Project Azorian's Sunken Sub - podcast episode cover

Project Azorian's Sunken Sub

Jun 09, 202527 min
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Episode description

A special father’s day treat for you! This week, Ed shares one of his favorite chapters from his NYT Bestselling book SNAFU: The Definitive Guide to History’s Greatest Screw-ups (available at SNAFU-BOOK.com or wherever you get your books.) Selected from the Audiobook rendition, Ed weaves a wild tale of a CIA covert operation to develop a bona fide claw machine aboard a seafaring vessel strong enough to haul up the remnants of a sunken Soviet submarine which held Cold War era nuclear secrets. This one is chock-full of spies, subterfuge, and even Howard Hughes! Enjoy this free sampling of the book and order yours today! 

 

See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Transcript

Speaker 1

Hey, I'll use snaffoo fans or snaffo heads, snap snaff snaffoops, snaffoo snaff footies. I don't know what are we gonna call you. We'll figure that out today. I have a very fun treat for you, a little glimpse into my New York Times best selling book, Snaffoo, The Definitive Guide to History's Greatest screw Ups. Yes, you heard that right. It is a New York Times best seller. Baby, I'm so proud of this thing. Oh my gosh. All right, well,

listen up. Here's the deal. Father's Day is fast approaching, and we all know what that means. You're scrambling to find a gift for all the great dads in your life. And let's be honest, neckties, golf balls, that's so twentieth century, folks. But never fear. I'm here to help make it stress free for you this year. Yeah, I think you know where I'm going with this. Grab a copy of my compendium of his Greatest screw Ups. It's Dad reviewed and Dad approved, and yours is gonna love it. Trust me,

I know I'm a dad. The book is full of thirty plus different snaffoos. Each chapter is its own contained short story. This is the perfect gift. It is great for beach reading, bedside reading. I'm gonna say it, you can even read it in the bathroom. I mean, go for it. I'm not gonna judge. Anywhere you read is a good place to read. Okay. So just to give you a little snapshot or a little glimpse into the book, this week, I have pulled an exclusive chapter from the

Snafu audiobook, narrated in its entirety by yours truly. Project Azorian a tale stranger than fiction involving Cold War chaos, a sunken Soviet nuclear submarine, a giant claw machine built to withstand treacherous ocean depths, and everyone's favorite mid century mad cap billionaire, Howard Hughes. Yes, even the legendary Howard Hughes is tied up in this one, so don't forget.

The book is available in bookstores everywhere or online at Amazon or of course our own website, Snaffo dashbook dot com. That is Snafu dashbook dot com. And now please enjoy the riproaring adventure of the CIA's Project Azorian. Project Azorian a sub above how the CIA tried to win the world's most expensive and difficult claw machine. In the early hours of June fifth, nineteen seventy four, security guard Mike Davis stood outside the building at seventy twenty Romain Street

in Hollywood. As he enjoyed the balmy sixty degree weather the light of the full moon shining through the cloudy Mike suddenly felt something pressing into his back a gun. A group of four burglars grabbed poor Mike and forced him to unlock the door. Why did these thieves want to get inside so badly? Because the building Mike was guarding was the corporate headquarters of Howard Hughes, the reclusive billionaire aviator, film producer, philanthropist, and all around all American

weirdo rich guy. Think Jeff Bezos, but with a pencil thin mustache and actually, you know, adventurous. After the burglars forced Mike to let them in, they wheeled in a heavy tank filled with highly flammable acetylene gas. They mazed their way through the Art Deco style two story building before finally marching into an office that contained a safe and a large vault jackpot. Wait a second, you might

be asking, The burglars just waltzed right in there. Shouldn't this famously secretive I have some sort of security or alarm system for this building that houses his sensitive, top secret shit well reader or listener. There was an alarm system, it just wasn't working. Actually, it had been out of order for some time, and Mike was the only guard on duty. Seriously, this place had worse security than the gas station where my friends and I used to steal

