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Summary
Summary
In 1984, Tom Clancy released his blockbuster novel, "The Hunt for Red October," an edge-of-your seat thriller that skyrocketed him into international notoriety. The inspiration for that novel came from an obscure report by a US naval officer of a mutiny aboard a Soviet warship in the Baltic Sea. "The Hunt for Red October" actually happened, and Boris Gindin lived through every minute of it. After decades of silence and fear, Gindin has finally come forward to tell the entire story of the mutiny aboard the "FFG Storozhevoy," the real-life "Red October." It was the fall of 1975, and the tensions between the Soviet Union and the United States were climbing. It seemed the two nations were headed for thermonuclear war, and it was that fear that caused most of the crewman of the "FFG Storozhevoy" to mutiny. Their goal was to send a message to the Soviet people that the Communist government was corrupt and major changes were needed. That message never reached a single person. Within hours the orders came from on high to destroy the "Storozhevoy" and its crew members. And this would have happened if it weren't for Gindin and few others whose heroism saved many lives. Now, with the help of "USA Today" bestselling author David Hagberg, Gindin relives every minute of that harrowing event. From the danger aboard the ship to the threats of death from the KGB to the fear that forced him to flee the Soviet Union for the United States, "Mutiny" reveals the real-life story behind "The Hunt for Red October" and offers an eye-opening look at the Soviet Union during the height of the Cold War.
Author Notes
David Hagberg was born and raised in Duluth, Minnesota. After graduating from high school, he joined the Air Force and was trained as a cryptographer. During his career, he was stationed in Greenland and in Germany. He studied physics, mathematics and philosophy at the University of Maryland, Overseas Division and the University of Wisconsin. He worked as a cub reporter on the Duluth Herald and News-Tribune and as a news desk editor for the Associated Press. His first novel, Twister, was published in 1975. He has written over 70 suspense novels including The White House, Joshua's Hammer, Desert Fire, and High Flight. He won three Mystery Scene Magazine Best American Mystery awards for Countdown, Crossfire, and Critical Mass. His Sean Flannery novel, The Kremlin Letter, was also nominated for an American Book Award.
David Hagberg passed away on September 8, 2019 at the age of 76.
(Bowker Author Biography)
Reviews (4)
Publisher's Weekly Review
Prolific thriller writer Hagberg (Dance with the Dragon) and former Soviet naval officer Gindin recount the 1975 mutiny aboard the FFG Storozhevoy, a Russian antisubmarine warfare ship, which inspired Tom Clancy's international bestseller. Gindin was a senior lieutenant and chief engineer on the Storozhevoy when it was seized by Capt. Third Rank Valery Sablin. An idealist who "actually believes the Party line," Sablin intended to sail the ship into the Baltic Sea and broadcast an appeal to the Russian people to overthrow the corrupt Kremlin leadership. He secured the crew's support by promising them "an early out from the navy," and arrested the captain and the ship's officers, including Gindin, who refused to cooperate. Upon hearing the news, Kremlin leader Leonid Brezhnev ordered his navy to "find that ship and sink it." Under attack, the mutiny fizzled and the ship and crew were spared, but the personal repercussions were severe. Another nonfiction account of the Storozhevoy mutiny, The Last Sentry, was published in 2005, but the eyewitness testimony of coauthor Gindin justifies a retelling. Unfortunately, tutorials on subjects as diverse as historical mutinies and Soviet executions slow the narrative, and the documentation is bare bones. (May) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Booklist Review
