Friday, June 6, 2014

Blind Mans Bluff

The Blind Mans Bluff

The blind mans bluff was about two investigative reporters and a researcher have joined forces to produce an excellent history of U.S. submarine espionage operations. They take the story from the early days of the cold war, when we lost, by accident, the diesel submarine Cochino on a spy mission and nearly lost the Gudgeon to Soviet antisubmarine forces. They continue through the shift to nuclear submarines, the loss of the Scorpion. The role of the Halibut in finding the Soviet missile boat later salvaged by the CIA's Glomar Explorer, and the cable-tapping operations in which the Parche won more presidential unit citations than any other submarine in American history. They also cover open-sea efforts to shadow Soviet submarines, which occasionally led to dangerous collisions, and add to our knowledge of the horrendous safety record of the Soviet nuclear navy and the vices and virtues of Hyman G. Rickover, father of its American counterpart.
The significance of Blind Man Bluff is to show the world how the U.S. submarine were used and lost through out the cold war. It is used to show how much esponiage was going on back then.                                          

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