packs of gum as kids. The burglars turned on the acetylene tank and grabbed their torches. You know the big heist scene and Thief where James Kahn puts on a welding suit, lights up a long ass torch and drives it straight into a locked metal door as sparks fly everywhere. Just imagine that. And after hours of slowly melting the door off its hinges, one of the burglars took off his suit, wiped his brow, and smirked as he said, we're in. The burglars stormed into the vault and grabbed

everything they could. Four hours after first arriving, the burglars escaped, hauling the acetylene tank with them and all their stolen loot. They ended up with quite the grab bag. Sixty eight thousand dollars in cash, two Wedgewood vases, a ceramic samovar, two butterfly collections, three digital watches, and an antique Mongolian eating bowl. Again, Hughes was a rich weirdo. Maybe he was planning on sitting down to a delicious meal of

pickled butterflies perfectly arranged in his Mongolian bowl. But even more valuable than those preserved critters and antiques were two foot lockers full of files, documents that would soon cause

an international diplomatic scandal. These documents revealed Hughes's participation in a secret CIA plot that involved a sunken Soviet submarine, underwater nukes, and the most difficult claw game in the world the sub It all began six years earlier, on March first, nineteen sixty eight, when a Soviet submarine named K one twenty nine sailed out from a naval base in Petropavlovsk, way out in the Russian Far East and over four thousand miles from Moscow. K one twenty nine

was equipped with three nuclear warheads. Each single warhead was nearly seventy times more powerful than the bomb dropped by the United States on Hiroshima. In the case of nuclear war, the sub would fire off its nukes to targets on the west coast of the United States. The sub began its standard peacetime patrol in the North Pacific, but at some point in the middle of March, the Soviets lost communication with K one twenty nine. The sub went radio silent.

It's still not clear exactly what happened. A declassified, heavily redacted CIA report published in nineteen eight five simply says that the submarine suffered an accident, cause unknown and sank one thousand, five hundred and sixty miles northwest of Hawaii. The report is also mom about how the CIA came

to ascertain the location of the sub sinking. According to military historian Matthew Aid, archival documents have suggested that the US Navy's underwater sonar the sound surveillance system might have discovered the location of the sunken sub. Whatever the case, the Soviets had lost a nuke equipped submarine, They fruitlessly searched for it for two months, then gave up, and that whole time the CIA knew exactly where it was.

Why was the CIA so interested in the sub because inside was potentially valuable intelligence that could reveal the inner workings of the Soviet Navy codebooks, decoding machines, and burst transmitters, not to mention the nukes themselves, which would still be functional. There was just one problem. K one nine lay sixteen five hundred feet beneath the surface of the ocean. How the hell do you get down there in the first place, And once you're three miles deep, how do you then

bring the sub back up to the surface. These questions might have left a recovery effort dead in the water, but with such a tantalizing prize on the ocean floor, the CIA couldn't resist to consider their options. Longtime CIA agent John Perengosky convened a task force in an anonymous office near, of all places, Tyson's Corner, the largest shopping mall in the DC area Today, if you showed up there for a meeting, you could browse the racks at

Urban Outfitters and grab a pretzel from Anti Ann's. But there isn't a secret meeting room anymore. At least Perengosky got in ahead of Anti Anne, though, according to the book The Taking of K I nine, he was a fair boss, occasionally even friendly, but no one was immune from his temper. I assume Perngosky wasn't very forgiving if you came back late from lunch at the food court. Anyway, Parngosky assembled a team of scientists, engineers, and submarine experts

to brainstorm ideas for the sub rescue mission. Imagine a bunch of suits scribbling ideas on a whiteboard. Maybe they could place buoyant material kind of like a really sophisticated pool noodle under the sub and then hope the material was floaty enough to carry the sub all the way up. Maybe instead of a pool noodle, they could simply generate a buoyant gas like hydrogen or nitrogen through electrolysis, causing the sub to float back up without even touching it.

