- Source: Spanish submarine Tramontana
Tramontana (S-74) was an Agosta-class submarine built for the Spanish Navy by Bazán at Cartagena, Spain. She served from 1985 to February 2024, when she was decommissioned.
History
The submarine was launched in 1984 and commissioned in 1985.
It was involved in a collision during naval exercises near Cartagena, in 2001 as well as the Perejil Island crisis in 2002.
It was deployed as part of the Spanish contribution to the multi-national task force enforcing the United Nations Security Council Resolution 1973 "to take all necessary measures to protect civilians under threat of attack" in Libya on March 22, 2011.
Between 19 and 23 March 2012, the submarine participated in the INSTREX-12 exercise, along with 11 other ships and the Portuguese Tridente-class submarine, Arpao.
On 24 May 2013, Pedro Argüelles, Secretary of State for Defence, declared at the Congress of Deputies that shipbuilding company Navantia would review the technical delays of the S-80 Submarine, which had previously been discarded.
The Armada decommissioned the Tramontana in a ceremony on February 16, 2024.
Media
Part of the movie Navy SEALS was filmed aboard the submarine in November 1989.
See also
List of submarines of the Spanish Navy
Notes
References
Chant, Christopher (1987). A Compendium of Armaments and Military Hardware. New York: Routledge & Kegan Paul. pp. 158–59. ISBN 0-7102-0720-4. OCLC 14965544.