I decide to alter course and speed to get in front of the CVBG to carry out my mission to scout ahead of them.
With the CVBG located my primary task now is to look for enemy submerged combatants. I use a combo of sprint and drift and alternating above and below the layer to stay ahead of the CVBG while trying to find any Soviet submarines.
I wish I could deploy my towed array for better acoustic search but apparently the depth of water (700ft-900ft) is too shallow for its deployment. I will have to count on the Hull array.
Unfortunately the Soviet's find the CVBG before we detect them. Sonar reports torpedoes in the water to the south and then explosions. Luckily the Soviet submarine targeted the Iowa (BB61) first, and she succeeds in decoying a number of torpedoes before being hit - and shrugging off major damage due to her armor. I order Battlestations and announce I have the Deck and the Conn.
Since none of the surface ships already identified were BBs I assume one of the surface contacts on the south side of the CVBG is the Iowa. But which and where is the Soviet sub? Watching the CVBG they all turn to the North and the Helo's move to the south of the CVBG so odds are the Soviet sub is south/on the other side of the CVBG from me. I order the Diving Officer to go deep and the Helm to increase speed to Full heading directly into the CVBG.
Once in the CVBG I order depth above the layer and slow to listen to what is going on. It appears the Soviet sub continued her attack on the Iowa based on reports but still no detection. I continue moving south thru the CVBG and slowing to give my sonar a better chance to detect the Soviet sub.
After a few minutes Sonar announces "submerged contact bearing 189 estimate 14nm. Designate Sierra-20." Since there are no other NATO submarines in the area, and the Iowa was just attacked, this sounds like our Soviet. We have a bearing and it appears at 14nm she may be moving off following her attack on the Iowa. My plan is to stay on this course a little longer to gather more sonar data then turn across her bearing to perform target motion analysis (TMA) to generate a better firing solution and close the range if possible.
A few minutes later Sonar changes everything - "Contact Sierra-20 classified SSN estimated range 3-5nm." Then seconds after that - "Sierra-20 has been classified as an Alfa class SSN". The contact is an Alfa and she is in the midst of the CVBG just like me - probably lining up her next attack. So much for spending time on TMA…
