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Can SPECTRE, or something like it - be that far away?

Heh. Criminal organizations building submarines. Of course, if I was on the Berkeley City Council I would be referring to the US Navy.  However, this submarine below was just being built by oppressed peoples who's only object is to meet the needs of oppressed people in the United States...  Of course, not a few national entities in the past grew out of criminal origins. Including in this country, also by simply meeting the needs of the oppressed.  Kennedy family fortune, anyone? 

July, 2010 Ecuadoran police found a real diesel-electric submarine sitting in a river, near the Colombian border, almost ready to move out into the Pacific ocean, apparently to move cocaine from Colombia to points north. The 23.5 meter/73 foot long, three meter/nine feet in diameter boat was capable of submerging.
Increased Activity In The Eastern Pacific
by James Dunnigan March 3, 2011

In the last seven months, security forces in Colombia and Ecuador have found two fiberglass submarines, built to transport cocaine to North America [PHOTO]. The countries involved, and the United States, are not talking about how many of these subs are out there, or believed to be in operation or under construction. What is known is that the U.S. Navy, in cooperation with some Central and South American navies, is looking for these subs. While these submarines don't run very deep (less than 50 meters/151 feet), they are invisible to radar when completely submerged. But these subs were designed to run on batteries for only a short period of time. When they are at sea, they usually operate their diesel engines. These are noisy. Sonar can pick up this noise over a long distance, and now that two of them have been captured, it's been possible to run the engines and get a sound profile of this type of boat, and equip American sonar systems with this data.
But the most potent weapon the U.S. Navy has against these tiny (less than 34 meters/100 long) subs is heat sensors. One of the two subs captured had a snorkel type device ( a tall structure extending from the conning tower, that contained pipes allowing diesel exhaust to escape and fresh air to be brought into the submerged boat.) It's this heat that airborne sensors can detect. All surface (or semi-submerged) ships at sea display this kind of "heat signature", and capturing working examples of these cocaine smuggling subs makes it possible to get a better idea of what the airborne heat sensors should be looking for.

It was only last July that Ecuadoran police found the first real diesel-electric cocaine carrying submarine. It was nearly completed, and ready to go into a nearby river, near the Colombian border, and move out into the Pacific ocean. The 23.5 meter/73 foot long, three meter/nine feet in diameter boat was capable of submerging. The locally built boat had a periscope, conning tower and was air conditioned. It had a commercial fish sonar mounted up front, so that it could navigate safely while underwater. There was a toilet on board, but no galley (kitchen) or bunks. Submarine experts believed that a five man crew could work shifts to take care of navigation and steering the boat. The boat could submerge to about 16 meters (50 feet). At that depth, the batteries and oxygen on board allowed the sub to travel up 38 kilometers in one hour, or at a speed of 9 kilometers an hour for 5-6 hours. This would be sufficient to escape any coastal patrol boats that spotted the sub while it moved along on the surface (its normal travel mode.) The boat could also submerge to avoid very bad weather. The sub carried sufficient diesel fuel to make a trip from Ecuador to Mexico. There was a cargo space that could hold up to seven tons of cocaine. The sub was built using fiberglass panels fitted over a wooden frame. It was designed by someone who knew how to build boats, and may have worked for one of several firms that now produce "recreational submarines."

The sub was captured where it was being assembled, and a nearby camp for the builders, appeared to house about fifty people. This was the first such sub to be completed, but not the first to be attempted. A decade ago, Russian naval architects and engineers were discovered among those designing and building a similar, but larger, boat. However, that effort did not last, as the Russian designs were too complex and expensive. It was found easier to build semi-submersible craft. But more and more of these are being found.

The other sub was found in southern Colombia earlier this month. Like the first sub, it was not military grade. It could travel submerged, but not dive deep. It was built using the same fiberglass material used for the more numerous semi-submersible craft, but was larger. It probably cost several million dollars to build and was weeks away from completion and sea trials. The drug sub was similar to the small subs being built since the 1970s for offshore oil operations and underwater tourism.

