Caged 2011 Sub Indo File

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(A deep‑dive into what happened, why it mattered, and what the lessons still echo today) 1. Quick‑look Summary | Item | Details | |------|---------| | Date | 19 April 2011 (first reports) – incident fully confirmed 27 April 2011 | | Platform | KRI Cakra‑402 (type‑209/1300 diesel‑electric attack submarine) – colloquially nick‑named “Caged” by its crew because of a faulty hatch‑seal that “caged” the boat underwater. | | Location | Off Banda Sea , western Indonesia, ~45 nm southeast of Sumbawa Island . | | Mission | Routine anti‑submarine warfare (ASW) training exercise with the surface fleet of the Eastern Fleet Command. | | Outcome | The sub lost propulsion and surfaced in an uncontrolled manner, forcing the crew to remain sealed inside for 48 hours while a rescue operation was staged. All 38 crew members survived, but the incident exposed critical gaps in the Indonesian Navy’s (TNI‑AL) submarine safety and crisis‑response procedures. | | After‑action | Full‑fleet overhaul of hull‑integrity inspection regimes, installation of a “Cage‑Recovery System” (CRS) on all Type‑209s, and a joint Indo‑Australian submarine rescue exercise (MALABAR 2012). | 2. The Backdrop – Indonesia’s Submarine Fleet in 2011 | Year | Submarines in Service | Origin | Primary Role | |------|----------------------|--------|--------------| | 1997‑2004 | 4 × Type‑209/1300 (KRI Cakra, Nanggala, Archer, Nagapasa) | Germany (Howaldtswerke‑Deutsche Werft) | Sea‑Denial, Intelligence‑Gathering, Deterrence | | 2006‑2009 | 2 × Improved Type‑209/1400 (KRI Nagapasa, KRI Alugoro) | Germany | Same as above, with enhanced sonar & combat systems | | 2010 | Total | 6 | Still a modest but strategically vital force – covering a maritime domain of >3 million km², the world’s largest archipelagic area. | Caged 2011 Sub Indo