- Submariners are shielded from worldly worries and information.
- To encourage an undivided focus on their top-secret missions of nuclear deterrence.
- They are blissfully unaware of how the pandemic is turning life upside down.
- Mariners aboard ballistic submarines are spared bad news while underwater to avoid undermining their morale.
- The French navy won’t divulge what has or hasn’t been said to submarine crews.
- French submarine missions last 60 to 70 days, with about 110 crew members aboard.
According to an article published in 9News, Submariners stealthily cruising the ocean deeps, purposefully shielded from worldly worries to encourage an undivided focus on their top-secret missions of nuclear deterrence, may be among the last pockets of people anywhere who are still blissfully unaware of how the pandemic is turning life upside down.
Spared from bad news
Mariners aboard ballistic submarines are habitually spared bad news while underwater to avoid undermining their morale, say current and former officers who served aboard France’s nuclear-armed subs. So any crews that left port before the virus spread around the globe are likely being kept in the dark about the extent of the rapidly unfurling crisis by their commanders until their return, they say.
“They won’t know,“ said retired Admiral Dominique Salles, who commanded the French ballistic submarine squadron from 2003-2006. “The boys need to be completely available for their mission.“
Knowledge of pandemic after landing
Speaking exclusively to The Associated Press, Salles said he believes submariners will likely only be told of the pandemic as they head back to port, in the final two days of their mission.
“Those who are at sea don’t need this information,“ said Salles, who also commanded the nuclear-armed French submarine “L’Inflexible. The commander, I think, is doubtless informed about what is happening. I don’t think he’ll have all the details,“ he said.
Navy withholds information from submariners
For submariners, the return to land could be a shock
The doctor was underwater in 2012 when an Islamic extremist killed three French paratroopers and later killed a rabbi, his two young sons and grabbed an 8-year-old girl and shot her in the head. Only later did the officer learns of the attacks, “so when people talk to me about it, I find it impossible to imagine,“ he said.
Underwater – cut off from all information
When bombings hit Madrid in 2004, Salles didn’t inform submariners who were at sea for the ballistic flotilla that was then under his command.
Salles said the situation now will be toughest for any crews that leave the harbor in the weeks ahead, because they’ll know they are leaving loved ones in the midst of the pandemic and, possibly, still living in lockdown. The French government has already extended its stay-home orders once, to April 15, and said it could do so again.
Salles said he believes those crews will get regular coronavirus updates, but won’t be told of any family deaths until they are returning to the l’Ile Longue submarine base near Brest in Brittany.
Salles was at sea in a sub when his father died. The news was kept from him until he had finished his 60-day mission.
“No matter how serious an event is, there is nothing a submariner can do about it. And since he cannot do anything, better that he knows nothing,“ Salles said. “They know that they won’t know and accept it. It’s part of our deal.“
Did you subscribe to our daily newsletter?
It’s Free! Click here to Subscribe!
Source: 9News