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🔥 If you want to dive deeper into this story, here are the books and resources I used to research this episode: 1. "Blind Man's Bluff" by Sherry Sontag - THE definitive book on Cold War submarine espionage. Contains detailed accounts of submarine collisions just like USS Baton Rouge. This is the book I used to research this episode. Get it here: https://amzn.to/4al5gsH 2. "Red November" by W. Craig Reed - Focuses specifically on U.S.-Soviet submarine confrontations in waters where collisions like Baton Rouge happened regularly. Includes incidents never before declassified. Get it here: https://amzn.to/48q6lNh 3. "Hostile Waters" by Peter Huchthausen - The story of K-219, another submarine collision in 1986 that nearly started World War III. Shows what could have happened if Baton Rouge had been worse. Get it here: https://amzn.to/3KqiPfV 4. If you prefer watching: "The Hunt for Red October" (4K) remains the best submarine thriller ever made and captures the tension of the Cold War underwater warfare that led to incidents like this. Get it here: https://amzn.to/48qQcqS *Your purchases directly support this channel. Every sale helps us research and produce more deep-dive Cold War submarine stories. Thank you! 🙏 USS Triton: The Nuclear Submarine That Circled The Globe In 83 Days Without Ever Surfacing February 16, 1960. New London, Connecticut. USS Triton (SSRN-586), the largest submarine ever built by the United States Navy, slipped beneath the frigid waters of the Atlantic and vanished. Her mission, classified at the highest levels and authorized personally by President Eisenhower, was audacious beyond anything attempted in naval history: circumnavigate the entire planet underwater without surfacing once. Captain Edward L. Beach Jr., a decorated World War II submarine commander and bestselling author, would lead 172 men on a 41,500-mile voyage through every ocean on Earth, past Soviet patrol zones, through treacherous straits, and around the storm-lashed capes that had claimed ships for centuries. For 83 days, the world above would have no idea that an American nuclear submarine was prowling beneath their feet, proving that the United States possessed a weapon that could go anywhere, stay indefinitely, and never be found. The voyage tested men and machine to their absolute limits. Eight days into the mission, Chief Radarman John Poole collapsed with kidney stones so severe that without surgery he would die. Beach faced an impossible choice: surface and destroy the mission, or watch his man suffer and possibly perish. In a feat of coordination conducted entirely through encrypted back-channels, Triton surfaced for exactly four minutes and eleven seconds in the South Atlantic darkness to transfer Poole to the cruiser USS Macon—then disappeared again before anyone knew she had been there. In the Drake Passage, where the Atlantic meets the Pacific in the most violent waters on Earth, Beach's sonar operators detected a Soviet submarine hunting them, forcing Triton to drift in absolute silence while the enemy searched overhead. In the Lombok Strait of Indonesia, uncharted seamounts rose from the seafloor without warning, and Beach navigated with less than two hundred feet between his keel and underwater mountains that no chart had ever recorded. RESOURCES: Primary Sources: Around the World Submerged by Captain Edward L. Beach Jr. (1962) - Commander's Personal Account USS Triton (SSRN-586) Deck Logs February-May 1960 - National Archives (Declassified) Operation Sandblast Mission Report - Naval History and Heritage Command Captain Beach Congressional Testimony - U.S. Naval Institute Archives Subscribe to Cold War Chronicles for untold stories of the silent service where nuclear technology and human courage reshaped the balance of power. Turn on notifications to follow our series on the submarines that held the line during humanity's most dangerous standoff. #USSTriton #ColdWarHistory #NuclearSubmarine #Circumnavigation #NavalHistory #OperationSandblast #SubmarineRecord #1960 #EdwardBeach #SubmergedVoyage #AroundTheWorld #MagellanRoute #SilentService #ColdWarChronicles #SubmarineEndurance #MilitaryHistory #NuclearPower #DrakePassage #LombokStrait #CapeHorn #U2Incident #Eisenhower #NavalEngineering #SubmarinePioneer #ColdWarTechnology Cold War, Cold War History, Submarines, Naval History, Military History, US Navy, Submarine Warfare, Naval Operations, Nuclear Submarine, Silent Service, USS Triton, SSRN-586, Operation Sandblast, Circumnavigation, Edward Beach, 1960, Submerged Record, Around The World, Magellan Route, Drake Passage, Lombok Strait, 83 Days, Submarine Documentary, Cold War Documentary, Nuclear Power, Naval Record, Exploration History, Ocean Voyage, Military Achievement, Submarine Pioneer, Endurance Record