PETROPAVLOVSK-KAMCHATSKY, Russia, Aug. 7, 2005

Russian Sub Crew Safe, Thankful

Rescued Sailors Reported In 'Satisfactory' Condition

  • Play CBS Video Video Russian Sub Crew Rescued

    Seven sailors trapped aboard a Russian submarine were rescued by a British submersible. They spent almost three days in Kamchatsky penninsula, north of Japan. CBS News' Sheila MacVicar reports.

    • The AS-28 mini-submarine crew, with Lt. Vyacheslav Milashevsky, commander of the vessel, at right, gets off a ship at the port of Petropavlovsk-Kamchatsky, Russia, Sunday.

      The AS-28 mini-submarine crew, with Lt. Vyacheslav Milashevsky, commander of the vessel, at right, gets off a ship at the port of Petropavlovsk-Kamchatsky, Russia, Sunday.  (AP)

    •  (CBS)

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  • Interactive The Sinking Of Russia's Kursk

    Russia's nuclear submarine Kursk sinks in the Barents Sea, taking with it the lives of 118 seamen.

(CBS/AP) 
The red-and-white-striped sub surfaced at around 4:26 p.m. local time, some three days after becoming stranded in 600 feet of water off the Pacific Coast. It was carrying six sailors and a representative of the company that manufactured it.

Earlier, Russian ships had tried to tow the sub and its entanglements to shallower water where divers could reach it, but were able to move it only about 60-100 yards in the Beryozovaya Bay about 10 miles off the Kamchatka coast.

Then, a British remote-controlled Super Scorpio cut away the cables that had snarled the 44-foot mini-submarine. Once the obstructions were removed, there was a last spasm of anxiety as the submarine remained still.

"Then after two or three minutes, it broke free and within three minutes it surfaced," Ivanov said.

The British vehicle was sent after the Russian navy made an urgent appeal for international help--unlike during the August 2000 sinking of the nuclear submarine Kursk, when authorities held off asking for outside assistance for days. All 118 aboard the Kursk died.

The men aboard the small submarine waited out tense hours as rescuers raced to free them before the vessel's air supply ran out. The sailors put on thermal suits to protect them against temperatures of about 40 degrees Fahrenheit and were told to lie flat and breathe as lightly as possible, officials said. To conserve electricity, the submarine's lights were kept off and there was only sporadic contact with the surface.

"The crew were steadfast, very professional," Pepelyayev said on Channel One television. "Their self-possession allowed them to conserve the air and wait for the rescue operation."

Officials said the mini-submarine was participating in a combat training exercise Thursday when it got caught on an underwater antenna assembly that is part of a coastal monitoring system. The system was anchored with a weight of about 66 short tons, according to news reports.

Russia's cash-strapped navy apparently lacks rescue vehicles capable of operating at the depth where the sub was stranded.

Putin's silence about the sub crisis echoed his stance during the sinking of the Kursk, when he remained on vacation as the disaster unfolded. Critics said he appeared either callous or ineffectual.

The new crisis indicated that Putin's promises to improve the navy's equipment apparently have had little effect. He was sharply criticized for his slow response to the Kursk crisis and reluctance to accept foreign assistance.

CBS News Correspondent Mark Phillips reports that security concerns were a major reason the Russians were so reluctant to bring foreign rescuers during the Kursk emergency. This time they seem to have placed the lives of the sailors first.

Still, Phillips reports, this is a very sensitive area, full of high-tech equipment.

New criticism arose within hours of Sunday's rescue. Dmitry Rogozin, head of the nationalist Rodina party in the lower house of parliament, said he would demand an assessment from the Military Prosecutor's Office of the navy's performance in the incident, the Interfax news agency reported.

Rogozin said he wants to know why Russia has not acquired underwater vehicles similar to the ones provided by Britain and the United States and "why fishing nets and cables litter the area of naval maneuvers."

"It appears the naval command is not in control of the area of naval exercises," he said, according to Interfax.


©MMV, CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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