'A Time to Die': The Kursk Disaster
Book Reveals New Details of Russian Sub Sinking Tragedy

The Kursk was an Oscar-class submarine, more than 500 feet long and armed with cruise missiles designed to knock out aircraft carrier groups.

Cover of 'A Time to Die: The Untold Story of the Kursk Tragedy' (Crown Publishing: ISBN 0609610007)
All Things Considered, January 13, 2003 · During naval exercises in the frigid Barents Sea on Aug. 12, 2000, two explosions ripped through the Russian submarine Kursk, and the mammoth ship quickly sank to the bottom in more than 350 feet of water.
British journalist Robert Moore -- an award-winning broadcaster who covered the collapse of the former Soviet Union for the ITN television network -- tells NPR's Robert Siegel that the disaster was an accident waiting to happen. In his new book, A Time to Die: The Untold Story of the Kursk Tragedy, Moore details the poor decisions and political bungling that led to the death of 118 sailors.
The Kursk was not just any Russian submarine. Fast, stealthy and technologically complex, the Kursk was the pride of the cash-starved post-Soviet sea force. Today's rusting Russian navy is a shadow of its former glory when the Soviet Union was a true superpower. For example, the men who served aboard the Kursk sometimes went months without getting a paycheck.
The explosions that doomed the Kursk were most likely caused by the use of hydrogen peroxide as a torpedo propellant -- a chemical so volatile that Britain's Royal Navy banned its use decades earlier. The explosions in the forward torpedo room killed almost all the crew instantly, but 23 sailors found refuge in the very last compartment. However, the batteries of the Russian mini-sub sent to save them didn't run long enough for sustained rescue operations.
With time running out, Russian military leaders kept a tight lid of secrecy over the incident, and only accepted foreign help days later. Moore believes the chance of rescuing the trapped sailors was minimized by the Russians waiting so long to accept help.
"It was really a case of political paralysis," Moore tells Siegel.
Related NPR Stories
- Aug. 15, 2000: NPR's Mike Shuster reports the Russian navy has begun a rescue operation to save the men of the Kursk.
- Aug. 21, 2000: NPR's Michele Kelemen reports that Norwegian divers have confirmed Russia's worst fears -- all 118 men aboard the Kursk are dead.
- Aug. 23, 2000: NPR's Michele Kelemen reports that President Vladimir Putin says he feels guilty and responsible for the sinking of the Kursk.
- Dec. 5, 2000: NPR's Noah Adams talks with Don Degener, a diver for the Halliburton Company, about his experience as the only American diver working on the Kursk recovery mission.