Royal Navy Classified Submarine Missions 1980 - 1994
The National Archives in Kew is
one of the world’s great repositories of information. Acting as the official
archive for the British Government, its vast shelves and, literally miles, of
storage containing information that in its day was often classified as TOP
SECRET, but today is available for any member of the public to read. Kew is
somewhere well worth a visit because it gives a chance to see papers handled by
great political and military figures and hold them in your own hands, reading
the files that tell the stories of how decisions were reached and policies
enacted. It is also a chance too to see ‘behind the curtain’ and compare the
official correspondence and ‘lines to take’ with the private and often highly
indiscrete thoughts of officials and officers alike.
Not all files make it to the
archives. Historically the British Government has only chosen to preserve files
of historic value, rather than every file, noting that there is finite storage
space and capacity to preserve the records. Under the formerly 30 year rule,
and now 20 year rule, files should be reviewed for a decision on their future
at a point when they should be transferred to the archives. Not every file
makes it to the Archives – some are destroyed by their parent department, while
others are retained using various legal instruments to keep them closed. The
reasons for this may include protection of sensitive information, intelligence
or operations that are so sensitive, revealing them may compromise wider
national security (this is sometimes referred to as a ‘retained file’ in the
sense that the file remains with its parent Department and is not sent to the
Archives).
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What this means is that what is
seen in the Archives online record system (known as ‘Discovery’) is a huge list
of tantalising files, some of which are open to read or download, while many
more are retained by their departments, usually for many decades. A cursory
glance at Discovery shows file after file on nuclear weapons, deterrence
policy, nuclear targeting, Special Forces operations and a myriad of other
highly secret and sensitive files that will almost certainly never be open to
the public to see. Central among these files are those records which relate to
Submarine operations by the Royal Navy, which are starting to appear in the
archives records as ‘retained files’. What is fascinating is the way that these
files hint at all manner of fascinating activities.
Humphrey is a regular user of the
National Archives, and tries to visit when personal circumstances permit,
usually with a lengthy reading list of subjects to research. Recently he
noticed by chance reference to various submarine operations, and realised that
they were being conducted on behalf of naval intelligence. Always keen to dig
deeper, many hours of detective work later and the result was a complete list
of all the files declared to the Archives relating to naval intelligence
missions that had been conducted by Royal Navy submarines during the 1970s to
1990s. This blog is a slightly unusual PSL blog in that it analyses this data
and offers some narrative and suggestions on other avenues of research.
There are some important
constraints in this article. Firstly, this research is based purely on those
files declared to the National Archives that the MOD has chosen to retain on
national security grounds. It is at best a tiny snapshot of a much bigger
operational picture that has likely been lost to time. It is likely that many
of the missions conducted will have been in files that were shredded and not
declared to Kew, and that there is no one master document listing all of them
that will be publicly viewable.
Secondly the timelines are very
narrow – there is no mention of documents relating to submarine operations in
the 1960s – this does not mean that they did not happen, but that either the
filing systems have changed, or that the keywords are different. More work is
required to find them lurking in the Discovery database. This article is, at
best, a reflection of a finite time period.
Finally, this article is based
entirely on open-source guesswork. Although the author has previously worked
for the MOD, he has never worked in any aspect of this highly secretive world
and has precisely zero professional knowledge about the subjects being
discussed here. It is entirely possible that what follows could be completely
wrong – any mistakes made are the authors alone. There is no classified
information in anything written in this blog and it could be utter nonsense!
Summary:
There are approximately 130 files
declared to the National Archives in Kew which relate to submarine intelligence
gathering operations conducted between 1980 and 1995 by the force of OBERON,
UPHOLDER, VALIANT, CHURCHILL, SWIFTSURE and TRAFALGAR class submarines. No
files could be found for HMS DREADNOUGHT or the PORPOISE class, although this
does not mean they were not used in this role – rather the files are well
hidden! There is a patrol report available for download covering monitoring of terrorist in Northern
Ireland by HMS CAHCALOT in the 1970s known as OP AWLESS – ironically other
files on the same op are retained). No analysis has been done on activities of
the post war ‘A’ Class or the wartime era T class boats, although these were
known to be active in the intelligence space .
The breakdown of reported
operations by class is as follows:
Class |
Total Files Declared to TNA Kew |
OBERON |
24 named operations 3 named missions 10 patrol reports |
UPHOLDER |
1 named operation |
VALIANT |
5 named operations 3 patrol reports |
CHURCHILL |
10 named operations 6 patrol reports |
SWIFTSURE |
15 named operations 8 named missions 3 patrol reports |
TRAFALGAR |
32 named operations 1 named mission 1 patrol report |
TOTAL |
87 named operations 12 named missions 23 patrol reports |
In collating this, the author has
drawn the following distinction between the three types of files.
‘Named Operations’: A file
referring to an Operation name (e.g. OP IOWA) that was attributed to that
specific vessel (e.g. the file would be called ‘HMS TRIUMPH OP IOWA’).
‘Named Missions’: A file
referring to a mission name / serial number that was attributed to a specific
vessel (e.g. ‘HMS SUPERB Mission B.79’). The files refer to missions under the
‘B, E and FP’ headers.
