Rating: Summary: Clear & convincing Review: As others note here, this is a well-written and exhaustively researched account of the role of submarines in undercover operations during the Cold War. It contributes major understanding about that era. Inevitably, it asks whether the risks and expense were worth it; but it offers no answer. Here's one: Spying provided incontrovertable information to each side about the other's intentions, thus reducing threat of nuclear war. The effort was worth it, not for what it achieved,but for what it prevented. Everyone involved in these operations (even traitorous spies) helped prevent nuclear war. To those who did so from courage, their nation owes gratitude as surely as to those faced the perils of a shooting war.
Rating: Summary: What went on during the cold war Review: This was a very entertaining book. It was a true high seas adventure story. This is the information that you never hear about in history class but it happened. I have read several other books on Submarines the latest book on Rickover the Struggle for Excellence, and the Craven book the Silent War. Each told basically about the same time in history from different view points. I have to say I enjoyed the Rickover book more but this one was more of a page turner.
The book is chronological in order and tells the story of submarines and their clandestine operations. It gives you a feeling of what life was like aboard a submarine during the cold war and what they were trying to do.
It starts out with the first uses of the snorkel and some of the tragedies that they had at sea to emphasis how dangerous it was. Then it goes into a ship that was chased by the Soviets.
The middle of the book is mostly tails about attack subs and some of their secret missions and what they did mostly which was trailing Soviet subs.
The book tells what Craven thought was the cause of the Scorpion disaster and how he figures it out. Then it tells about the special uses of some of the submarines and their fish and the bat cave. You'll have to read to see what I mean.
The latter part of the book is about the cable tapping operations and what we found out.
Over all it is a very enjoyable read. People who will like this book are people who like adventure stories, stories about submarines and history buffs who want to know what really went on during the cold war.
Rating: Summary: More startling than any novel. Men against the Sea! Review: "Blind Man's Bluff" is a book that in any other country but the USA would have put its author and contributors in jail. For this is the story of many classified missions undertaken during the bad old days of the Cold War by American submarines against the Soviet Union. These missions were utterly classified, and startlingly successful much of the time.
Unknown to almost all American citizens, for several decades the US Navy's submarine force engaged in an aggressive intelligence campaign against the Soviet Union--in fact it is said that many US subs spent more time in Soviet coastal waters than did most Soviet vessels. According to this book, the Glomar Explorer episode, far from being an intelligence coup, was a poorly thought-out venture into the US Navy's turf by the CIA. On the other hand, various other heretofore unknown undersea intelligence operations were hugely successful, perhaps adding to US security in ways that most of us will never understand well enough to appreciate.
Regardless of one's personal attitude about the Cold War, this book makes plain the amazing level of both competence and courage that characterized US Navy submarine crews. It may have been peacetime to most of us, but these sailors went in harm's way often, putting their lives on the line by venturing into Soviet waters where their presence, if detected, would lead to a very likely lethal response.
The book gives some interesting perspectives on the Cold War. Soviet submarines never felt secure, and the Soviet Navy had an accurate perception that any time its submarines put to sea they were being aggressively hunted by a relentless, technically advanced enemy. On the other hand, much of this American technological and industrial prowess was at least in part neutralized by the second oldest profession in the world--human spies, i.e. the Walker spy ring and perhaps others. This book explains how an American intelligence operation that undoubtedly cost billions of dollars was eventually thwarted by a few traitors who were paid, at most, tens of thousands of dollars in bribes by the KGB.
This book is more engaging than any espionage novel and is a must-read for those interested in either espionage or stories of men at sea.
Rating: Summary: The story of the subs that helped us win the Cold War Review: It is hard to overstate the singularity and importance of this book. Blind Man's Bluff, as the subtitle says, truly is The Untold Story of American Submarine Espionage. Before the research of writers Sherry Sontag and Christopher Drew (with Annette Lawrence Drew) culminated in the publishing of this book, the stories of hundreds of submariners, true heroes one and all, had been shrouded in the secrecy borne of the Cold War. Many men aged and died without ever telling their wives and children what they did during their tours of duty; many family members never knew exactly how and why their loved ones never came home; many survivors have only now learned, thanks to this book, the exact nature of the missions they took part in, having never been privy to that information during their service. According to the authors, many of these men and their families have thanked them in quite emotional terms for finally telling their stories. The submariners of the United States Navy helped win the Cold War, and they deserve the heroic recognition they dutifully earned in service to their country.This book basically takes the reader through the secret history of submarine intelligence missions over the course of the Cold War years and beyond. Many of these tales prove once again that truth is oftentimes stranger than fiction. Triumph and tragedy abound. The book also serves as a primer of sorts for the history of the Cold War; the interplay between different American administrations, naval chiefs and admirals, larger-than-life sub captains, and brilliant civilian naval administrators immerses you in the full scope of military planning, action, reaction, and sometimes overreaction. The biggest mistakes that were made all seem to fall in the lap of admirals and high-ranking naval officers and administrators, and these mistakes put many lives in danger and caused a number of unnecessary deaths. The dangerous obstinacy of government bureaucracy is a problem we continue to deal with today. Submarines fulfilled innumerable intelligence-gathering missions during the decades after World War II. Subs infiltrated Russian waters to glean data about Soviet hardware, missile technology, and military behavior patterns; they secretly tailed all manner of Soviet subs across the oceans in order to identify each type of craft by the slightest of sounds and to learn the practices and tendencies of Soviet sub commanders (helping to ensure that the Soviets would be hard pressed to ever launch a massive nuclear first- or second-strike via the sea); they searched for valuable military hardware (both American and Soviet) along the ocean floor; and they brought home some of the most critical intelligence findings imaginable. Among the more remarkable stories detailed here are the Navy's successful attempts to locate a lost Soviet nuclear sub (which the CIA later attempted - embarrassingly unsuccessfully - to salvage from the bottom of the ocean), the mysterious loss of the US sub Scorpion (along with new information that would seem to finally explain the cause of the tragedy), and the collision of an American sub with one of its Soviet counterparts (just one of a surprising number of such collisions). Perhaps the most fascinating account to be found in Blind Man's Bluff is America's secret tapping of Soviet military cables underneath the sea off Okhotsk and in the Barents Strait. Submarines made a number of undetected trips to the discovered cables, hiding in relatively shallow waters literally just beneath the Soviet navy's very nose for days at a time, to collect and replace recorded tapes that gave Naval Intelligence an unprecedented look at Soviet plans and capabilities as well as crucial insight into the Soviet military psyche itself. You will meet some incredible heroes and brilliant intellectuals in this book: men such as John Craven, Commander Whitey Mack, Admiral Bobby Inman, and Tommy Cox, a would-be country singer who immortalized the deeds of his fellow submariners (and memorialized those who didn't make it back home) in song. Then there are John A. Walker, Jr. and Ronald W. Pelton, two of the worst traitors in American history. Walker spent eighteen years building a spy ring that turned over an immense number of secrets to the Soviets for less than one million dollars, while Pelton informed the Soviets of the Okhotsk cable tap for a mere $35,000. These men put the lives of hundreds of brave submariners at risk, greatly compromising their nation's security in the process, and will stand forever among the most infamous of American traitors. If you want to know what peril under the sea can really mean, read the amazing accounts chronicled in Blind Man's Bluff. America's submariners played a crucial role in our nation's defense for decades, but only now are their stories being told. It is a secret history more thrilling than that borne of the imaginations of the best military science fiction writers.
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