There was a recent news item suggesting a Russian Akula-class submarine conducted a month-long combat patrol in the Gulf of Mexico without being detected by the United States military. Almost immediately several military blogs said many "senior" or "experienced" former (retired) submariners believe that to be a bunch of hooey. None of those "experts" were named, so their credentials could not be checked. Others suggested the story was false, a plant to politically embarass the President of the US in an election year. It was noted that the information trail led back to and ended at a conservatrive blog. The author of the article however, was Bill Gertz who is a nationally respected columnist in military affairs for a major US newspaper in Washington DC, who is renowned for developing many "informants" in the militaries around the globe.
Of course neither the US military nor Russia has made any definitive statement.
So... assume for the sake of analysis the story is true. How could an Akula elude detection in the Gulf of Mexico?
Some inquiries to start the ball rolling. You scientists will be familiar with Occam's Razor, a hypothesis about how things occur in nature, enunciated in 1852 by an English logician. Essentially -- if there are several explanations for an observed phenomena (or lack of observation in our case), the simplest most direct solution is probably the correct one.
Following that thread, you cynics would say the simplest explanation is, there was no Akula patrol to be detected. Okay, fair enough. But, if we assume there WAS such a patrol, what is the simplest explanation?
Perhaps there were no sensing assets (planes, ships, etc.) patrolling in sufficient quantity or scope to detect it.
That done... what about advances in hull tiles or coatings, perhaps developed for Russia's newest subs, that could be retrofitted to an Akula?
How about sailing tactics to avoid detection zones?
If an Akula did make the Gulf transit, how might it have accomplished it without detection?
Of course neither the US military nor Russia has made any definitive statement.
So... assume for the sake of analysis the story is true. How could an Akula elude detection in the Gulf of Mexico?
Some inquiries to start the ball rolling. You scientists will be familiar with Occam's Razor, a hypothesis about how things occur in nature, enunciated in 1852 by an English logician. Essentially -- if there are several explanations for an observed phenomena (or lack of observation in our case), the simplest most direct solution is probably the correct one.
Following that thread, you cynics would say the simplest explanation is, there was no Akula patrol to be detected. Okay, fair enough. But, if we assume there WAS such a patrol, what is the simplest explanation?
Perhaps there were no sensing assets (planes, ships, etc.) patrolling in sufficient quantity or scope to detect it.
That done... what about advances in hull tiles or coatings, perhaps developed for Russia's newest subs, that could be retrofitted to an Akula?
How about sailing tactics to avoid detection zones?
If an Akula did make the Gulf transit, how might it have accomplished it without detection?