The granddaddy of the techno-thriller, Tom Clancy's The Hunt for Red October (1984), was based on a real mutiny of a Soviet warship in 1975. The definitive account of that event is The Last Sentry (2005), by Gregory D. Young and Nate Braden; here novelist Hagberg grafts the memories of a Soviet naval officer who was aboard the warship onto the thriller format. Then in his early twenties, Boris Gindin was the engineering officer of the Storozhevoi, an antisubmarine vessel whose name means sentry. Gindin was not disaffected with the Soviet system, opposed the mutiny, and was locked up with other loyalty-minded officers for the revolt's brief duration. Its leader intended to sail into the Baltic Sea and broadcast an anti-Soviet manifesto, pirate-radio style. Readers not privy to the history will be surprised by the leader's identity, and once those cards are on the table, Hagberg switches over to the thriller framework of admirals ordering pilots to sink the Storozhevoi. Although it is evident that creative license has been taken, the underlying truth of Gindin's story comes through in Hagberg's dramatized rendition.--Taylor, Gilbert Copyright 2008 Booklist
Kirkus Review
Nonfiction thriller about the Soviet naval mutiny that inspired The Hunt for Red October. Veteran novelist Hagberg (Allah's Scorpion, 2007, etc.) teams with Gindin, one of the officers aboard the ship, who is now a U.S. citizen. FFG Storozhevoy was an antisubmarine frigate, a long, narrow, fast ship designed to hunt and destroy U.S. nuclear subs. In November 1975, the ship was in harbor at Riga, Latvia, being made ready for two weeks of repairs after a six-month cruise. Senior Lieutenant Gindin, at 24 a proud member of the Soviet navy, was in charge of the engine room. Hagberg conveys the barriers Gindin had to overcome as a Jew in the Soviet system while laying groundwork for the plot by Captain Valery Sablin, the ship's third in command. The abundant details about running the ship and daily life in the Soviet navy are sure to please military buffs and techno-thriller fans alike. But at the narrative's center stands the enigmatic Sablin, a true believer in the ideals of Marxism/Leninism who was appalled by the corruption of the Brezhnev-era Soviet Union. Believing that a majority of his fellow Russians shared his vision of a free Rodina (motherland), he planned to sail the ship near Leningrad and broadcast a tape pleading for the bureaucrats' overthrow. At first, his scheme succeeded. He tricked Captain Anatoly Potulniy, the ship's commander, into a locked room and armed enough crewmen to imprison those officers who did not support him. Then Sablin's luck began to run out. His tape, rather than being broadcast, was sent out on an encrypted military channel. One officer escaped to spread the alarm. Whatever chance the mutiny had of succeeding was gone as soon as the Kremlin learned of it. Hagberg manages to build and maintain the suspense even though readers know that the plot's failure is preordained. A little-known slice of Cold War history, as experienced by an insider and vividly retold by an old pro. Copyright ©Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Library Journal Review
In fall 1975, on the Baltic Sea, Cold War tensions culminated in a mutiny aboard the FFG Storozhevoy. The Soviet antisubmarine warship's political officer (zampolit) believed that Soviet leader Leonid Brezhnev's government had strayed from the Marxist-Leninist party line and that he could commandeer this ship, sail into Leningrad's (today's St. Petersburg) harbor, and broadcast a speech that would move the population to action. But when the route to Leningrad came suspiciously close to the Swedish coast, indicating a possible intent to defect, Brezhnev himself ordered the rogue ship to be sunk with all hands on board. Gindin, the FFG Storozhevoy's chief engineer and senior lieutenant, joins with National Book Award winner Hagberg (The Kremlin Conspiracy), to tell the story of these real-life events, which in part inspired Tom Clancy's novel, The Hunt for Red October. The narrative is fast-paced, even gripping in portions. Though the background history in various chapters is rudimentary and incomplete, the story withstands its brief recounting, and the embellishments are worth reading. Highly recommended for all public libraries.--Harry Willems, Park City P.L., KS (c) Copyright 2010. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Excerpts
Excerpts
