Chinese State Media Has Doubts On U.S. Navy Explanation For USS Connecticut Collision

(FILE PHOTO) © REUTERS/Mass Communication Specialist 1st Class James Kimber/U.S. Navy/Handout via Reuters  

Business Insider: China's state media accuses the US of lying about what happened to submarine it says hit an underwater mound in the South China Sea  

* A US submarine hit an underwater object in October, for reasons that were initially a mystery. 

* The Navy concluded Monday the USS Connecticut hit an uncharted hill beneath the surface. 

* Chinese state media are not satisfied, and without evidence floated the idea of a nuclear spillage. 

Chinese state media are casting doubt on the US account of what happened to a nuclear submarine that collided with an object last month. 

US Navy investigators concluded Monday that the nuclear-powered attack submarine USS Connecticut hit an uncharted underwater hill while patrolling in international waters in the South China Sea on October 2. 

"The investigation determined USS Connecticut grounded on an uncharted seamount while operating in international waters in the Indo-Pacific region," Cdr. Haley Sims, a 7th Fleet spokesperson, told Insider on Monday.  

Read more ... 

WNU Editor: My gut is telling me that the reason why Beijing is focused on this collision is that they did not know the sub was there, were surprised by it, and they are now trying their best to gleam as much news and intel that they can.

More News On Chinese State Media Having Doubts On The U.S. Navy Explanation For USS Connecticut Collision  

US investigation on submarine collision ‘untransparent’ -- Global Times  

China deplores lack of transparency in U.S. nuclear sub accident probe -- CGTN  

China says ‘irresponsible’ US hasn’t clearly explained submarine incident -- SCMP 

China Accuses US of 'Lack of Transparency' Over Sub Accident -- AP  

China: US lacking 'transparency and responsibility' on submarine accident -- The Hill  

Beijing slams lack of answers after US claims nuclear submarine hit ‘uncharted seamount’ in Indo-Pacific -- RT

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