Russia doubles number of trained dolphins to fight off Ukrainian attacks

Russia doubles number of trained dolphins to fight off Ukrainian attacks

DAILY STAR

Dolphins trained to defend Russia’s Sevastopol naval base in Crimea have doubled in number in response to the heightened threat from Ukrainian special forces divers, according to reports.

Several countries have trained dolphins for underwater military missions such as detecting mines, helping detect lost equipment on the sea bed, and to act as underwater ‘guard dogs’ against attack.

The idea originated with the US and Swedish navies in the early 1960s and was soon picked up in the Soviet Union.

With the collapse of the USSR, the entire Soviet combat dolphin programme was handed over to Ukraine but after the annexation of Crimea in 2014 the main base for the dolphins was once again in hands.

The Kremlin bizarrely claimed at the time that the highly intelligent marine mammals had “defected” to Russia.

The Russian navy is known to have bought a number of additional bottlenose dolphins in 2016.

Evidence obtained by Naval News shows that the number of dolphin pens at Sevastopol has increased from four to seven in recent months.

An increase in the number of pens suggests that more dolphins are being pressed into service as part of a multi-layered defence system that includes anti-torpedo nets and rocket launchers.

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