Excerpt The morning of the mutiny the northern winter frost rides heavily on the stiff ocean breezes in the harbor. Not many people are up and about along Eksporta Iela Krastmala Street, which runs along Riga's waterfront on the Daugava River. Yesterday throngs of people lined up to see the ships of the great Soviet navy on parade to honor the fifty-eighth anniversary of the Bolshevik Revolution, but on this chilly pre-dawn all of Riga, it seems, is sleeping. Moored in the middle of the river are fourteen Soviet warships: submarines, destroyers, cruisers, tenders, and frigates, all in parade formation, all respectful of the law and order, peace and prosperity, that serving the Motherland--the Rodina--guarantees. It's a brave new world over which lies a morning haze of wood and coal smoke from the chimneys of homes of people lucky enough to find fuel to waste in late fall merely for heat. Aboard the frigate Storozhevoy, moored practically on top of an Alpha-class submarine, reveille has sounded. It is time for the two hundred men and officers to rise from their slumbers, dress in trousers and telnyaschka, the long-sleeved blue-and-white-striped undershirts that sailors wear no matter the time of year, and muster on deck for exercises. But yesterday was a holiday, and the mood this morning is almost universally one of indifference toward routine, yet there is a strange undercurrent of anticipation that has permeated the ship, though only two men know the reason. The Storozhevoy is a low-slung, sleek warship that even tied up at his* moorings looks like a greyhound at the starting block, ready at a moment's notice to charge forward, to do battle. At over four hundred feet on deck, he is a third longer than a football field, but with a narrow beam of only forty-six feet, flaring bows, a low-slung afterdeck, and midship masts bristling with radar and Electronic Surveillance Measures (ESM) detectors rising seventy-five feet above the water, the ship looks lean and mean. And dangerous. Down two decks and aft through three sets of watertight doors, open now, and just forward of the engineering spaces, before the midshipmen's mess, Ordinary Seaman Pavel Fomenko is sound asleep in his bunk while all around him in the cramped, smelly compartment, called a cubrick, his sixteen crewmates are bustling to get dressed and report on deck. It is 0700, still pitch-black outside. Standing above Seaman Fomenko's rack is his boss, chief of engineering, Senior Lieutenant Boris Gindin. At twenty-four, Gindin is a well-trained officer aboard ship, but he's young and relatively untested. The new men among the seventeen in his gas turbine section do not know him yet. He has a set of ground rules he learned at the academy and on his other postings, but he hasn't explained himself. He hasn't proven himself. He will stand up for them and defend them if the need should arise. But he wants to know that they will behave themselves, that they won't get drunk, that their uniforms will be neat at all times, and, most important, that they will obey orders. Riga is still asleep. But the crews aboard the other warships moored in the river are coming awake. From here the city's most famous structure can be seen. It's the wooden tower of St. Peter's Church in Vecriga, the old city. Dating back to the fifteenth century, it used to be the tallest wooden building in the world. Even now, rising seventy-two meters above street level, it gives a view all the way out to the Baltic Sea to the northwest. Tourists climb to the top to see the sights, and lovers make the pilgrimage for luck. For the Soviet sailors the tower represents nothing more than another authority figure. It's always something or someone, towers or officers, looking down on them, ordering them about, sometimes fostering a resentment in a man that can run deep. Like today. His crew needs to obey Gindin, but they do not have to know that he comes from nothing more than a middle-class family from Leningrad. Certainly not rich by any standards, certainly not well connected, certainly not favored by the Politburo or the Communist Party. They don't have to know he's a Jew. Every morning Gindin is up before his men, so that he can make sure they are ready for their mandatory exercises. In the academy, where he learned gas turbine engineering, he was on the weight-lifting team. He is five-feet-nine and stocky, with the round but pleasant face of a Great Russian, obsidian black hair, and blue eyes. It's obvious that he's in better physical shape than most of his men, especially Seaman Fomenko, in part because of the luck of the genetic draw but also because Gindin continues to work out and because officers aboard Soviet warships eat much better than enlisted sailors. Gindin kicks the man's bunk. "It's time to get up." Fomenko opens one eye and gives his officer a baleful look. He cannot get up with the others. "My father is an alcoholic and I have a hangover, so