Haunting Photos Show the Aftermath of the Kursk Submarine Disaster in 2000

(rarehistoricalphotos.com)

85 points | by mooreds 4 days ago

7 comments

  • vrosas 1 hour ago
    One of the most interest facts about this disaster is that if the submarine was standing on its tail straight up, its nose would be sticking 150ft OUT of the water it sunk in.
    • petepete 21 minutes ago
      It was 155m long and the ocean was 108m deep, in case anyone else was wondering.
    • thedanbob 1 hour ago
      And yet even in that shallow of water the pressure would have been around 10 atm. It's amazing how dangerous something as mundane as water can be.
      • lencastre 49 minutes ago
        nothing but respect for water
        • atomicnumber3 46 minutes ago
          Definitely a strong contender for favorite 3-atom molecule
  • fusslo 19 minutes ago
    The description of the survivors last hours is horrifying.
  • jvuygbbkuurx 42 minutes ago
    That is an absolute unit. The photos at the end with people inside the wreck put it in perspective.
  • jeffrallen 1 hour ago
    Soundtrack for this post: https://youtu.be/3qF95ANVHSg

    Kursk, by The Vad Vuc

  • ge96 19 minutes ago
    Damn that's crazy seeing Putin back in 2000
  • FridayoLeary 1 hour ago
    The story depresses me a little. One of the greatest engineering marvels in history, destroyed by stereotypical Russian negligence, incompetence and corruption and more then 100 lives lost in the process. The Soviets for all their many sins were at least capable of building incredible things, the protections on the nuclear reactor held up, for example, preventing a massive environmental catastrophe.
    • giraffe_lady 22 minutes ago
      It's stereotypical now but I remember at the time this was taken as a kind of confirmation that russia had been coasting on and also neglecting a lot of the soviet-era infrastructure. It's hard to reflect back now but in 2000 the soviet collapse was recent memory and the role and effectiveness of its successor was an open question, internationally.

      I do remember that in the 90s the "russia understanders" were split into two camps: now that russia is free of the shackles of communism it will step into its destiny as supreme global superpower vs the soviet system was actually quite effective at large scale mundane infrastructure & logistics in a way the russian federation isn't.

      By 2000 the weight of evidence was already fairly strong for the second view but this disaster, and especially their response to it, really settled the matter. This is how I remember feeling about it all anyway.

      • Gagarin1917 18 minutes ago
        Russia had roughly half the population as compared to the Soviet Union. There’s just no way they could have ever competed on the global stage the same way.
        • mitthrowaway2 0 minutes ago
          If one took the view that communism was holding back roughly half of their their potential, then it would have been a reasonable prediction.
  • Klaster_1 2 hours ago
    [removed]
    • Mikhail_Edoshin 1 hour ago
      Chomsky wrote that Western media publishes only what is "useful" for certain ends, usually political. So you think the article is useful, don't you?
    • brookst 1 hour ago
      I found the story and photos entirely haunting. Those sailers had no chance.
    • pavel_lishin 1 hour ago
      Reading a note written by a sailor, in the dark, by feel, estimating his changes to be 10%, certainly felt haunting to me.
    • infecto 1 hour ago
      Found it pretty haunting myself. You could pick a different descriptive word but haunting fits.
    • ahhhhnoooo 1 hour ago
      I found several photos haunting.
    • giraffe_lady 1 hour ago
      Being able to look at a full actual likeness of a person who is dead is incomprehensibly novel to human experience. It has never stopped giving me chills.