‘Patrol Reports’: A file
referring to a specific deployment or patrol that was assigned to a named
submarine (e.g. ‘HMS SOVEREIGN, Operations in North Norwegian Sea’).
There is almost certainly some
overlap between these files – for example some of the mission names are also
likely covering parts of the Operation, although the dates do not necessarily
always add up. Without viewing the files though, it is not possible to
determine how interlinked they are, or if they are stand alone missions.
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How to spot a file of interest
The power of the Discovery
website is that it enables some very effective keyword searching, allowing you
to quickly filter files by subject, department and closure status, helping
identify subjects of interest. When you
click on a record it will tell you the title and any prior file reference used
– a powerful tool when departmental reorganisations will have resulted in
changes of filing structures.
In the case of these files,
keyword searches were made using each submarines name, then reviewing the files
that came up. Many were self-explanatory titles, while others were anodyne but
still retained. What was particularly helpful was looking for files carrying
prior file references – under the system uploaded onto the archives, many of
the Royal Navy files of interest are classed as DEFE69 (Flag Officer
Submarines). This in turn was often a file previously classed as a DS5, or DI8
or DI(NC) file, all of which link the file to intelligence (DI is a well-known
acronym for Defence Intelligence, NC for Naval Collection). What this means is over time it is possible
to build up a good understanding of what operations were linked to Defence
Intelligence work, and usually which platform carried them out. Currently there
are 634 files retained within the DEFE69 series that will not be opened to the
public.
To further corroborate this,
other files can occasionally provide valuable corroboration – a search for
operation names, usually hunting for ‘retained’ files will provide some useful
clues. The DEFE67 series is linked to ASW training schools and contains many
Operational Reports from this period – all of which are closed. However the
title of some of the reports (e.g. ‘Anti-Submarine Warfare analysis report’
gives an insight into the type of operation that was carried out. Several
operations credited to submarines can be corroborated this way by looking at
the report type.
The DEFE67
files are particularly valuable as a reference point as they were created by
the so-called ‘MOD Operational Evaluation Group and
Submarine Tactics / Weapons Group and Joint Anti Submarine School’ – This was the
fleet evaluation group that conducted operational analysis on operations,
weapons and tactics. The modern equivalent of this group is a combination of
the Maritime Warfare Centre and what became the Joint Maritime Operational
Training Staff (JMOTS) based at Northwood for many years. The role of this
group was to conduct operational analysis, and there is a long list of
Operations that they provided both doctrinal analysis on, as well as an
assessment of ASW tactics. Whatever was happening, it was clear that the
submarines were deploying to places with sufficient rigour that a post
operational evaluation by the naval experts in weapons and tactics was called
for.
At least 33 named operations have
had post operational analysis conducted by this group, including at least six
Fleet ASW Analysis reports, 14 Fleet Operational Analysis reports and 13 Joint
Acoustic ASW Centre Analysis reports. All of the files located so far are
related to operations in the 1980s and 1990s. Only a small number of these
operations have been linked to RN submarine operations referred to in the
National Archives. The dates and timing of these reports indicates that the RN was
heavily involved in ASW operations throughout the 80s and 90s, although it is
not clear whether this relates to RN submarine deployments, or surface ship
deployments or operations against other submarines. For example Op DISSECTION
occurred in January 1992 – a Joint ASW and Acoustic Centre report involving HMS CLEOPATRA, a LEANDER
class frigate. We know that CLEOPATRA was a platform modified for specialist
SIGINT collection, publicly confirmed by this file about SIGINT Collection
Operations in 1978. A review of that file has confirmed that she embarked a
number of SIGINT specialists for collection missions in the Med and throughout
the Red Sea and Horn of Africa region. It is possible that she was used in a
similar manner for Op DISSECTION, although this cannot be confirmed. What this
means though is its hard to confirm whether these operations were primarily
about submarines or if they involved Royal Navy ASW forces tracking Soviet vessels.
Another way of confirming
activity is to look at other Departments, many of which will release material
to different standards. Ironically No10 Downing Street can occasionally release
files linked to the Prime Minister in this way – there is a short file (CAB
301-761) about an intelligence gathering
mission conducted by HMS COURAGEOUS in the Eastern Med in 1976 (Op name
currently unknown). In the wider letter, and more importantly the draft letters
not sent, it is revealed that the RN planned to conduct intelligence collection
during a visit to Odessa in 1976, and that the Soviet vessel visiting
Portsmouth in 1976 would be subject to no less than seven different
intelligence collection operations.
This is where OSINT really comes
into play – after googling and using the Navy News archive, it was possible to confirm that HMS
DEVONSHIRE visited Odessa, while a Soviet cruiser, Ozvbratzovy visited
Portsmouth (the first visit to the UK in 20 years by a Soviet warship). The end
result from a scribbled draft note buried in the No10 Archive files is a gold
mine to look at how naval intelligence was conducted during this time. Ironically amid all of
this, the actual dates and details of the operation COURAGEOUS was conducting
have been lost.
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Deployment Analysis
Looking at the information
available, it is possible to draw some analysis on key deployment areas.
Unsurprisingly during the Cold War the most important area for deployments
seems to have been into northern waters.
