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German U-boat commanders entered World War II believing the ocean itself would protect them. Submerged beneath the waves, invisible to the human eye, submarines relied on stealth and silence to hunt Allied convoys across the Atlantic. Early sonar systems were limited, slow, and often unreliable, allowing U-boats to evade detection and strike with devastating effectiveness. For a time, it seemed like nothing could truly track a submarine once it disappeared underwater. But sonar technology evolved faster than anyone expected. Improvements in ASDIC systems, escort coordination, and anti-submarine tactics transformed sonar from a simple detection tool into one of the most feared weapons in naval warfare. Escorts could maintain continuous contact, predict evasive maneuvers, and guide precise attacks that left U-boat crews with fewer and fewer places to hide. What once felt like a safe depth quickly became a hunted environment where every sound could reveal your position. This episode breaks down how sonar reshaped the Battle of the Atlantic, how Allied escorts learned to track submarines relentlessly, and how technological innovation turned the hunters into the hunted. From early experimental systems to coordinated kill groups that changed underwater warfare forever, this is the story of the weapon that forced U-boats to fight a battle they could no longer escape. Subscribe for more WWII deep dives: @WarArchiveNetwork Like the video if you learned something new Comment below: Which submarine story should we cover next? #ww2 #worldwar2 #uboats #navalhistory #sonar #battleoftheatlantic #history #wararchivenetwork This video is historical storytelling based on publicly available sources. Some details vary across accounts. For academic research, always refer to official archives and primary documents.