USS Dahlgren and USS Spruance
Visit to Århus,
Denmark, September 1988 |
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The
double-visit of the USS Dahlgren (DDG-43) and USS Spruance (DD-963) to
Århus
in central Denmark took place only two months after the visit of the
USS
Conyngham (DDG-17), which was used to test Denmark's continued acceptance of
nuclear weapons in its ports following the so-called port visit election in May
1988 that was provoked on the issue of visits by nuclear-capable warships.
Both USS Dahlgren and USS Spruance were capable of carrying
nuclear weapons and in addition had been inspected and certified to store
nuclear weapons prior to their departure from the United States.
The
USS Dahlgren was a Farragut (DDG-37) class guided-missile destroyer. It was able
to stow and fire nuclear-armed ASROC anti-submarine warfare rockets and nuclear
Terrier anti-air warfare missiles. During the 1980s the ship was regularly
inspected and certified to carry out its assigned nuclear mission. Such
inspections were given to major combatants to ensure that the ships were ready
to fulfill their nuclear weapons missions in accordance with approved war plans.
The inspections and certifications of the USS Dahlgren were
documented in
a briefing paper which was released to the media in Denmark prior to the
visit. The briefing paper showed that the latest inspection and certification
prior to the arrival in
Århus, a Navy Technical Proficiency Inspection
(NTPI), was successfully held and passed on June 26-27, 1986.
What the briefing paper did not show, because it was not known
at the time, was that the USS Dahlgren prior to its departure from the U.S. east
coast loaded nuclear weapons onboard. The details of the nuclear loadout, the
schedule for the ship's operations in the Middle East and Northern Europe, and
the visit to Aarhus follow below:
USS
Dahlgren Nuclear Onload Prior to Denmark Visit, 1988 |
Date |
Description & Remarks |
07/30-31/87 |
Conducted
weapons onload in NWS Yorktown, VA., following dry-dock
period.
Deck Log:
07/30/87: 0940 - Commence handling special weapons;
1037 - Secured from handling special weapons; 1302
Commence special weapons handling. |
Jul-Sep 1987 |
Inport NORVA
(Norfolk, Virginia) and various local exercises. |
09/16/87 |
Inport
NORVA. [Deck Log]
Deck Log:
Moored at Pier 24. 0850 - Commenced handling weapons. BRAVO
hauled up; 0951 - Crane YD-214 along side for weight test;
1005 - Secured from weapons handling. |
09/29/87 |
Inport NORVA
where a Terrier nuclear weapons exercise was held. [Deck
Log]
Deck Log:
Moored at Pier 25. 0901 - Accident/Incident Drill fire on
Terrier deck; 0910 - Fire on Terrier deck out. Reflash watch
HT2 Sweeney.; 0920 - Injured man evacuated to DECON station;
0922 - Ship's safety team mustered to clear path to weapon;
0955 - Secured from Accident/ Incident Drill; 1005 - DC
Central reports Accident/ Incident Drill still in progress;
1017 - Security alert; Missile House Guard under DURESS.
Reported by GMM' Brannon; 1040 - Secured from security
alert. |
09/30/87 |
Inport NORVA
where an ammunition onload occurred. [Deck Log]
Deck Log:
Moored at Pier 25. 1000 - Late Entry: Commenced ammunition
onload; 1015 - Secured from ammunition onload. |
10/19/87 |
Inport NORVA
where a Terrier weapons accident exercise was held. [Deck
Log]
Deck Log:
Moored at Pier 24. 0755 - Terrier accident. Terrier
accident. A dropped weapons on the Terrier deck (Drill). |
10/30/87 |
Ammo onload
at NWS Yorktown, VA. |
11/03/87 |
Inport
Roosevelt Roads, P.R.
Deck Log:
Moored at Pier #3. 1445 - Commenced handling ASROC and
Torpedoes; 1510 - Secure from handling ASROC and Torpedoes. |
01/09/88 |
At NWS
Yorktown for an ammo onload. |
Jan 1988 |
Participated
in local exercise simulating ASW in Norwegian Sea. |
01/31/88 |
Inport
NORVA. [Deck Log]
Deck Log:
Moored at Pier 21. 1400 - DC Central reported all
conditions normal with the exception of high temperature
alarm in the missiles house and WSN-5 alarm in forward. |
Feb 1988 |
Inport
inspections and various sea trials. |
03/03-04/88 |
Inport NWS
Yorktown for ammo onload prior to overseas deployment. |
04/30/88 |
Enroute
Mediterranean from Bermuda steaming as part of the Forrestal
battle group, the ship assisted in recovering a missile
canister that had been dropped overboard from the USS
Forrestal (CV-59). [Deck Log]
Deck Log:
1451: Stopped to recover missile canister lost from USS
Forrestal (CV-59); 1512 - Swimmer Fields, Kenneth (...) in
water to assist recovery of missile canister; Missile
canister revered, on board. |
05-08/88 |
Operated in
Med., Red Sea, and Gulf of Oman as part of the Forrestal BG. |
08/27/88 |
While at
anchor off Benidorm, Spain, a
temperature alarm was sounded in the magazine. [Deck Log]
Deck Log:
1522 - Magazine high temperature alarm sounded. |
09/00/88 |
Participated
in operation Teamwork 88. |
09/16/88 |
Operating in
Solbergfjord near Sorreisa, Norway. |
09/25-29/88 |
Inport
Karlskrona, Sweden. "The first visit by a U.S. Warship to
that country in over 12 years." While inport Karlskrona,
magazine reports were issued daily. [Deck Log] |
09/30-10/03/88 |
Inport
Århus, Denmark. While
inport Aarhus, magazine reports were issued daily. |
10/03-08/88 |
Participated
in operation Baltops 88. |
10/25/88 |
Arrived back
in Norfolk. |
02/24/89 |
Underway for
operation North Star 89. |
04/02-05/89 |
Arrived at
NWS Yorktown, VA, for a complete weapons offload prior to a
three month Phased Maintenance Availability (PMA) at Norfolk
shipyard. |
The
USS Spruance is the lead ship in the Spruance class of destroyers. It
was originally outfitted with ASROCs, and from 1979 to 1985 the ship was
regularly inspected and certified to stove and launch nuclear ASROCs. In
1986, the ASROC launcher on the forward deck was removed and replaced by
a vertical launch (VLS) system capable of firing Tomahawk cruise
missiles. During 1987, after the installation of the VLS, the Spruance
tested out and trained with its new capability. By August 1988, it was
certified for Tomahawk cruise missiles.