File names indicate at least
seven missions occurred in the areas of the Norwegian / Barents / Iceland
/Faroes waters during this time. Several of them were called ‘surveillance
missions’ suggesting that the purpose of the trip was to collect intelligence
from Soviet vessels/systems. The Greenland/Norwegian/Barents sea is a vast area
of water that would in wartime probably have been full of Soviet attack
submarines and potentially some of their ballistic missile submarines too.
We know that there was a
significant submarine detection presence through submarines, surface ships and
maritime patrol aircraft, supported by the SOSUS sonar network. It is likely
that these missions would have used wider intelligence to enable the boat to
get close to a target of interest.
It is also likely, based on the
range of the Polaris missiles that this area may have been a patrol area for
Royal Navy and US Navy SSBNs, to ensure they were close enough to fire in
wartime. The same is likely to be true of Soviet submarines, and there may well
have been a wide range of targets of interest from an intelligence perspective.
The second area of significant
attention was the Mediterranean, a key area of strategic concern to the UK for
centuries. In the 1960s files indicate that the RN deployed at least one OBERON
class submarine (HMS OCELOT) to conduct intelligence collection operations
against Soviet vessels of interest (the full account of this operation will be
written up in a separate future Pinstripedline blog).
We know from the files that the
Med was a particularly valued location for underwater photography due to its
unique environmental conditions. A note on the operation helps justify the
intelligence collection value as:
“The clearness of the water and the
bright conditions above the surface afford an opportunity to obtain some unique
intelligence. Soviet security is such that Western intelligence seldom obtains
a view of important modern ships in dock and therefore all too little is known
about the important underwater configuration and fittings of such ships. These
are very important items – hull configuration, particularly allied with the
shape and numbers of propellor blades is an important factor in assessing
speed/endurance, turning circles, radiated noise and, in the case of
submarines, diving depth. Sizes and shape of sonar domes provide evidence of
the power and frequency used and hence the capability of the sonar set itself.
If OCELOT could pass underneath (or nearly so) she would have a very good chance
of obtaining unique intelligence badly needed not just by ourselves, but by the
Americans.”
There was a clearly defined British
government policy in place for such operations. We know from the files that it
was reviewed in 1968, and was called ‘JIC 68/5’, which set out both the policy
constraints for different types of collection missions (e.g. conducted in
international waters or inside foreign territorial waters), and that the risk
level of different missions required approval at different ministerial levels.
Reference is made in files to the sort of operations being conducted by OCELOT
as an ‘Op LIBEL’ indicating a non-contentious / low risk intelligence
operation, which could be approved by a junior minister (at this time the Under
Secretary of State for the Royal Navy). Higher risk operations would need approval
at either Secretary of State or even Prime Ministerial level.
It is likely that the Royal Navy conducted
multiple intelligence gathering patrols in the Med throughout the 1970s – 1990s.
HMS ODIN and ORPHEOUS are known to have carried out these patrols in the mid
1980s, while HMS COURAGEOUS deployed in the 1970s, HMS WARSPITE in the 1980s and
SPLENDID carried out a ‘surveillance
operation’ in the Med in January 1986. It is reasonable to assume that
these would have included both SIGINT collection and potentially underwater photography
and were conducted on at least an annual basis (files relating to the OCELOT mission
indicated that the RN planned to conduct at least one SSK deployment per year in
the Med for these purposes). The last known (to date) intelligence deployments
to the Med appeared to have occurred in 1994 when HMS TIRELESS and TALENT
deployed separately on Op SHARPGUARD, the multi-year NATO / EU blockade of the Adriatic
during the Balkans civil wars.
One well known public deployment that
was likely to have been related to the Med was that of HMS SUPERB, who in April
1982 was observed sailing from Gibraltar just after the Argentine invasion of
the Falkland Islands. In fact SUPERB was not involved in the Falklands War, but
was operationally committed throughout April, taking part in ‘OP SARDIUS’,
which is likely to have been an intelligence collection mission. Interestingly
she was also committed to DIS related tasking later in the year under mission ‘E79’
in Oct – Dec 82, with there being some suggestion that the ‘E’ series missions
were SIGINT related. Of note, there are two files called ‘Submarine
Patrol Investigation of Soviet ASW Tactics’ for the period 01 May – 01 Sep 1982, that were
produced by the DIS. It is possible (but not confirmed) that HMS SUPERB was engaged
during OP SARDIUS on either intelligence collection in the Med, or trying to ‘poke
the bear’ and see how they conducted ASW operations. It is only possible to
produce a report on an investigation of Soviet ASW tactics if you’ve actually
got first hand evidence on how the Soviets conducted themselves. It is
reasonable to assume that either SUPERB
or another RN Boat were very busy and up close with the Soviets
throughout the spring of 1982.
The events of 1982 opened the
door to a third focus for RN submarine deployments, namely off the coast of
Argentina. After the war concluded, there was a new commitment to sustain at
least two submarines (usually SSNs) in the region, which later dropped over
time to an occasional presence roughly 20-30% of the time by the mid-1990s. Files
indicate that during the period of late 1982 – 1983, the UK had credible
intelligence based concerns that the Argentines may mount a renewed threat on
the islands. This led to the deployment initially of HMS VALIANT and WARSPITE,
with HMS OSIRIS also deploying to cover an SSN gap when WARSPITE was delayed
arriving in theatre. We know from publicly available files that throughout 1983
HMS OSIRIS conducted intelligence collection patrols off the coast of Argentina,
tracking Argentine warships, and working with HMS VALIANT to map the Argentine
coast, activities of their warships and air force and build a deeper
understanding of the region. It is likely that throughout this period the Argentines
were blissfully unaware that in their main naval exercise areas, at least one,
and occasionally two British submarines were monitoring their every move. A
separate Pinstripedline blog will be written in due course about the patrol of
HMS OSIRIS and her encounters with the Argentine Navy.
