The history
of nuclear weapon accidents is as old as their introduction
The US Department of Defence
(DoD) first published a list of nuclear weapon accidents in 1968 which
detailed 13 serious nuclear weapon accidents between 1950-1968. An updated
list released in 1980 catalogued 32 accidents. At the same time, documents
released by the Navy under the Freedom of Information Act cited 381 nuclear
weapon incidents between 1965 and 1977.
A number of nuclear cases involve ships or submarines colliding at sea or, in some cases, submarine nuclear power units becoming unstable and the subs having to be abandoned. According to Greenpeace there have been more than 120 submarine accidents since 1956. The most recent incident, in August 2000, was the loss of the Russian nuclear submarine Kursk in the Barents Sea. The Kursk is the seventh nuclear submarine lost, five of them Russian, two American. There are 92 known cases of nuclear bombs lost at sea.