US nuclear-powered
submarine stops in Iceland for first time
By
ALISON BATH
STARS AND STRIPES • April 27, 2023
The Los Angeles-class submarine USS San Juan stops
for supplies and personnel April 26, 2023, off the coast of Iceland accompanied
by an Icelandic coast guard ship. (U.S. Embassy Reykjavik)
A nuclear-powered U.S. Navy submarine briefly
visited Iceland this week, after the NATO ally approved such visits for the
first time amid increased Russian underwater activity in the North Atlantic.
The Los Angeles-class submarine USS San Juan
stopped for supplies and personnel in waters off Iceland’s west coast on
Wednesday, U.S. Naval Forces Europe-Africa/U.S. 6th Fleet said in a statement
the same day.
The submarine visit came as the top U.S. military
officer in Europe told Congress on Wednesday that much of Russia’s military,
notably its undersea force, had not been degraded as a result of the war in
Ukraine.
“Their (submarine) patrols into the Atlantic and
throughout the Atlantic are at a high level most of the time … at a higher
level than we’ve seen in years,” Army Gen. Christopher Cavoli told the House
Armed Services Committee.
Last week, Iceland announced that it will allow
U.S. submarines to occasionally visit, with the assurance that the country and
its territorial waters will remain free of nuclear weapons.
The visits would help strengthen surveillance and
response capabilities by allied countries, “which ensures better situational
awareness and increases the safety of underwater infrastructure such as
submarine cables in the waters around Iceland,” the Icelandic Foreign Ministry
said in an April 18 statement.
San Juan does not carry nuclear weapons. It’s
armed with Tomahawk missiles and MK-48 torpedoes, according to Navy.mil. It has
a crew of about 143 and is homeported in Groton, Conn.
The frequency of U.S. submarine visits will vary
depending on need. Iceland has supported U.S. anti-submarine warfare aircraft
and other allied efforts at Keflavik Air Base, the foreign ministry statement
said.
Meanwhile, NATO allies also have been monitoring
recent Russian activity in the air that military officials have deemed unsafe.
German and British jets intercepted three Russian
warplanes flying over the Baltic Sea on Wednesday with their transponder
identification signals off, the German air force said.
That followed an incident near Estonia in March,
when a Russian refueling plane failed to communicate with Estonian air traffic
control, The Associated Press reported.
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