In total though, the files
indicate that in the 1980s, at least seven, and likely a significantly higher
number, of patrols were conducted by the submarines ONSLAUGHT, ORPHEOUS, OSIRIS,
VALIANT, WARSPITE, CHURCHILL and COURAGEOUS. This conventional and nuclear presence was
maintained at a near 100% level of cover until the late 1980s. By 1991 the
official requirement had reduced to 42% cover, driven mainly by an SSK presence
with an SSN held at 14 days readiness, which due to the challenges faced by RN
reactor issues and reduced submarine hulls it was found to be very difficult to
sustain. Indeed by 1991 the RN had to make Ministers aware that if they
continued to focus on the delivery of Falklands patrols by SSN’s and SSK’s then:
“Because of the reduction in SSN
availability due to the continuing trouserlegs problem and the early run down
of submarine numbers due to Options, there are increasingly serious difficulties
in maintaining the 42% commitment. In
short due to the reduced size of the SSK fleet, it will no longer be possible
to plan on deploying SSKs to the South Atlantic after the end of this year. To
meet the requirement with SSNs would account for a disproportionate amount of
all SSN availability; there would be a serious impact on operational effectiveness,
training (including a further setback to Trident requirements), NATO, national
exercises and commitments’
Instead by the early 1990s the RN
gained ministerial approval to only conduct ‘periodic’ deployments to the
region using an SSN for between 15-25% of the time. These later deployments in the early 1990s are
particularly interesting as they required the submarines to be visible in a way
that they were not intended. To maximise deterrent value, Ministers approved
the planning of a programme which ensured:
“that submarine patrols include
provision for appropriate planned sighting opportunities so as to maximise
their deterrent value. While the operating instructions require the submarines
to conduct covert operations, much of the Falklands patrols is overt; for example,
surfaced movements, exercises and occasional port visits. Overt activities would
include as a high priority in future patrols.”
As noted above, by the late 1980s
one of the biggest challenges facing the RN submarine force was that of
operational availability of hulls. In 1989 a major crack was discovered in the
steam generator pipe of HMS WARSPITE, then under refit. In a note to the Prime
Minister in 1990 it was observed that this fault, known as the ‘trouserleg’ due
to its welding and seam location on the piping. It was noted that:
“This discovery undermined confidence
in similar welds in all other RN nuclear submarines… Failure of this weld could,
in the worst case, result in reactor damage and consequential radiological hazard…
This analysis was of such sufficient concern that in January this year the
Safety and Reliability Directorate (SRD)
of the UK Atomic Energy Authority, MODs independent safety assessors issued a
SAFETY REQUIREMENT that ‘operation of the nuclear submarine flotilla should cease
until an adequate safety justification has been formulated.
In other words, at the near end
of the Cold War, the MOD warned the Prime Minister that it had a reasonably
held belief that every single one of its then roughly 20 strong nuclear attack
and ballistic missile submarines was at risk of reactor damage and radiological
hazards causing the security of the entire force into question and that the
entire force needed to cease operations. This would mean the loss of the SSN
force to NATO operations as well as the breaking of the continuous at sea
deterrent while the problem was fixed. Instead, the solution was that where
suitable safety precautions were in place, operations could continue but on a strictly
case by case basis. This meant that at the end of the Cold War, large numbers
of the older RN submarine force were unable to operate, and several of the
older hulls were paid off early. This points to the real challenges faced by
the submarine force during this period, and which indicates why some submarines
were paid off early.
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Why does all of this continue to
matter today? Simply put, times have not changed! The UK continues to enjoy a similar
level of strategic concerns against Russia, security in the Med and residual
concerns in the South Atlantic. It is trying to do this with a nuclear attack submarine
force that is smaller now than at any stage during the Cold War, and which is extremely
busy.
By looking at how busy the fleet
was, where it operated and what it got up to, we are left with a sense of the challenges
faced by submariners and the sheer raw courage required to conduct what, at times,
appear to have been extremely risky and dangerous operations, far from home or
help. These files matter as they provide a snapshot of how busy the force was
during the Cold War, how important the role of submarines are to intelligence
collection and in monitoring potential threats, and in being able to respond
quickly to new challenges. None of these facts have changed today.
None of the files identified here will ever realistically be released to the public, nor is it likely to think that the stories within them be told. At best what we can do is look at the file titles and try to collate a public version of a very classified private world to understand how committed Royal Navy Submarine Service was during the later Cold War years.
The Mission List
Listed below are all the missions
conducted by the Royal Navy submarine service between 1980 and 1994 for which
operational records can be found on file titles in the National Archives. The table
sets out by year the missions conducted by each submarine. Unless otherwise
stated all these missions were conducted, at least in part, to carry out some
form of intelligence collection. Where a post mission analysis report has been
raised, this has been noted too. In addition, the ‘other operations’ column
shows operations where acoustic / ASW analysis has been carried out after the
mission, but where no the participating units are not known.
