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    Sub Found!

    <TABLE cellSpacing=0 cellPadding=0 width="100%" border=0><TBODY><TR><TD>WWII-era Japanese sub found near Hawaii






    HONOLULU, Hawaii (AP) -- The wreckage of a large World War II-era Japanese submarine has been found by researchers in waters off Hawaii.

    A research team from the University of Hawaii discovered the I-401 submarine Thursday during test dives off Oahu.

    "We thought it was rocks at first, it was so huge," said Terry Kerby, pilot of the research craft that found the vessel. "But the sides of it kept going up and up and up, three and four stories tall. It's a leviathan down there, a monster."

    The submarine is from the I-400 Sensuikan Toku class of subs, the largest built before the nuclear ballistic missile submarines of the 1960s.

    They were 400 feet long and nearly 40 feet high and could carry a crew of 144. The submarines were designed to carry three "fold-up" bombers that could be assembled for flight within minutes.

    Kerby said the main hull is sitting upright and is in good shape. The I-401 numbers are clearly visible on the sides, and the anti-aircraft guns are in almost perfect condition, he said.

    An I-400 and I-401 were captured at sea a week after the Japanese surrendered in 1945. Their mission -- which was never completed -- reportedly was to use the aircraft to drop rats and insects infected with bubonic plague, cholera, typhus and other diseases on U.S. cities.

    When the bacteriological bombs could not be prepared in time, the mission was reportedly changed to bomb the Panama Canal.

    Both submarines were ordered to sail to Pearl Harbor and were deliberately sunk later, partly because Russian scientists were demanding access to them.

    The submarine found Thursday is the second Japanese vessel discovered off Oahu by the Hawaii Undersea Research Laboratory. In 2002, researchers found the wreckage of a much smaller Japanese sub that was sunk on December 7, 1941, off Pearl Harbor.


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    #2
    Cool! I look forward to seeing some photos of the sub.

    Comment


      #3
      Actually that smaller sub was one of the 4 Mini - 2 man subs that was never found reportedly sunk in the hours shortly before the attack on Pearl Harbor. There was a special on the History Channel a few months back detailing the search and location of this sub. That leaves only 1 out of the 4 now unaccounted for.

      Comment


        #4
        A rat and Insect bomb,,,I think they got New York City but it was covered up!!! What an amazing thing I never knew. I wonder who assembled these bombs???
        Iam Uncle Sam
        That’s who Iam
        Been hiding out
        In a rock and roll band

        Comment


          #5
          Originally posted by münster
          A rat and Insect bomb,,,I think they got New York City but it was covered up!!! What an amazing thing I never knew. I wonder who assembled these bombs???
          I forget the Japanese officers name, but he had a complex hidden off in the wilderness of mongolia. The history channel just had a special about the whole Japanese biological program.

          Comment


            #6
            Been reading about the Sub,,,Amazing!
            Iam Uncle Sam
            That’s who Iam
            Been hiding out
            In a rock and roll band

            Comment


              #7
              I wonder if the other 3 carrier subs are nearby. There were 4 total and they all surrendered at the end of the war. The 4 subs together created a 10 plane bomber squadron. Japan orginally planned to use them for biological warfare against the US, the they decided to use them against the Panama Canal locks, then they were given new orders to attack the US Fleet. So basically they did nothing. Fascinating design and concept though. The US ended up sinking all 4 post war.

              Comment


                #8
                Very interesting, I wonder if it would be possible to raise it. I thought the I-400 and I-401 were scuttled together.

                Japan had four aircraft carrier subs....the I-400, I-401 (which carried three planes) and the I-13 and I-14 (carried two planes each). The I-13 was sunk enrout to Truk in July 1945. The two other special subs captured and sent to Pearl were the I-201 and I-203 that were designed to be high speed underwater boats. The I-201 and I-203 were sunk in 1946 testing a new torpedo exploder in anti-submarine warfare training.

                Sorry, I'm a Japanese sub geek

                Over, the commanding officer of Unit 731 was Ishii Shiro.

                Eric

                Comment


                  #9
                  Wasn't one of the carrier subs found off the Japanese coast recently with several other scuttled subs? I seem to remember hearing something about that.

                  Comment


                    #10
                    The I-402 was scuttled off Japan with other boats in 1946, she was one of ths sister boats to the I-400 and I-401 but was modified during construction into an oil transport. I think this was the one that was found a few years ago.

                    Eric

                    Comment


                      #11
                      I thought it was Manchuria, and they practiced with these diesase, and plagues also on chinese cities.



                      Originally posted by Over_Heer
                      I forget the Japanese officers name, but he had a complex hidden off in the wilderness of mongolia. The history channel just had a special about the whole Japanese biological program.

                      Comment


                        #12
                        the Japanese Imperial Army operated a biological research facility in Manchuria, China, it was known simply as 'Unit 731' under the command of Lieut-Gen Ishii Shiro. After the War, most of the personnel and records of this Unit were transferred to the USA which used them as the basis of their own biological/germ warfare research throughout the 50's.
                        Thomas.

                        Comment


                          #13
                          Manchuria....That's right, It's been a while since I saw the show I mentioned, I stand corrected

                          Comment


                            #14
                            Yes, & the diseases unleashed by the Japanese remain a problem in those parts of China where they were originally released.

                            Is it possible to raise that large a boat?

                            Comment


                              #15
                              Very possible, remember the Russian sub that was raised a few years ago? But the ethics of the site being a war grave come into play here. I really don't see any attempt being likely.

                              Comment

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