Report: Ukraine military dolphins to switch nationalities, join Russian navy
updated 7:41 AM EDT, Thu March 27, 2014
Weeks after Russia annexed Ukraine's Crimea region, it plans to take custody of dolphins in the nation as well.
Not just any dolphins.
These highly trained military mammals detect risks such as sea mines or
enemy scuba divers trying to slip through. Sea mines are sophisticated
weapons that can sink ships and other watercraft.
"The combat dolphin
program in the Crimean city of Sevastopol will be preserved and
redirected toward the interests of the Russian navy," state-run Russian news agency RIA Novosti reported Thursday.
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Dolphins are a crucial
part of open-water security. They detect sounds and objects in murky
waters that human beings can't, making them uniquely effective at
highlighting dangers on the sea floor.
Ukraine was using outdated military equipment for the dolphin program and planned to disband it next month, RIA Novosti said.
The Ukraine Defense
Ministry told CNN that the nation has an ocean dolphin facility but
declined to provide details, saying they're classified.
The dolphin program dates
to the 1960s, when Russia and Ukraine were part of the Soviet Union,
but was handed over to Kiev after independence, RIA Novosti said.
The U.S. Navy in San Diego also trains dolphins and sea lions to help protect its assets and find dangerous objects underwater.
Tensions between Moscow
and Kiev have escalated since Russia reclaimed the Crimea region after a
referendum this month that overwhelmingly supported the annexation. The
United States and its allies have pledged to isolate Russia for its
actions.
Ukraine also has combat sea lions that operate under the same base. It's unclear whether they'll be barking allegiances to Moscow or Kiev.
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