There are two tables to review.
The first is a chronological table, the second is one broken down by all submarines
for whom records could be found, listing the operation and its relevant file
reference in the TNA records system.
Some caveats -firstly, these dates
are based on the dates in the Archives and may not be precisely accurate for
the operation itself (e.g they may relate to activity in another year entirely).
Secondly this is not a complete listing, only the listing of the files declared
to the National Archives at Kew. There are likely to have been many more
missions for which no file has yet been identified or retained. For example,
the CO of HMS TIRELESS briefed on a mission to the Prime Minister in 1991, that
does not appear to align with any dates found in the archives.
Of note is the fact that ‘trouserleg’
problem appears to have had a significant impact on all RN nuclear operations
in 1990 and 1991, with the focus on deployments shifting from older hulls to
the newest of the TRAFALGAR class while the safety case was resolved. This is
borne out by open
source information from the early 1990s which reveals that the entire ‘C’
class were taken out of commission in the early 1990s, removing all these boats
from service, while no less than three non-refitting S boats were alongside for
most of 1991/92. This would reflect the direction that only the most urgent
tasks were carried out by the submarine service during this period.
By 1993 the problem seems to have
been recovered due to the paying off of older hulls, and the arrival in service
of newer ‘T’ Boats. Of note during this period was the sole operational use of
an UPHOLDER, with HMS UNICORN conducting intelligence missions during her single
deployment under the White Ensign. Another operation of note was OP IOWA, which
involved two different TRAFALGAR class submarines (TRIUMPH and TORBAY) in late
1993. It may be relevant to note that HMS VANGUARD commissioned in August 1993,
so it is possible that this operation may have been linked to her sea trials
and possible first deployment to protect her from other ‘interested parties’.
Overall this list shows just how
busy the RN submarine force has been in the late Cold War, and the levels of commitment
involved. It is a timely reminder of how much is asked of Submariners and the
risks they take on a daily basis – it is perhaps fitting that we will never
know what they did in any detail, only that this most silent of services had a
very loud and busy Cold War.
YEAR |
SUBMARINE OPERATION |
OTHER OPERATIONS |
1980 |
HMS CONQUEROR: OP SWAIN (nfd) |
|
1981 |
HMS CONQUEROR: OP BOMBA (nfd) |
|
1982 |
HMS ODIN: OP VINEGAR (Not intelligence related) HMS OLYMPUS: OP RUMOUR HMS ONSLAUGHT: Mission 208, Mission 209 HMS ONYX: OP SWELL HMS CHURCHILL: Nov 82 – Mar 83: South Atlantic Patrol HMS COURAGEOUS: Falklands Patrol HMS SUPERB: OP SARDIUS, Mission E79 (SIGINT mission?) |
OP MIDFIELD (Patrol Report 931) |
1983 |
HMS ONSLAUGHT: Patrol Report HMS ORPHEOUS: South Atlantic deployment for
intelligence collection HMS OSIRIS: South Atlantic deployment for
intelligence collection HMS OTUS: OP KERN HMS VALIANT: South Atlantic Patrol (Intelligence
gathering off Argentina) HMS WARSPITE: South Atlantic Patrol HMS COURAGEOUS: South Atlantic Patrol, Med Patrol (intelligence
gathering) |
|
1984 |
HMS OBERON: OP PARAGE (Possibly not intelligence), MISSION
A211 HMS ORACLE: OP WIDE HMS OSIRIS: OP JOINT (Not intelligence), South
Atlantic Patrols x3 for intelligence collection HMS SPECTRE: OP MALAISE, Mission E89, E94 (both likely
