Mike Clancy

former Technical and Scientific Director
Fleet Numerical Meteorology and Oceanography Center

Project AZORIAN was a CIA project to covertly recover the sunken Soviet ballistic missile submarine, K-129.  The K-129 went down with all hands approximately 1,600 miles northwest of Hawaii on 8 March 1968 at a location that was unknown to the Soviets.  However, using underwater surveillance technology, the U.S. Navy was able to determine where the submarine sank within about 6 miles.  Subsequently, the U.S. Navy submarine Halibut was able to find and photograph the K-129, more than 3 miles down on the ocean floor. This enabled a covert recovery operation, which was launched in June of 1974, using a remarkable ship built specifically for this task, the Glomar Explorer.

Project AZORIAN was one of the most exciting, complex, secretive, expensive and potentially rewarding intelligence gathering operations of the 20th Century.  The marine technology it employed in the attempt to recover the submarine was like nothing seen before or since.

There are six significant connections between Project AZORIAN and the Monterey Area. This presentation will highlight these connections while reviewing the history of this incredible and extraordinarily dangerous episode of the Cold War.  In addition, the speaker will present a novel theory on the root cause of the K-129 disaster.

Date

March 26, 2025

Time

11 AM to NOON Pacific Time

Location

MBARI
7700 Sandholdt Road
Moss Landing, CA 95039

Zoom webinar registration

In-person attendance is limited to staff and approved guests. The seminar will be presented in a hybrid format, you can register for the Zoom link here.