you see I cannot get up." "I don't appreciate your joke," Gindin tells the man. "Get out of bed now." Several of the seaman's crewmates have remained behind to watch from the open door. It is the officer against the new troublemaker. "I have told you that my father is an alcoholic and I have a hangover. Now go away and let me alone." Fomenko turns over in bed. He means to disobey a direct order. Gindin glances at the men watching the unfolding drama. He is not a hard man. He does not have a bad temper, as some of the other officers do. He does not treat his men harshly. But he does expect his orders to be obeyed. This is important to him, and to the ship, and especially to the Soviet navy, to which he owes his entire future. Gindin throws back the thin blanket, grabs Fomenko by the collar of his shirt, hauls him roughly out of bed, and slams him against the wall. "Do you feel better now?" "No," the seaman says. He is provoking Gindin to take the situation to the limit or leave him alone, in which case the men will have won a small battle against an officer. Gindin smashes the seaman against the steel bulkhead again, this time with much greater force. "How do you feel now?" Gindin asks. "Better but not good enough." Gindin lifts the man's feet completely off the floor and smashes him against the wall again, his head bouncing off the steel. "How about now?" "I feel much better, sir," Fomenko says. He is ready to go on deck for morning exercises. The seventeen men from the motor turbine division make their way topsides, where they join their comrades. Thirty minutes of exercise every morning, seven days per week, at anchor or at sea, rain or snow or shine. Curiously, despite the bland, monotonous food in the crew's mess and despite the fact that no matter the weather the men dress only in trousers and cotton shirts, no one gets a cold or the flu. These boys are healthy, most of them from the farms or small towns across the Soviet Union, with iron constitutions. Every morning after exercises the enlisted men are served kasha, which is a gruel made of hulled buckwheat, and a couple thin pieces of bread with a little butter, while the officers are served a special kasha made of processed oatmeal, cheese, kielbasa sausages, and as much good bread and butter as they can eat. After making sure that his men show up for their exercises Gindin walks forward to the officers' dining hall on an upper deck. It's about twenty-five feet long and half that width, with three long tables and two big windows. It is a bright, airy room, something Gindin appreciates, since his duty station is belowdecks in the machinery spaces. The table to the left is for the skipper, Captain Second Rank Anatoly Potulniy; his starpom, executive officer, Captain Lieutenant Nikolay Novozilov; and the zampolit, political officer, Captain Third Rank Valery Sablin; plus any visiting VIPs. This is the end of a six-month cruise, which has taken them as far around the world as Cuba, to show the flag, to show support for a friendly nation. Tomorrow the Storozhevoy, which in English translates very unsexily into "large patrol craft," is scheduled to sail to the Yantar Shipyard in Kaliningrad, where he will undergo two weeks of repairs, and then back to base at Baltiysk, fifty kilometers away. Gindin's family lives in Pushkin, about twenty-five kilometers south of Leningrad, and it'll be good to get home on leave, because he's just lost his father, Iosif, with whom he was very close. His dad's death was a real blow, which he is having a hard time dealing with. He wants to be morose, but he can't let himself slide into self-pity and still do his duties. But two weeks will not be soon enough for him to be with his mother, Yevgeniya, and sister, Ella, who need him. Boris's roommate, Senior Lieutenant Vladimir Firsov, is at the breakfast table when Gindin walks in and takes his place. The captain's not here this morning, but Zampolit Sablin is, and it looks as if he has a fire in his belly. "Good morning, Boris," Sablin calls with a lot of bonhomie. "It'll be a fine day, don't you think?" He's got dark hair, a good build, and the kind of face that is always smiling. Gindin remembers an incident when the ship sailed down to East Germany for a celebration of the thirtieth anniversary of the end of World War II. A parade had just passed by, and everybody on the pier was happy. Gindin and Sablin and some of the other officers went down on the dock, and