News

Barents Sea, August 12th, 2000. During a Russian naval exercise, and after suffering a serious accident, the K-141 Kursk submarine sinks with 118 crew members on board.
The docuseries examines the events of August 2000, when an explosion aboard the K-141 Kursk submarine saw the vessel sink to the bottom of the Barents Sea with the crew trapped inside. It asks why ...
K-141 Kursk was an Oscar-II class nuclear-powered cruise missile submarine of the Russian Navy, lost with all 118 hands when it sank in the Barents Sea on August 12, 2000.
On August 12, 2000, just three months after Putin took office, the Russian nuclear submarine K-141 Kursk suffered a catastrophic explosion during a naval exercise, killing 118 sailors.
When it was commissioned in 1994, the nuclear submarine K-141 “Kursk” was one of the most powerful assets of the Russian Navy. The size of two jumbo jets, it was considered impenetrable ...
During his naval service he had not only served on the “Admiral Kuznetsov” but was present during the Kursk submarine disaster. The Russian nuclear-powered submarine K-141 Kursk sank in the Barents ...
A former British soldier fighting for Ukraine was captured by Russian forces in the Kursk region, and a video shows the man identifying himself as 22-year-old James Scott Rhys Anderson.
James Scott Rhys Anderson, a 22-year-old British mercenary, has been captured by Russian forces in the Kursk region. The Russian Ministry of Defence reports that 141 mercenaries from Great Britain ...
K-141 Kursk, a nuclear submarine, sank off the coast of the Murmansk Oblast in August 2000. A gas leak caused a torpedo to explode and killed most of the 118-man crew.