All of these ideas were one hundred percent real and actually considered by the CIA, And yeah, if they sounded hair brained and doomed to fail, you'd be right. But believe it or not, the loution Parngoski and company finally landed on was even more hair brain the doomedest to fail of them all. That's right, folks, Parngoski and company decided to use a literal claw to pick up K one twenty nine from the bottom of the ocean and

lift it back up through brute force the claw. The claw would consist of five separate grasping claws connected to heavy duty winches that would be mounted onto a specially built ship. The ship had to be able to withstand the weight of the one thousand, seven hundred and fifty ton Soviet sub. The plan was for the claw to descend to the seafloor, slip a sort of metal hammock beneath the sub, and then gingerly lift it back up.

You're probably picturing one of those arcade claw games at Chuck E Cheese right now, And yeah, that's exactly what I want you to imagine, because think about how hard it is to even pick up a stuffed animal from the bottom of the machine. Those things are impossible to win. Now, think about trying to pick up a submarine that's more than three miles underwater and has the weight of about eight hundred and seventy five passenger cars. What could possibly

go wrong? As it turns out, just about everything, and they knew it too. Senior intelligence officers gave the project a ten percent success rate. If you were a civil engineer and designed a bridge that had a ninety percent chance of collapsing, what do you think your boss would say. Would they be like, great, idea, here's an ungodly amount of money to build this bridge that nine times out of ten will catastrophically fail. Well, that's exactly what the

CIA decided to do. On October thirtieth, nineteen seventy, two years after K one twenty nine SANC, the agency authorized Project Azorian, the official name for the mission to recover the Soviet sub There were definitely concerns about the mission, especially the constantly ballooning cost. Suspiciously, the declassified CIA report redacts any and all specific dollar figures. What it does mention is how like the making of Apocalypse Now, the

project kept getting delayed and going over budget. For example, Project to Zorian was first costed at redacted number in nineteen seventy. In less than a year, it had jumped more than fifty percent to some redacted number. We'll probably never know the exact cost, but Matthew Aid estimates it at half a billion with a B dollars at the time. That's over three billion dollars in today's money. How much is three billion? It's more than the individual GDP of

thirty five sovereign nations. In other words, this CIA floating claw machine was more expensive than entireier economies, which damn that makes paying a quarter to play a claw game at chuck e Cheese seem like a bargain. The voyage, the CIA had one last problem with Project disorient How do we keep this thing a secret? We can't actually tell everyone we're building a giant claw ship to retrieve a Soviet submarine. By nineteen seventy one, the United States

and the USSR were in a period of detante. The two countries had signed the Nuclear Non Proliferation Treaty in nineteen sixty eight, and a mission to essentially steal a Soviet sub wouldn't be great for diplomatic relations. So the CIA needed a cover story and decided to reach out to Howard Hughes. Could Hughes pretend to be constructing a research vessel equipped with a giant claw for the purpose of mining deep sea metals. Hughes was in many ways

a perfect choice. He already had a reputation as a seat gritive eccentric billionaire who invested in all sorts of expensive projects and already had a stated interest in deep sea mining. He had also previously collaborated with the government to develop satellites for classified intelligence purposes, and sure enough, Hughes was more than happy to help construction on the Hughes Glomar explorer. Hughes also agreed to let the Claw

ship be named after him. Began in nineteen seventy one in a shipyard in Chester, Pennsylvania, a half hour south of Philadelphia. In November nineteen seventy two, the ship was christened in the usual way, smashing a bottle of champagne on the hull. Not that things exactly went to plan. The person who was supposed to smash the bottle missed twice and had to throw a third bottle at the ship as it cast off. Not everything as an omen, but sometimes such occurrences are a little on the nose.

