25,99 €
inkl. MwSt.
Versandkostenfrei*
Versandfertig in 1-2 Wochen
payback
13 °P sammeln
  • Broschiertes Buch

The Antares Disaster On the night of November 21, 1990, the fishing vessel Antares left the small Scottish village of Carradale for what should have been a routine night's work in the Firth of Clyde. Aboard were four men: skipper Jamie Russell, Billy Martindale, Dugald John Campbell, and Stewart Campbell. By dawn, all four were dead, their boat dragged to the bottom after its trawl lines were snagged by HMS Trenchant, a Royal Navy nuclear submarine conducting training exercises in the same waters. The disaster that followed exposed a web of institutional failures: inadequate watchkeeping on a…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
The Antares Disaster On the night of November 21, 1990, the fishing vessel Antares left the small Scottish village of Carradale for what should have been a routine night's work in the Firth of Clyde. Aboard were four men: skipper Jamie Russell, Billy Martindale, Dugald John Campbell, and Stewart Campbell. By dawn, all four were dead, their boat dragged to the bottom after its trawl lines were snagged by HMS Trenchant, a Royal Navy nuclear submarine conducting training exercises in the same waters. The disaster that followed exposed a web of institutional failures: inadequate watchkeeping on a submarine whose command team was distracted during a high-stakes training course, fatal assumptions about surface vessels that led to an eight-hour delay in launching a search and rescue operation, and a culture of military secrecy that prioritized operational security over civilian safety. Four men paid with their lives for negligence that official investigations would later confirm was entirely preventable. The Antares Disaster tells the complete story of this tragedy for the first time, combining meticulous investigation with intimate human narrative. Drawing on Marine Accident Investigation Branch reports, Fatal Accident Inquiry proceedings, court martial transcripts, and extensive interviews with survivors, family members, and maritime experts, this book reconstructs the collision minute by minute while exploring the institutional failures that made it possible. But this is more than an account of a single disaster. It is the story of a small Scottish fishing community devastated by sudden loss, of families fighting for accountability in the face of institutional resistance, of a legal system that punished individual error while protecting systemic failure. It examines the hidden costs of military operations in civilian waters, the democratic deficit in how those operations are governed, and the ongoing challenge of shared seas where fishing boats and submarines must coexist. From the cramped control room of HMS Trenchant to the grief-stricken homes of Carradale, from the courtroom drama of the court martial to the quiet dignity of annual memorial services, The Antares Disaster reveals how four ordinary men doing dangerous work became victims of extraordinary negligence and how their deaths forced changes that continue to shape submarine operations more than three decades later. This is investigative journalism and maritime history, but it is also a deeply human story about loss, memory, and the cost of institutional failure. It asks uncomfortable questions about accountability, about the balance between national security and public safety, and about what we owe to those who work in dangerous professions while institutions tasked with protecting them fail in that duty. Jamie Russell, Billy Martindale, Dugald John Campbell, and Stewart Campbell went to work on a November night. They trusted that those sharing their waters would act with due care. That trust was misplaced. This is their story.