis Scott Key Bridge in Maryland.

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