intelligence missions) HMS SPARTAN: OP WIDE HMS SPLENDID: Mission E92 |
OP IMPEACH |
1985 |
HMS ORACLE: OP JOKESMITH HMS CHURCHILL: Med patrol HMS SPARTAN: OP PILAU (Int mission, but linked to ASW
activity, Intelligence mission - JOINT ACOUSTIC AND ASW CENTRE mission report
raised) HMS TURBULENT: OP TORSION (nfd) |
OP WIDE OP RETAMA OP SCHUENBERG |
1986 |
HMS OBERON: OP FULMIN, OP EXPLORE (Baltic Sea) HMS ONSLAUGHT: South Atlantic Patrol HMS ONYX: OP FIG HMS OPPOSSUM: OP GRENADE (GIUK Gap) HMS ORPHEOUS: South Atlantic Deployment HMS SWIFTSURE: OP MASCLE A211 (Norwegian and Greenland
Seas patrol), Pacific Ocean deployment, South Atlantic Deployment HMS SOVEREIGN: Mission E108, E11 (Barents Sea
intelligence collection) HMS SUPERB: Mission B20, Norwegian and Greenland Sea
(likely intelligence gathering mission) HMS SPLENDID: OP WILFRED, Surveillance operations in
Med HMS TRAFALGAR: OP IMPLEMENT, OP THIN (Norwegian Sea) HMS TURBULENT: Mission B21 Surveillance Mission
Norwegian & Greenland Seas HMS TIRELESS: OP HORNIE |
OP TEMPLATE OP LOGICIAN OP ONTOGONEY |
1987 |
HMS ONYX: OP PROFANTITY HMS OPPORTUNE: OP SIBSTON, OP ABANDON HMS ORPHEOUS: OP YAP (GIUK operations, linked to DIS),
OP SIMBA, OP COSMOLOGY (anti Soviet operation) HMS WARSPITE: OP CLEM, OP FOUR SCORE, deployment to Med
HMS CHURCHILL: OP IMPERIOUS, OP FOXBAT HMS CONQUEROR: OP BIGLY HMS SWIFTSURE: OP TAZZA, OP NULL, OP EXPEND HMS TRAFALGAR: OP DEMIJOHN HMS TURBULENT: OP SPEEDWAY HMS TORBAY: OP CESTRIAN |
OP SALIVA |
1988 |
HMS ODIN: Med deployment HMS OLYMPUS: OP RABELAIS HMS ONYX: OP HEALD HMS OPPORTUNE: OP VORTREKKER HMS OSIRIS: OP INVESTON, South Atlantic Deployment for
intelligence collection. HMS OTTER: OP PROSELYTE HMS CHURCHILL: OP THUNDERSTROKE (Intelligence mission - JOINT
ACOUSTIC AND ASW CENTRE mission report raised) HMS CONQUEROR: HMS ACCRETION HMS SWIFTSURE: OP UNGUENT (Possible ASW patrol vs
Soviets) HMS SOVEREIGN: North Norwegian Sea patrol HMS SPECTRE: OP NECKED HMS TRAFALGAR: OP AMARENT, OP MATE (not intelligence
related?) HMS TORBAY: OP REGICIDE |
OP LANGLEY OP CHOCTAW OP WINCE |
1989 |
|
|
1990 |
HMS TRENCHANT: OP JUDAS |
OP PERQUISITE OP HOLDREDGE OP LANA OP DESTINATION OP TRELLIS OP VAUGHAN OP SEARCHLIGHT |
1991 |
HMS SOVEREIGN: OP HINTERLAND (Intelligence mission - JOINT
ACOUSTIC AND ASW CENTRE mission report raised) HMS TRAFALGAR: OP HUTCH OP ZINCALO (Intelligence mission
- JOINT ACOUSTIC AND ASW CENTRE mission report raised) HMS TURBULENT: OP DISSECTION (Intelligence mission - JOINT
ACOUSTIC AND ASW CENTRE mission report raised) |
OP QUESTOR OP HECKLER OP VIRGIL |
1992 |
HMS SUPERB: OP BOY |
|
1993 |
HMS OPPORTUNE: OP FIDDES, OP CALYPTRA HMS SUPERB: OP VAIN HMS TURBULENT: OP DACHS HMS TIRELESS: OP DOGROSE, OP CHAPPARAL HMS TORBAY: OP IOWA, OP CHAPMAN HMS TALENT: OP SHARP GUARD, OP CLICHÉ (Likely Med
related), Mission T32033 HMS TRIUMPH: OP RAGWORM, OP REMEMBER (PART 1 & 2), OP
IOWA |
OP GAGGER / HAROLD |
1994 |
HMS UNICORN: OP RELIEVE HMS VALIANT: OP OINTMENT HMS SPLENDID: OP YAM HMS TIRELESS: OP SHARP GUARD HMS TORBAY: OP NASEBY, OP ABBERLEY, OP SABBATICAL/SPARROW
MARSH (nfd), OP CHAMPMAN (conducted for Defence Research Agency), HMS TURBULENT: OP CARDAMON, OP HARGRAVE, OP ACCENTRIC |
OP MARGUERITE OP VAIN |
Submarine |
MOD Operations |
DI Naval Collection Operations |
Patrol Locations If Known |
OBERON |
Op PARAGE (Oct 1984)
DEFE69/1362 Op FULMIN (Oct 1986) DEFE
69/1494 (Also known as ‘mission 215’ –
likely intelligence collection for DIS) |