Sablin scooped up one of the children and held the kid high in the air with a big smile. Everyone was laughing and singing. Sablin was married and had a child of his own, and he liked all children. But Gindin wasn't married, had no children, and didn't understand. Except that Sablin has the same happy, excited look on his face this morning as he had in Germany that day. "What's with our good zampolit?" Firsov asks. He's five-nine, with blond hair, a mustache, and a wicked kick on the soccer field. He's a bright guy. He and Gindin have hit it off. "He's always like that," Gindin says. "He thinks he's here to save us." "From what?" Firsov asks. "Our crazy crew?" Gindin looks sharply at him, thinking that he was the only one who'd noticed that something strange was going on. Things felt different somehow. It promised to be a bright, crisp weekend, and there was nothing to spoil it. Yet coming up a companionway from belowdecks he ran into some sailors who were in a huddle, having a serious conversation about something. When they spotted an officer coming their way, they broke off. It was a holiday, when people normally smile and laugh and have happy faces. But this morning Gindin has not seen any smiling sailors; he's heard no jokes, no laughter. Only sullenness. Except from Zampolit Sablin. The mess steward comes with Gindin's food. All the officers contribute an extra twenty-five rubles a month for good food, but Gindin has a special relationship with the cook because he controls the ship's water. It's the same on all Soviet warships. Some systems in the military seem to work better than others, and this is one of them. Another involves a pure alcohol, called spirt, which Gindin uses to clean his equipment. It's 96 proof and when distributed to a friend or to anyone you would like to curry favor with is part of another system that works well. "After duty we'll have some spirt," Gindin suggests to his roommate. "Maybe we'll figure out what bug Sablin has up his ass." Firsov is quick to laugh, and their zampolit, out of earshot, nods his approval. Sablin likes to see his men happy, especially his officers. He has a seemingly genuine interest not only in the crew's comfort and morale but, curiously, in the ship's systems as well. All the ship's systems, mechanical and electrical. But this morning his mood seems somehow contrived. Maybe false. As if he were afraid of something. Of what? Gindin wonders. Copyright (c) 2008 by David Hagberg and Boris Gindin. All rights reserved. Excerpted from Mutiny!: The True Events That Inspired the Hunt for Red October by David Hagberg, Boris Gindin All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.
Table of Contents
Acknowledgments | p. 9 |
Authors' Note | p. 11 |
Preface | p. 13 |
Preface | p. 15 |
The Mutinies | p. 21 |
Riga | p. 23 |
Riga | |
The Academy | |
Cold War Considerations | |
En Route to Havana | |
The Finest Navy on the Planet | |
Defending the Rodina | |
At the Ready | |
The Storozhevoy | |
The Baltic | p. 79 |
Evening of the Mutiny | |
Soviet Dogma | |
To the Midshipmen's Dining Room | |
The Shipboard Schedule | |
Sablin's Plea | |
The Great Soviet Failure | p. 115 |
Doublespeak | |
The Captain and the Engineer | |
The Zampolit | |
Moving Ashore | |
Building the Storozhevoy | |
Warship | |
Engineer | |
Baltiysk | |
Senior Lieutenant | |
The Big Lie | |
The Mutiny of FFG Storozhevoy | p. 167 |
Potulniy's Arrest | |
Mutiny | |
The Officers Divided | |
The Gathering Storm | |
Captive | |
Disappointment | |
Rage | |
Revolt | |
Deserter | |
The Alarm | |
Betrayal | |
The Sword and Shield | p. 225 |
The KGB | |
Escape | p. 239 |
Sablin | |
Firsov | |
Potulniy | |
Gindin | |
Nine Ounces | p. 261 |
Execution | |
The Hunt for FFG Storozhevoy | p. 273 |
Chain of Command | |
The Bridge | |
Belowdecks | |
Chain of Command | |
Il-38 May-052 | |
The Bridge | |
Chain of Command | |
Belowdecks | |
Baltic Fleet Headquarters, Kaliningrad | |
Tu-16 Badger Flight-01 | |
The Bridge | |
Big Ears | |
The Bridge | |
Chain of Command | |
The Bridge | |
Yak-28 Squadron | |
The Bridge | |
Yak-28 Squadron | |
Belowdecks | |
Chain of Command | |
Su-24 Squadron, Tukums Air Force Base | |
The Bridge | |
Su-24 Squadron | |
The Bridge | |
Su-24 Squadron | |
The Bridge | |
Belowdecks | |
The Bridge | |
Engine Room | |
Su-24 Squadron | |
The Bridge | |
Su-24 Squadron | |
The Bridge | |
Fear Has Big Eyes | p. 363 |
Vladivostok | |
Afterword | p. 369 |
Bibliography | p. 379 |