Meanwhile, the semisubmersible boats continue to operate. The Colombian Navy has found and destroyed semi-submersible drug smuggling boats being built in, and operating out of, Ecuador and Colombia. Troops have found workshops, with a nearby camp (for at least 30 people) that apparently support construction of these boats. In the last two decades, since this type of smuggling "submarine" was first encountered, the Colombian military has captured over 60 of them.

A typical Colombian "semi-submersible" is a 20 meter/63 foot long and 4 meter/12.5 feet wide, fiberglass boats, powered by a diesel engine, with a very low freeboard, and a small "conning tower", providing the crew (usually of four), and engine, with fresh air, and permitting the crew to navigate the boat. A boat of this type is the only practical kind of submarine for drug smuggling. The gangs are enterprising, and have found people able to turn their semisubmersible boats into fully submersible ones.
 

Copyright 2011 James Dunnigan and Strategy Page.  All rights reserved, used with permission.

14 Comments

WANT...!!!
 
What, Neffi, you gonna float it in Dillon Reservoir or something?  It ain't gonna float in the Platte or Arkansas, that's for sure!
 
I wonder if the sub builders were offered a large sum of money (even by their standards) if they would use one of their boats to haul some non-drug cargo into US waters?

Allahu akbar, amigo?
 
Carter Lake, or Horsetooth perhaps... just needs a deck gun (a Ma Deuce would be 'scale-ish')and I'll show them thar obnoxious power boaters a thing or two!
Bwahahahaha!
 
John NTA, the smugglers are criminal, not stupid. I seriously doubt they would take the risk of gaining the specific attention US special forces.

 
Casey - for enough money?  They're already helping bad guys across the southern border.  Move some ordnance for them?  Not outside the realm of possibility.
 
Casey: um, do you really think anybody cares about US armed forces as long as Barry Lackwit is their CinC?

On the subject of the Special Executive for Counterintelligence, Terrorism, Revenge, and Extortion -- if you mean S.P.E.C.T.R.E. as shown in Ian Fleming's original Bond novels, then I wouldn't be surprised to find that such organizations (yes, plural) are already in existence and that we and other countries deal with them daily.  If you mean the film version, then forget it.  Too expensive, too easy to find and destroy.  I don't see any reason to bother when you don't have to. 

 
Sometimes, you guys take me a little too literally.  And I initially did S.P.E.C.T.R.E. but it looked silly in the header.

As for can it exist - one could argue that versions of it - bandit kingdoms, like the kleptocrocies of sub-Saharan Africa, Asia, and as times Central and South America, tribal areas in the 'Stans, and some "company towns" in the US, etc, do exist, have exist, and have gained (or been given) legitimacy.
 
If they have captured 60 of them, I wonder how many they did not get? Better get the ASDIC sets and Hedgehogs out!
 
Are all the P-3 Orions grounded? They be pretty old.
 
 I would go a bit further than Sir John of Argghhh and say it is highly probable that the druggies have helped the Islamocrazies move ordnance into this country. I would be seriously shocked if they have not.

If we start seeing real air independent propulsion in those things, then we are in deep trouble.
 
@John: Hmm. I wasn't aware the drug cartels were doing that; I though they were just smuggling drugs & illegals.

That does change things.

 
 Casey, they are after money. How they get it doesn't matter to them. That they are cutting their own throats in the long run doesn't matter. As Keynes once told a critic, "in the long run we're all dead."
 
QM, my take on that is that they're after power and luxury-living, in that order.  Money's just a means to those ends.  I also think the drug lords honestly believe they can't be touched.  Their own countries can't do it because there are so many law-enforcement folks either on their payroll or scared stiff.  Plomo o plata, you know -- silver or lead, take the coins or take a bullet.  Only the US Army/Marines could stop them, and they have no reason to think we'll ever have the guts to commit the necessary manpower.