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During the Second World War, the River-class frigate was dismissed by Japanese commanders as a slow, lightly armed escort—hardly a serious threat to submarines operating in the Indian Ocean. That assumption proved catastrophically wrong. Designed for endurance, anti-submarine warfare, and relentless patrols, River-class frigates combined sonar, depth charges, and disciplined convoy tactics into a deadly system. When deployed against Japanese submarine operations linked to the Imperial Japanese Navy, these ships quietly began dismantling undersea threats one by one. In the waters of the Bay of Bengal and along the coast of Burma, Japanese submarines found themselves hunted by vessels they had never taken seriously. By the time Japanese analysts realized what was happening, twelve submarines had been destroyed—lost not to battleships or aircraft carriers, but to methodical escorts once written off as irrelevant. The lesson was brutal: in modern naval warfare, speed and glamour mattered far less than sensors, coordination, and persistence. This channel explores stories like this—where overlooked weapons and underestimated platforms reshaped World War II and the Cold War that followed. From escort ships and submarines to secret technologies and strategic miscalculations, we examine how small decisions and quiet weapons changed the course of history beneath the waves.