Saturday,
June 30, 2007
FBI Scuba Alert -Italians Pioneered Use of
Divers and Mini-submarines in WWI
The
ANNOTICO Report
Terrorist
fears are not unfounded.
The
Italian Navy pioneered the use of divers and mini-submarines prior to WW
I, and during WWI the Italians sunk the feared Austrian battleship Viribus Unitis and a freighter,
with a modified torpedo that was placed under the warship.
Prior
to WWII the Italians developed the The Maiale, that was powered by
a small electric motor and carried up to 650 pounds of explosives in a
detachable warhead upfront. The idea was for the two divers to get their ride
through anti-submarine measures like nets and such, find their target, dive
underneath it, attached the warhead like a mine to the hull of the boat, or
perhaps just place it on the bottom, arm it, and then, if possible, hightail
out of town.
The
Italians were remarkably successful with this tactic, attacking and sinking a
British tanker and two battleships in the
The British
captured one of the Italian minisubs and copied the
design and diving gear. In 1943, 51-feet long X-craft midget
subs, which had both diesel and electric power, and was able to disable
the German warship Tirpitz.
Ever since WWII,
Most major countries underwater divers have frequently conducted surveillance
on visiting Naval ships, having to elude increasingly
complicated countermeasures.
Scuba
Diver Info - Folsom,CA,
June
29, 2007
In this day and
age where we can
This morning I
saw that washingtonpost.com and other news agencies reported that the FBI has
recently alerted dive shops around the country to look out for suspicious
divers seeking advanced training, including night diving, diving in murky
waters and pipes, advanced navigation and use of underwater vehicles. The
advisory was said not to be based on a particular
threat but as a routine caution. Instructors, the Post quoted, should be aware
of "odd inquiries that are inconsistent with recreational diving."
With NAUI estimating that there are about 1,800 dive shops around the country
there are plenty of places to learn the ins and outs of diving and get the
required certifications. Terrorists could then easily rent equipment, have
their tanks filled and so on.
But what harm
could a scuba diver do? Peruse history and you see that divers often played an
important role in warfare. Terrorist fears are thus not unfounded. In WW II,
Italian and British divers successfully launched devastating underwater attacks
on enemy warships.
The underwater
division of the Italian Navy pioneered the use of divers and mini-submarines to
attack British ships stationed in Each of those 23-feet mini
subs, also nicknamed "maiale" which is
Italian for "pig," (because it was about as difficult to ride and
steer like a wild pig) had two divers sitting astride them like cowbows. (The picture shown is of a 1:48 scale model
available from a Polish website) The design went back to World War I where the
Italians had sunk the feared Austrian battleship Viribus
Unitis and a freighter with a modified torpedo that
was placed under the warship. The Maiale was powered
by a small electric motor and carried up to 650 pounds of explosives in a
detachable warhead upfront. The idea was for the two divers to get their ride
through anti-submarine measures like net s and such, find their target, dive
underneath it, attached the warhead like a mine to the hull of the boat, or
perhaps just place it on the bottom, arm it, and then, if possible, hightail
out of town. The Italians were remarkably successful with this tactic,
attacking and sinking a British tanker and two battleships in the
The British
captured one of the Italian minisubs and copied the
design and diving gear. In 1943, 51-feet long X-craft midget subs (see Wiki entry on the X class
subs.), which had both diesel and electric power, tried to sink the
German warship Tirpitz moored in a heavily guarded port in northern
Diving history is
also full of examples of divers using rebreathers to
infiltrate enemy territory or perform military operations underwater. They used
closed-circuit oxygen rebreathers that issued no
tell-tale bubbles at all. The depth limitation of 20 to 30 feet is rarely on
obstacle for such operations, and they are still being used today.
So how does all
this fit into terrorism 21st century style? Well, the obvious answer is that if
nail clippers and toothpaste are viewed as enough of a danger to make them
illegal on airplanes, then the use of scuba equipment can represent a
significant danger indeed. Terror is psychological warfare and harassment.
Massive attacks like 9/11 are few and far between, but the ever-present threat
impacts our lives. So it
The
ANNOTICO Reports Can be Viewed (and are Archived) on:
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Italia
Mia: http://www.ItaliaMia.com (3 years)
Annotico
Email: annotico@earthlink.net