The Washington Times
published my review of Facing the Bear: Scotland and the Cold War.
After serving two years on an
aircraft carrier during the Vietnam War, I went from serving on one of the
largest ships in the world to one of the smallest, as I was assigned to a
100-foot Navy harbor tugboat at the American nuclear submarine base at Holy Loch,
Scotland.
The two tugboats at the
floating naval base in the middle of the loch were the workhorses of Submarine
Squadron 14. In addition to towing submarines and barges in the loch, the
tugboats were also sent out to rendezvous with submarines at sea. The tugboats engaged
in naval exercises with the submarines and performed medical evacuations and
intelligence missions.
I recall the American,
British and Soviet submarines playing dangerous cat and mouse games in the
Irish Sea and the North Atlantic, and had the Cold War turned hot, as Trevor Royle
states in his book “Facing the Bear: Scotland and
the Cold War,” Scotland
would have been a prime target for destruction by the Soviets.
The Cold War, which lasted
roughly from the end of World War II in 1945 to the fall of the Soviet Union in
1991, saw the US and NATO allies poised and ready for war with nuclear-armed
missiles aimed at the Soviet Union and the Eastern Bloc nations.
“For much of the period Scotland was on
the front line, mainly due to its position on NATO’s “northern flank” — the
waters of the north-east Atlantic and the Norwegian and Barents Seas with the
vital Greenland-Iceland-UK (GIUK) gap through which Soviet nuclear-armed
submarines and strategic bombers would have attacked in the event of an
outbreak of hostilities,” Trevor Royle
writes. “That made Scotland
the first major obstacle: it would have been in these northern seas and over
Scottish skies that the first battles would have been fought. That accounted
for the build-up of sophisticated antisubmarine warfare facilities and air
defenses in Scotland
and it was from the American and British bases on the Clyde that the strategic
submarines would have launched the response by way of Polaris and Poseidon
missiles, each of them capable of destroying Hiroshima several times over.”
In Mr. Royle’s
history of the Cold War era in Scotland, he
notes that not everyone was happy with the American Navy creating a nuclear
submarine base at Holy Loch near the Clyde. The 1960 US-UK deal to allow the
Polaris-equipped submarines to locate in Scotland became
a focal point for anti-nuclear protests. Mr. Royle
explains that the movement attracted pacifists, environmentalists, trade
unionists and leftist politicians. Yet many Scots welcomed the Yanks and were
thankful for the defense partnership, as well as the infusion of dollars into
the local economy.
… The book also covers the
Scottish regiments that served in the Korean War and in West Germany, as well
the Scottish cultural aspects of the Cold War. The book even mentions briefly
my old Navy tugboat, the USS Saugus, YTB-780.
You can read the rest of the
review via the below link:
https://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2019/oct/14/book-review-facing-the-bear/
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