The
briefing paper did not mention, because the details did not become available
until later, that the Tomahawk certification included an intense series on
nuclear weapons inspections in the months prior to USS Spruance's visit to
Århus. They includes as
many as five nuclear-related inspections and as well as a live (unarmed) nuclear
Tomahawk launch in the Gulf of Mexico. The detailed follow below:
USS
Spruance Nuclear Work-up Prior to Denmark Visit, 1988 |
Date |
Description & Remarks |
06/24-26/87 |
In Yorktown
for weapons onload following ROH.
Deck Log:
06/24/87: 0903 - Received daily magazine report. All arms
present and accounted for. |
12/00/87 |
Tomahawk
Training/TTQT. |
12/14-17/87 |
A Nuclear
Weapons Assist Team (NWAT) came aboard as part of
preparations for an upcoming inspection. |
01/28-29/88 |
Another
Nuclear Weapons Assist Team (NWAT) visit took place. |
02/04-05/88 |
A Nuclear
Weapons Acceptance Inspection (NWAI) was passed. |
02/09-12/88 |
Tomahawk
Training/TTQT. |
03/16-18/88 |
In NWS
Charleston for weapons onload.
Deck Log:
03/17/88: 0850 - Commenced ordnance handling. |
03/26-27/88 |
In Gulf of
Mexico for Operational Test Launch of nuclear Tomahawk from
VLS.
Deck Log:
03/25/88: 1630 - Simulated launching one Tomahawk missile;
03/27/88: 1007 - Launched one Tomahawk missile. |
09/26-28/88 |
Inport
Helsinki, Finland. |
09/30-10/03/88 |
Inport
Århus, Denmark.
Deck Log:
10/01/88: 0826 - Received daily small arms/magazine
temperature report; 10/03/88: 0853 - Received daily magazine
temperature/small arms report. |
10/03-08/88 |
Participated in exercise Baltops 88 in the
Baltic Sea. |
10/25/88 |
Returned to Mayport, FL. |
12/04-06/88 |
After
returning to Mayport on 25 October, the ship sailed to NWS
Charleston for weapons offload.
Deck Log:
12/05/88: 1015 - Commenced Tomahawk handling. |
01/03/89 |
Nuclear
Weapons Assistance Team (NWAT) visit. The ship
successfully met the requirements. |
01/89 |
A Nuclear
Weapons 923 Course was held. |
03/08-10/89 |
The ship
successfully completed a Nuclear Weapons Assistance Team
(NWAT) visit while inport Mayport, FL. This visit followed
a grounding and brief dry-dock period. |
04/11/89 |
A Nuclear
[Navy] Technical Proficiency Inspection (NTPI) was conducted
onboard. |
A copy of the briefing paper was delivered to the
Danish government, which responded that it did not wish to comment on
the "speculations" in the paper. "I do want to point out," Defense
Minister Knud Enggard later stated in the Parliament, "that the ships'
certification to use nuclear weapons does not mean that they have
nuclear weapons onboard." Once again, the Danish government chose to
turn a blind eye to violations of its nuclear ban.
Even when a much larger report on
U.S.
Naval Nuclear Weapons in Sweden was published in 1990, the Danish government
told reporters: "No comments." In Sweden, meanwhile, the Defense Ministry's
research unit (FOA) acknowledged that the report was credible and the Swedish
ruling Social Democratic Party voted -- against the will of the Foreign Minister
-- to begin enforcing Swedish non-nuclear policy.
The visit of the USS Spruance was also noteworthy because of
its loadout of Tomahawk cruise missiles. One year prior to the visit, the Danish
government praised the INF-agreement between the United States and the Soviet
Union to eliminate intermediate-range land-based nuclear missiles. It was ironic
that at the same time the INF-agreement began removing the land-based Tomahawk
(the Ground Launched Cruise Missile) from Europe, the Danish government welcomed
the sea-based Tomahawk onto its own territory.
©
Hans
M. Kristensen |
www.nukestrat.com | 2004-2005
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