The CIA was able to maintain this cover for quite some time. When the hGe, let's call it the hGe, so I don't have to keep saying Glomar finally set sail in nineteen seventy three. The Los Angeles Times noted newsmen were not permitted to view the launch, and details of the ship's destination and mission were not released. The press chalked up the secrecy surrounding the ship and its mission to Hughes his own propensity for privacy. The hGe

first sailed from Pennsylvania to Bermuda. Because it was too big to pass through the Panama Canal, it had to sail all the way around the southern tip of South America. After making a brief pitstop in Chile, the hGe sailed on and reached its destination of Long Beach, California, at the end of September, where it stayed at harbor for several months in preparation for the recovery mission. It also kept experiencing mechanical failures. Literal cracks started showing in the hall,

which divers had to seal up. This thing was pretty much held together by duct tape and a prayer. The crew couldn't fix everything and eventually just gave up. One small but persistent seal leak was never corrected, and the seepage of a few gallons per hour was accepted. Thus, the hGe lived with a small puddle in the starboard wing well kind of embarrassing. Imagine a real estate agent trying to sell you a house and explaining that there's a permanent puddle on the top floor because the roof

isn't fully sealed. But the CIA had already invested too much time and too many resources into this over budget, creaky ass claw ship. I guess you could say they'd fallen into the sorry sunk cost fallacy. So sorry. On June seventh, nineteen seventy four, President Nixon personally gave the official and final green light to recover the sub. It was showtime the moment of truth on Independence Day, as fireworks exploded over cities across the country in celebration of

America's one hundred ninety eighth birthday. The hGe traveled to a spot one thousand, five hundred and sixty miles northeast of Hawaii, where K one nine lay at the bottom of the ocean. John Prengosky, the CIA agent who had come up with the whole claw idea, was closely monitoring the mission back at headquarters, but when the hGe arrived at the site, the mission was very nearly thwarted. The crew noticed Soviet helicopters flying overhead taking photos. Plus Soviet

Navy ships kept surveilling the hGe. One vessel named Chasma came within a mile of the hGe and center radio transmission. What are you doing here, the Americans replied, we are conducting ocean mining tests, deep ocean mining tests. After a few more tents back and forth, Chasma signed off with I wish you all the best and went on its merry way to Petropavlovsk, the port city that K one

nine originally set out from. The Soviets were none the wiser about hge's true purpose, But even with the Soviets off their backs, the crew still had to worry about maintenance issues, which just kept getting worse. One mechanical failure caused a display of noise, fire, sparks and smoke primarily and spastik shaking of the derrick. And as I always say, whenever there's spastik shaking of the dereck, things aren't looking good. The crew in general weren't confident about the chances for success.

In fact, they had nicknamed the claw Clementine since they figured the sub was lost and gone forever. But it was too late to back out now. Just after midnight, On July twenty first, the world's most expensive and difficult claw game began. The ships on board computers flashed with real time info and photos. The massive winch slowly unspooled miles and miles of piping, with Clementine descending into the

deepest reaches of the Pacific. According to the book blind Man's Bluff, one man who recruited sailors for the crew later compared the mission to lifting a twenty five foot long steel tube off the ground with a cable lowered from the top of the one hundred ten story World Trade Center on a pitch black night, haunted by swirling winds. So you know, everyone was set up for success. Down Clementine went not much lives sixteen thousand, five hundred feet

beneath the surface of the ocean. That depth is considered the abyssle zone, where there's no sunlight and the temperature is just above freezing. The water pressure can reach up to six hundred times the pressure of the atmosphere. The only things swimming around are freaky looking sea creatures with creepy names like faceless fish and fang tooths. It took eleven days for Clementine to reach the bottom of the ocean.

Using the built in cameras, the crew carefully maneuvered the claw to grasp the sub, only for them to miscalculate and slam the claw into the seabed. Whoops, But Clementine, faithful old Girl, was still intact. They went in for another attempt, and this time were right on target. Clementine latched onto the sub and gingerly began lifting it up at an agonizingly slow rate of six feet per minute. It took another eight days for the claw to rise

from the crash site. Imagine the crew's excitement when, after waiting for more than a week, the claw finally returned to the surface to quote another American military vessel mission accomplished, and then imagine their disappointment when the claw emerged with only a thirty eight foot long section of the front hull. About two thirds of the sub had broken off on Clementine's way up. Three of the five grasping claws had cracked and sunk, with only two claws still holding the