Mission A211 (Oct 1984) - DEFE 31/287 (Likely linked to OP PARAGE) Op EXPLORE (July 1986) - DEFE
69/1465 (Conducted in Baltic Sea) |
|
ODIN |
Op VINEGAR (Mar 1-31 1982) -
DEFE 69/1224 |
|
Mediterranean (June 1988) DEFE 69/1584 |
OLYMPUS |
Op RUMOUR (Feb 1982) – DEFE 69/1225 |
Op RABELAIS (Nov 1988) DEFE 69/1635 |
|
ONSLAUGHT |
|
Mission 208 (Jun 23 1982) - DEFE 69/1508 Mission 209 –( Sep 17 1982) - DEFE 69/1507 |
Patrol Report (May 01 – 31
1983) DEFE 69/1297 (DI
Tasking) South Atlantic (May – June
1986) - DEFE 69/1468 |
ONYX |
|
Op SWELL (Mar 1 – 31 1982) - DEFE
69/1219 Op FIG (Aug 8 – 26 1986) - DEFE
69/1436 Op PROFANITY (Jun 1987) DEFE 69/1535 Op HEALD (Mar 30 1988) - DEFE 69/1639 |
|
OPPORTUNE |
|
Op SIBTON (10 Mar 1987) - DEFE
69/1526 Op ABANDON (4 May 1987) - DEFE
69/1774 Op VORTREKKER (Aug 3 1988) - DEFE 69/1640 OP FIDDES (‘Hazan Supplement)
–(20 May 1993 DEFE 69/1958 Op CALYPTRA (Apr 5 – May 20
1993) DEFE
69/1975 |
|
OPPOSSUM |
|
Op GRENADE (Apr 24 1986) - DEFE
69/1442 Conducted in ‘Iceland/Faroes
gap’ |
|
ORACLE |
|
Op WIDE (Sep 1984) - DEFE
69/1360 -ASW report raised Op JOKESMITH (Jan – Dec 1985) DEFE
69/1416 (Fleet op analysis report raised) |
|
ORPHEOUS |
|
Op YAP (Apr 14 – 29 1987) DEFE
69/1464 (conducted in ‘Greenland-Iceland-Faroes Gap’) Op SIMBA (Jun 17, 1987) DEFE
69/1528 Op COSMOLOGY (Jul 21, 1987) DEFE
69/1536 (possible anti-Soviet mission) |
South Atlantic Patrol (Nov –
Dec 1983) – Likely conducted in part for Defence Intelligence. (DEFE 69/1272 & 1273) Med Patrol (conducted for
Defence Intelligence Staff) 03 Nov – 03 Dec 1986 (DEFE 69/1471) |
OSIRIS |
Op JOINT (01 – 31 Jul 1984) –
No file references to intelligence collection mission. |
Op INVESTON (11 Dec 1988) DEFE
69/1642 Deployment Diary (25 Jan – Mar
16, 1983) DEFE 31/262 |
Deployments to Falkland Islands
Jan – Mar 1983 (DEFE 31/262 refers – Will have been intelligence mission as
tasked by DI) ‘First South Atlantic Patrol’
(Nov 1 – 30 1984) - DEFE 69/1253 ‘Second South Atlantic Patrol’
(Dec 1 – 31 1984) DEFE 69/1254 – Possible Intelligence role ‘Third South Atlantic Patrol’
(Jan – Dec 1984) - DEFE 69/1255 South Atlantic Patrol (May 30
1988)DEFE 69/1583 – possible intelligence collection linked to file reference
226 |
OTTER |
|
Op PROSELYTE (Oct 4 1988) - DEFE
69/1636 |
|
OTUS |
|
Op KERN (Jan – Aug 1983) - DEFE
69/1636 |
|
UNICORN |
|
Op RELIEVE (Aug 28 – Sep 15
1994 DEFE 69/1966) |
|
VALIANT |
OP RUTLAND & OP BRIDGEPORT
(1968) - DEFE 26/2 –
likely SIGINT mission based on file title OP TRICKY (May 1 – Jun 30
1985)- DEFE 31/212 |
Op OINTMENT (Mar 11 – May 9
1994) - DEFE 69/1973 |
South Atlantic Patrol (May –
Jun 1984) - DEFE 69/1256 Unclear – Oct 1983 (Proceedings
doc remains classified) - DEFE 69/1299 |
WARSPITE |
|
Op CLEM (Apr 02 1987) - DEFE
69/1469 (Fleet OA Staff report) Op FOUR SCORE (Apr 10 1987) - DEFE
69/1530 |
Patrol in Med (Sep – Nov 1987)
DIS File DEFE 69/1524 |
CHURCHILL |
|
Op IMPERIOUS (Jan 1987) - DEFE
69/1529 Op FOXBAT (Aug 2 1988) - DEFE 69/1563 Op THUNDERSTROKE (Nov 4 1988) -
DEFE 69/1641 |
Patrol in South Atlantic (Nov
82 – Mar 83) - DEFE 69/1252 Patrol in Med – 1985 (DIS file)
- DEFE 69/1414, DEFE 69/1538, DEFE
69/1534 |
CONQUEROR |
Op PULP (Jul 01 – 31 1979) Op SWAIN (Dec 03, 1980) DEFE
69/1522 Op BOMBA (Jul 01 – 31 1981) DEFE
69/1300 Op AMELCORN (Oct 01 – 31 1981) DEFE
69/1114 Op ACCRETION (Dec 13, 1988) - DEFE
69/1566 |
Op BIGLY (May 6 1987) DEFE
69/1533 Op ACCRETION (Apr 1988) DEFE
69/1644 |
|
COURAGEOUS |
|
|
Falkland Islands (Nov – Dec 82)
- DEFE 69/1257 – Likely Intg
