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U-boat commanders expected convoys to be vulnerable targets. Merchant ships were slower, lightly armed, and dependent on escorts for protection. For much of the early war, attacking convoys meant striking from stealth, firing torpedoes, and disappearing before escorts could react. But as the Battle of the Atlantic evolved, convoys stopped being easy prey. Allied escort groups became more coordinated, equipped with improved sonar, radar, and new anti-submarine tactics designed specifically to counter wolfpack attacks. Some escorts carried forward-throwing weapons, homing torpedoes, and aggressive counterattack strategies that allowed them to strike back immediately. In several encounters, U-boats that launched attacks suddenly found themselves tracked, hunted, and even torpedoed in return — turning the hunters into targets. This episode explores how convoy defenses evolved, how escort vessels learned to counterattack submarines directly, and why some U-boat assaults ended with the attacking submarine destroyed instead of the convoy. Subscribe for more WWII deep dives: @WarArchiveNetwork Like the video if you enjoyed the story Comment below: Which Battle of the Atlantic moment should we cover next? #ww2 #worldwar2 #uboats #navalhistory #battleoftheatlantic #history #wararchivenetwork This video is historical storytelling based on publicly available sources. Some details may vary between accounts. For academic research, consult primary historical records and official archives.