Tuesday, October 21, 2014

More Suspected Submarine Sightings Reported In Sweden


Sweden Has More Sightings Amid Russian Submarine Speculation -- Bloomberg Businessweek

Sweden’s Armed Forces received reports of two further sightings as it continued to search for foreign vessels in waters near Stockholm amid media speculation a damaged Russian submarine was seeking to evade capture.

The most recent sightings bring the total to five as the army searches both on water and land “for something or someone,” Rear Admiral Anders Grenstad, the deputy chief of operations at the Swedish Armed Forces, said today at a press conference in Stockholm. While the army can’t confirm an intrusion, it is “very likely” that such an event took place, he said. The events are “completely unacceptable,” he said.

Commenting on the search, Grenstad said “it’s like Jesus - - everyone knows who he is but noone has seen him.” The army has moved its operation into open water, which is an easier area to search than within the archipelago, said Grenstad.

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More News On More Suspected Submarine Sightings Reported In Sweden

Two New Sightings of Alleged Submarine Reported in Sweden -- RIA Novosti
Swedish search for 'foreign sub' focuses on Ingaro Bay -- BBC
Sweden ready to use force to surface sub -- The Local
Sweden May Use Military Force Against Alleged Submarine: Armed Forces Chief -- RIA Novosti
Sweden says it's ready to use force against suspicious submarine -- AFP
Battleships And Helicopters Join Hunt For Missing Submarine: Sweden Prepares To "Use Weapons To Surface Sub" -- Zero Hedge
Sweden ready to force submarine to surface -- News24
Sub hunt: 'There is something out there' -- The Local
Swedish Military Chief Rejects Claims That Russian Transmitter Started Submarine Search -- RIA Novosti
Submarine hunt exposes Swedish readiness gap -- AP
Swedish submarine hunt: on patrol in the Stockholm archipelago -- The Telegraph
Mystery Submarine Hunt Resurfaces Cold War Tensions -- ABC News
The 'Russian Submarine' in Swedish Waters Isn't the Only Unwelcome Visitor in the Baltic Sea -- Elisabeth Braw, Newsweek
The Swedish Navy Is Hunting a Russian Submarine and Doesn't Have the Tools for It -- Foreign Policy

1 comment:

Unknown said...

Put in a Notice to Mariners of a new military test range effective tomorrow.

Start depth charging in earnest.

One thing to be off coast waters; quite another to be inside an estuary fjord of sheltered bay.