Gathering as ‘231’ file Falkland Islands Third Patrol
(1983) DEFE 69/1160 Med Patrol (Oct 1983) “Intelligence Gathering in the
Med” (Sep 1983)- DEFE 24/3017 |
SWIFTSURE |
N/A |
OP MASCLE ‘Mission B16’ (Apr 24,
1986) DEFE 69/1470 ‘Mission FP 086 Pacific Ocean’
– (Jul 25 – Sep 8, 1986) - DEFE 69/1466 Op TAZZA (Feb 18, 1987) DEFE
69/1527 (Op Staff report) Op NULL (Dec 14, 1987) DEFE
69/1539 Op EXPEND (Dec 15, 1987) DEFE
69/1525 Op UNGUENT (Nov 3, 1988) DEFE
69/1645 (ASW Report raise acoustics) |
Norwegian and Greenland Seas
(Op MASCLE) (Jan 7 – 1986) (DI Mission – DI8 Likely in
pursuit of Soviet ASW tactics) South Atlantic Patrol (May
1986) - DEFE 69/1473 |
SOVEREIGN |
Mission E108 (Mar 11 1986) - DEFE
69/1451 (likely intelligence gathering) |
Op HINTERLAND (Sep 12 1991) - DEFE 69/1884 |
Mission E111, Barents Sea (July
8 – 10 1986) DEFE
69/1467 Operations in North Norwegian
Sea (Dec 01 – 31 1988) - DEFE 31/267
(original DINC file) |
SUPERB |
Op SARDIUS (01 – 30 Apr 1982) -
DEFE 69/1221 Mission E79 (Oct 01 – Dec 31
1982) - DEFE 69/1286 (Likely
intelligence gathering) |
Op BOY (Dec 15 1992 – Jan 15
1993) DEFE 69/1962 Op VAIN (Apr 27 - June 02 1994)
DEFE 69/1895, DEFE 69/1964 |
Mission B20, Norwegian and
Greenland Seas, (Aug 5 1986) DEFE
69/1445 (Intelligence Mission) |
SPECTRE |
OP MALAISE (01 Apr – 30 Apr
1984) DEFE 69/1358 OP NECKED (Mar & Dec 13
1988) - DEFE 69/1565, DEFE 69/1637 |
Mission E89 (Jan 01 – 31 1984)
- DEFE 31/288 Mission E94 (Aug 01 – 31 1984)
- DEFE 31/285 |
|
SPARTAN |
OP WIDE (Nov 01 – 30 1984) - DEFE 69/1359 |
Op PILAU (Jan 01 – 31 1985)
(ASW raised) |
|
SPLENDID |
|
Mission E92 (Jun 01 – 30 1984)
- DEFE 31/286 Op WILFRED (Oct 16 1986) DEFE
69/1521 (Fleet analysis staff report) Op YAM (Sep 15 1994) |
‘Surveillance Operation in the
Med’ (Jan 7 1986) DEFE 69/1443 |
TRAFALGAR |
Op MATE (Feb 22 1988) DEFE
69/1562 |
Op IMPLEMENT (May 8 1986) - DEFE
69/1474 Op THIN (Oct 7 1986) - DEFE 69/1441 (Norwegian Sea) Op DEMIJOHN (Oct 9 1987) DEFE
69/1531 Op AMARENT (Apr 16 1988) DEFE
69/1638 Op ZINCALO (Aug 05 1991) DEFE
69/1883 Op KUTCH (Aug 6 1991) - DEFE
69/1881 |
|
TURBULENT |
Op TORSION (Jan 01 – Dec 31
1985) (fleet analysis report) |
Op SPEEDWAY (Dec 14 1987) DEFE
69/1537 Op DISSECTION (Jul 18 1991) DEFE
69/1878 OP DACHS (Mar 01-16 1993) DEFE
69/1974 |
Mission B21 Surveillance
Mission Norwegian & Greenland Seas (Oct 30 1986) DEFE 69/1444 |
TIRELESS |
|
Op HORNIE (Jun 25 1986) DEFE 69/1472 Op DOGROSE (Jan 25 1993) DEFE
69/1894 OP CHAPPARAL (Apr 19 1993) DEFE 69/1887 Op SHARP GUARD (Nov 2 1994 –
Mar 30 1995) DEFE 69/1980 |
|
TORBAY |
OP SABBATICAL / SPARROWMARSH
(Feb 20-21 1994) DEFE
69/1963 OP CHAMPMAN (30 Aug 1994) DEFE 69/1967 (Defence Research
Agency op) |
OP CESTRIAN (Oct 22 1987) OP REGICIDE (Dec 5 1988) DEFE 69/1643 OP IOWA (Dec 10 1993) DEFE 69/1959 OP CHAPMAN (Mar 23 1993) DEFE 69/2042 OP NASEBY (Aug 12 -21 1994) DEFE 69/1976 OP ABERLEY (Aug 26 -31 1994) DEFE
69/1977 |
|
TRENCHANT |
|
OP JUDAS (Oct 4 1990) DEFE 69/1885 Op CARDAMON, HARGRAVE,
ACCENTRIC (Jun 1994) DEFE 69/2043 |
|
TALENT |
|
OP SHARP GUARD (Feb 28 – Mar 23
1993) DEFE 69/1965 OP CLICHÉ (Apr 28 – May 11
1993) DEFE 69/1978 (Possible Med mission?) Mission T32033 (Nov 18 -23
1993) DEFE 69/1979 |
Patrol Report Feb 1993 - DEFE 69/1957 (DIS Related) |
TRIUMPH |
|
OP RAGWORM (May 23 – Aug 25
1993) DEFE 69/1968, 1969, 1970 OP REMEMBER (Phase 1 & 2)
Jul 26 – Aug 23 1993) - DEFE
69/1971 - DEFE 69/1972 OP IOWA (Dec 10 1993) DEFE 69/1960 |
|
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