Topic & Content

The Golf II-class submarine K-129 (hull number 722).
A Google Maps view with markers shows Sewell’s theory’s important locations.

Thesis

Author’s Background

Critical Observations

Positives

Negatives

Alternative Interpretation or Conspiracy Theory?

Dubious Claims & A Lack of Evidence – “Can neither confirm nor deny…”

Counterarguments

The Hughes Glomar Explorer
A CGI depiction of Glomar Explorer‘s Capture Vehicle (CV) lifting the Target Object (TO) (the forward section of the submarine).

Other Issues

Oh wait…it’s already been done! (Read the review here.) And it has David Duchovny in it who isn’t playing FBI agent Fox Mulder for once.

Evaluation (Does the content support the thesis?)

Rating:

Rating: 1 out of 5.

Notes

  1. We should be careful about construing an author’s background as indicative of all-encompassing expertise. Kenneth Sewell may be a submarine veteran who served on USS Parche (a very renowned and highly decorated spy boat), but that doesn’t automatically make him a historian or an expert on Soviet subs and K-129. Granted that there’s a lot of institutional knowledge that’s passed down to submariners (regardless of nationality), but at the end of the day, the only people who truly know about what happened on K-129 are gone. ↩︎
  2. As I’ve written before, conspiracy theories could be called simple answers to complex problems. Sadly, times have changed since I was a kid in the 1990s. Back then, conspiracy theories were all about extraterrestrials, the Illuminati, and the JFK assassination. I was a big fan of The X-Files TV show (and still am) and people seemed to treat conspiracy theories as light entertainment and fun brain exercises at best. Nowadays, extremist ideologies seem to have co-opted conspiracy theories to justify their actions. ↩︎
  3. No doubt the wreck is probably sitting in crates in some non-descript, heavily guarded warehouse in Redwood, CA, where some man in a black suit occasionally walks down the aisles to check on the contents. Right next to it is probably the Ark of the Covenant recovered by Indiana Jones. ↩︎
  4. AKA the furtive fallacy. ↩︎
  5. The CIA has indeed denied every Freedom of Information Act request regarding this event, but that’s not the only way to uncover information on an event. ↩︎
  6. Even the most convincing piece of evidence concerning the discovery of a radioactive oil slick by the University of Hawaii’s R/V Teritu off the French Frigate Shoals, which would point to a different location of the wreck site than officially claimed, is all sealed up and classified. So even that can’t be confirmed. ↩︎
  7. In historical research, the burden of proof is on the historian who needs to demonstrate sufficient probabilistic causation. From my understanding, Sewell’s other book, All Hands Down, about the sinking of USS Scorpion in 1968, has similar problems with demonstrating convincing evidence and is also marred by many technical inaccuracies. ↩︎
  8. I don’t mean to imply that the government never lies to people (yeah…right! I’m not that naive.), but the way the events align into a nifty conspiracy is too good to be true. ↩︎
  9. “Ray Feldman, ‘Another half-baked conspiracy theory!,’ Review of ‘Red Star Rogue,’ by Kenneth Sewell. Amazon.com, Accessed January 21, 2025, https://www.amazon.com/Red-Star-Rogue-Submarines-Nuclear/product-reviews/0743261127/ref=cm_cr_arp_d_viewpnt_rgt?ie=UTF8&reviewerType=all_reviews&filterByStar=critical&pageNumber=1.” Feldman was also interviewed for Norman Polmar and Michael White’s 2010 book Project Azorian, which was later made into the documentary Azorian: The Raising of the K-129. ↩︎
  10. It’s strange that Sewell continuously refers to this as a conning tower. WWII submarines had conning towers, but modern submarines refer to this area as the sail or fairwater. The purpose of the sail is to house the masts, and in the case of Golf-class submarines, the tops of the missile tubes. There’s a lot of pedantry that goes around when it comes to naval terminology, and submariners are no exception. Why Sewell, a sub sailor with experience aboard USS Parche would make this linguistic mistake is unknown. ↩︎
  11. The book Project Azorian uses all verifiable sources (no anonymous/secret mystery men) and the information used basically debunks all of Sewell’s wild claims. It even includes a whole chapter addressing various conspiracy theories about the sinking of K-129 (including Sewell’s). Norman Polmar is something of a household name in naval history and technical literature. His works are prolific and extremely well-researched. He’s not perfect, but it’s hard to go wrong with Polmar. ↩︎
  12. Alas, I suspect that the publishing industry is very similar to the film industry. Movies get greenlit when studio executives are convinced they’ll make money (logic and accuracy be damned). Publishers probably pick up manuscripts as long as they feel that they’ll sell and make money. For all of the good books out there, there are tons of trashy ones. ↩︎
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