highly fragile sub. The sub then split off and sank as well, along with the nuclear missile codebooks, decoding machines, and the burst transmitters. Essentially, they lost everything the CIA was dying to reclaim. What the Claw did recover were the bodies of six of the sub's crew members, who were trapped in the front ten percent of the sub. Prengosky had ordered that any recovered bodies would be given a proper funeral. The Soviet crew members were buried at

sea with full military honors. The funeral was filmed, and the recording was given to the Russian government a year after the Soviet Union's collapse. There's honestly something touching about that. The crew of K one twenty nine may have been working for America's sworn enemy, but they certainly didn't deserve to die in the depths of the Pacific, thousands of miles from home. At least after their deaths they were

treated with a little humanity. And so it was that on August eighth, nineteen seventy four, with most of K one twenty nine still at the bottom of the ocean, the Hughes Glomar Explorer began its voyage home. The blowback. Well, the CIA told itself, at least we were able to maintain our cover story, and no one's the wiser that our mission failed. Some in the government even believed Project

Azorian to be a success. In a post mission White House meeting, Secretary of Defense James Schlessinger declared that the operation is a marvel. The CIA figured that even if they didn't recover the entire sub they'd proved that it was at least possible. John Perengosky pushed for a second day attempt, which was scheduled for July nineteen seventy five. Hopefully they could keep the nosy press from catching on

one more time, but alas. Back on June fifth, nineteen seventy four, while the hGe was docked thirty three miles south in Long Beach waiting to launch out into the Pacific, a group of four burglars broke into the Hughes corporate headquarters and stole top secret documents that revealed the true purpose of the ship. The press discovered these documents, and Azorian's cover story was finally blown in February nineteen seventy five, when The Los Angeles Times published the first article revealing

the actual mission of the hGe. The following month, our goodpal Pulitzer Prize winning columnist Jack Anderson, you'll remember him, from Operation Popeye broke the story of Azorian on National TV, and surprise, surprise, our other legendary journalist, Seymour Hirsch, also wrote about the failed mission for The New York Times. Anyone else missed the glory days of Gumshoe reporters like

Anderson and Hirsch. Hirsch spoke to an anonymous Navy admiral who pointed out that even if the CIA did recover the secret Soviet codebooks, which would have been seven years out of date by that point, the codes wouldn't mean much because they were automatically randomly scrambled every twenty four hours. By June nineteen seventy five, all this bad press forced

the CIA to cancel the planned second recovery attempt. John Parrengoski, the agent who had spearheaded Project Dozorian, had retired by then, and naturally, the Soviets weren't happy about the news either. The USSR ambassador to the United States pressed for more details about Project Desorian. Perhaps the Soviets were embarrassed that, despite heavily surveilling the hGe, they'd failed to ascertain its

true purpose. American journalists also kept digging. The journalist named Harriet and Philippi filed a Freedom of Information Act request for more info. Walking a diplomatic tightrope, the CIA stated that they could neither confirm nor deny the agency's connection to the Hughes Glomar Explorer's true mission. It's the perfect non denial denial. Maybe this thing isn't true, but if

it is true, we can't tell you about it. A court case the following year upheld the CIA's quote refusal to confirm or deny existence of records, and Philippe's Foyer request was thrown out. You've probably heard this phrase. Of course, it became so widespread and infamous that today it's known as the Glomar response. In perhaps the worst example of branded accounts on Twitter now x at CIA's first ever tweet in twenty fourteen was we can neither confirm nor

deny that this is our first tweet. Hilarious. As for the Hughes Glomar Explorer itself, in nineteen seventy six, the US government tried to auction it off to the public. The maximum offer they received was two million, which was nothing compared to the estimated total mission cost of five hundred million. Again, the actual mission cost is still classified info.

The hGe was put into storage, and over the decades was leased to various private interests to drill for oil and to actually mine for deep sea medals, before finally being completely scrapped in twenty fifteen, all fifty one thousand tons of it. In an ironic twist, there's probably more of K one twenty nine left than the massive claw machine that was built to recover it. Maybe James Cameron can build another deep sea explorer and try to recover

the sunken Soviet submarine himself. But on the other hand, perhaps it's best to let sleeping subs lie

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