An essential new account of how anti-submarine warfare is
conducted, with a focus on both historic and present-day
operations.
This new book shows how until 1944 U-boats operated as
submersible torpedo craft which relied heavily on the surface for
movement and charging their batteries. This pattern was repeated in
WWII until Allied anti-submarine countermeasures had forced the
Germans to modify their existing U-boats with the schnorkel.
Countermeasures along also pushed the development of high-speed
U-boats capable of continuously submerged operations.
This study shows how these improved submarines became benchmark
of the post-war Russian submarine challenge. Royal Navy doctrine
was developed by professional anti-submarine officers, and based on
the well-tried combination of defensive and offensive
anti-submarine measures that had stood the press of time since
1917, notwithstanding considerable technological change.
This consistent and holistic view of anti-submarine warfare has
not been understood by most of the subsequent historians of these
anti-submarine campaigns, and this book provides an essential and
new insight into how Cold War, and indeed modern, anti-submarine
warfare is conducted.
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