Emergency Deep: Cold War Missions of a Submarine Commander

Author:   Alfred Scott McLaren
Publisher:   The University of Alabama Press
ISBN:  

9780817320928


Pages:   272
Publication Date:   30 May 2021
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   In stock   Availability explained
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Emergency Deep: Cold War Missions of a Submarine Commander


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Overview

Conveys in dramatic detail the high-risk and covert operations of a nuclear attack submarine during the zenith of the Cold War Captain Alfred Scott McLaren served as Commander of the USS Queenfish (SSN 651) from September 1969 to May 1973-the very height of the Cold War. As commander, McLaren led at least six major clandestine operations, including the first-ever exploration of the entire Siberian Continental Shelf, a perilous voyage detailed in his previous book Unknown Waters. Emergency Deep: Cold War Missions of a Submarine Commander conveys the entire spectrum of Captain McLaren's experiences commanding the USS Queenfish mainly in waters of the Russian Far East and also off Vietnam. This book is a riveting and deeply human story that illuminates the intensity and pressures of commanding a nuclear attack submarine in some of the most challenging circumstances imaginable. McLaren focuses on operational matters, both great and small. Based on his own notes and records as well as discussions with former officers and shipmates, McLaren recounts his unique perspectives on attack-submarine tactics and exploratory techniques in high-risk or uncharted areas, matters of leadership and team-building and the morale of his crews, and the innumerable and often unforeseen ways his philosophy of command played out on a day-to-day basis, with consequences that ran the gamut from the mundane to the dire and life-threatening. Readers are also treated to significant new information and insight on submarine strategy, tactics, and culture-details that illuminate and bring to life, with both great humor and gravitas, the intensity and pressures on those engaged in covert missions on nuclear attack submarines.

Full Product Details

Author:   Alfred Scott McLaren
Publisher:   The University of Alabama Press
Imprint:   The University of Alabama Press
Weight:   0.590kg
ISBN:  

9780817320928


ISBN 10:   081732092
Pages:   272
Publication Date:   30 May 2021
Audience:   General/trade ,  Professional and scholarly ,  General ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In stock   Availability explained
We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately.

Table of Contents

List of Figures Acknowledgments Preface Prologue: Change of Command Part I. 1969 Chapter 1. Prospective Commanding Officers School, Washington, DC Chapter 2. Prospective Commanding Officer, USS Queenfish Chapter 3. Commanding Officer, USS Queenfish Chapter 4. The Pacific Northwest Part II. 1970 Chapter 5. First Cold War Mission Chapter 6. Initial Patrol Area Chapter 7. A Golf II-Class SSB Chapter 8. An Echo II SSGN and Other Submarines Encountered Chapter 9. Pearl Harbor to the Pacific Northwest Chapter 10. En Route to the Arctic Ocean Chapter 11. To the North Pole Chapter 12. Toward the Siberian Continental Shelf Chapter 13. Severnaya Zemlya and the Laptev Sea Chapter 14. Across the Laptev Sea Chapter 15. North of the New Siberian Islands Chapter 16. The Malevolent East Siberian Sea Chapter 17. The Chukchi Sea Chapter 18. Nome and the Voyage Home Chapter 19. Pearl Harbor Part III. 1971 Chapter 20. Local Operations Chapter 21. A Cold War Mission and Preparations for WestPac Chapter 22. WestPac Deployment Chapter 23. The Big Event Chapter 24. Off Again! Chapter 25. Yokosuka, Japan Chapter 26. Our Third Cold War Mission Chapter 27. Zaliv Petra Velikogo Chapter 28. Yokosuka Again Chapter 29. Yankee Station, Vietnam, Hong Kong, Guam, and Home Part IV. The Hard Years, 1972 and 1973 Chapter 30. Final Months in Command Chapter 31. The Operational Reactor Safeguards Examination Chapter 32. Genesis Chapter 33. Final Deployment to WestPac Chapter 34. Last Cold War Mission Chapter 35. Yokosuka and Hong Kong Chapter 36. Services to Seventh Fleet and Vietnam Chapter 37. Guam and Return to Pearl Harbor Epilogue Notes Suggestions for Further Reading Index

Reviews

A superb portrayal of a senior command officer conducting some of the most daring, pioneering, exploratory, and military missions it is possible to conceive. It is the description, in part, of primary original geographic, oceanographic, and bathymetric research in some of the most challenging environments the planet has to offer and the human technology, endurance, intelligence, and creativity to match those almost unbelievable and unexplored places, all while maintaining absolute military secrecy and stealth. --Peter J. Capelotti, author of Adventures in Archaeology: The Wreck of the Orca II and Other Explorations Emergency Deep is authored by a highly-rated, successful commander of a combat submarine in a conflict that while 'cold' could have gone 'hot' at any time. The human side-the personalities, the honest discussions of human behavior, including tension, humor, and occasional terror are handled very well. The volume does an exceptional job of being relatable to anyone who might never get a chance to be in a virtual pressure cooker like a nuclear submarine. --James P. Delgado, author of War at Sea: A Shipwrecked History from Antiquity to the Twentieth Century and Silent Killers: Submarines and Underwater Warfare


Emergency Deep is authored by a highly rated, successful commander of a combat submarine in a conflict that while 'cold' could have gone 'hot' at any time. The human side--the personalities, the honest discussions of human behavior, including tension, humor, and occasional terror--are handled very well. The volume does an exceptional job of being relatable to anyone who might never get a chance to be in a virtual pressure cooker like a nuclear submarine. --James P. Delgado, author of War at Sea: A Shipwrecked History from Antiquity to the Twentieth Century and Silent Killers: Submarines and Underwater Warfare A superb portrayal of a senior command officer conducting some of the most daring, pioneering, exploratory, and military missions it is possible to conceive. It is the description, in part, of primary original geographic, oceanographic, and bathymetric research in some of the most challenging environments the planet has to offer and the human technology, endurance, intelligence, and creativity to match those almost unbelievable and unexplored places, all while maintaining absolute military secrecy and stealth. --P. J. Capelotti, author of Adventures in Archaeology: The Wreck of the Orca II and Other Explorations As Fred's XO during his last WESPAC deployment, I can say without a doubt he has described the trials and tribulations we went through during that period with a largely inexperienced wardroom. As a former skipper of a nuclear attack sub, I can also say he has depicted extremely well what it is like to be in command of such a vessel. Fred was a superb skipper and I have said to many, if I had to go in harm's way as an XO, I would want it to be with Fred as skipper. --Captain Ted A. Hamilton US Navy (RET) This firsthand account reveals the trials, tribulations, and triumphs of one of the finest American submarine skippers of the Cold War, Captain Fred McLaren. McLaren possessed the rare combination of technical and nuclear knowledge and tactical-operational brilliance. His story reflects a real-life Hunt for Red October. --Scott Laidig, author of Al Gray, Marine: The Early Years, 1950-1967, Vol. 1 and Al Gray, Marine: The Early Years, 1968-1975, Vol. 2


The US Navy's Submarine Force has a reputation of being the 'Silent Service.' This refers not only to actual operations and tactics, but also the Force's aversion to disclosing its history. Except for well publicized voyages of endurance or exploration by early nuclear-powered submarines, the US Submarine Force has declassified very few records of Cold War submarine operations. As a result, retired US Navy Captain (ret.) Alfred Scott McLaren's new book is a welcome addition to a growing body of Cold War submarine memoirs and unofficial histories, including two of his previous works.: --Michigan War Studies Review Emergency Deep is authored by a highly rated, successful commander of a combat submarine in a conflict that while 'cold' could have gone 'hot' at any time. The human side--the personalities, the honest discussions of human behavior, including tension, humor, and occasional terror--are handled very well. The volume does an exceptional job of being relatable to anyone who might never get a chance to be in a virtual pressure cooker like a nuclear submarine. --James P. Delgado, author of War at Sea: A Shipwrecked History from Antiquity to the Twentieth Century and Silent Killers: Submarines and Underwater Warfare Emergency Deep is authored by a highly rated, successful commander of a combat submarine in a conflict that while 'cold' could have gone 'hot' at any time. The human side--the personalities, the honest discussions of human behavior, including tension, humor, and occasional terror--are handled very well. The volume does an exceptional job of being relatable to anyone who might never get a chance to be in a virtual pressure cooker like a nuclear submarine. --James P. Delgado, author of War at Sea: A Shipwrecked History from Antiquity to the Twentieth Century and Silent Killers: Submarines and Underwater Warfare A superb portrayal of a senior command officer conducting some of the most daring, pioneering, exploratory, and military missions it is possible to conceive. It is the description, in part, of primary original geographic, oceanographic, and bathymetric research in some of the most challenging environments the planet has to offer and the human technology, endurance, intelligence, and creativity to match those almost unbelievable and unexplored places, all while maintaining absolute military secrecy and stealth. --P. J. Capelotti, author of Adventures in Archaeology: The Wreck of the Orca II and Other Explorations As Fred's XO during his last WESPAC deployment, I can say without a doubt he has described the trials and tribulations we went through during that period with a largely inexperienced wardroom. As a former skipper of a nuclear attack sub, I can also say he has depicted extremely well what it is like to be in command of such a vessel. Fred was a superb skipper and I have said to many, if I had to go in harm's way as an XO, I would want it to be with Fred as skipper. --Captain Ted A. Hamilton US Navy (RET) This firsthand account reveals the trials, tribulations, and triumphs of one of the finest American submarine skippers of the Cold War, Captain Fred McLaren. McLaren possessed the rare combination of technical and nuclear knowledge and tactical-operational brilliance. His story reflects a real-life Hunt for Red October. --Scott Laidig, author of Al Gray, Marine: The Early Years, 1950-1967, Vol. 1 and Al Gray, Marine: The Early Years, 1968-1975, Vol. 2


Emergency Deep is authored by a highly-rated, successful commander of a combat submarine in a conflict that while 'cold' could have gone 'hot' at any time. The human side-the personalities, the honest discussions of human behavior, including tension, humor, and occasional terror are handled very well. The volume does an exceptional job of being relatable to anyone who might never get a chance to be in a virtual pressure cooker like a nuclear submarine. - James P. Delgado, author of War at Sea: A Shipwrecked History from Antiquity to the Twentieth Century and Silent Killers: Submarines and Underwater Warfare A superb portrayal of a senior command officer conducting some of the most daring, pioneering, exploratory, and military missions it is possible to conceive. It is the description, in part, of primary original geographic, oceanographic, and bathymetric research in some of the most challenging environments the planet has to offer and the human technology, endurance, intelligence, and creativity to match those almost unbelievable and unexplored places, all while maintaining absolute military secrecy and stealth. - Peter J. Capelotti, author of Adventures in Archaeology: The Wreck of the Orca II and Other Explorations


Author Information

Alfred Scott McLaren, Ph.D. and retired US Navy Captain, is recipient of the Distinguished Service Medal and two Legions of Merit, president emeritus of The Explorers Club, former senior pilot of the SAS Super Aviator submersible, and president emeritus of The American Polar Society. He is author of Unknown Waters: A First-Hand Account of the Historic Under-ice Survey of the Siberian Continental Shelf by USS Queenfish (SSN-651) and Silent and Unseen: On Patrol in Three Cold War Attack Submarines.

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