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Royal Navy warship hit submerged Russian hunter-killer submarine in chase across north Atlantic



 Regal Navy warship hit lowered Russian tracker executioner submarine in pursue across north Atlantic

HMS Northumberland crashed into a Russian submarine close to Scotland

The Royal Navy transport was shipped off track down the submarine 200 miles seaward

The sub crushed into the British vessel's sonar hardware as it passed overhead

The accident, which occurred in 'late 2020' as per a MOD representative, is accepted to be the main impact of British and Russian boats since the Cold War

A Royal Navy warship crashed into a Russian tracker executioner submarine in the frigid waters of the north Atlantic in what is accepted to be the primary impact among Russian and British vessels since the Cold War.

The Russian submarine was hiding under the waters 200 miles north of Scotland when the team of HMS Northumberland was dispatched on a 48-hour mission to chase it down in the midst of fears it would attempt to take advantage of or cut undersea links fundamental for correspondence and the web.

The Royal Navy's Type 23 frigate cruised into the locale where the sub was accepted to stow away and conveyed its exhibit sonar - a link canvassed in hydrophones pulled along behind the body - to tune in for sounds from the sub.

However, in what a naval force source has depicted as '1,000,000 to-a single possibility occasion', the submarine passed right under the British vessel and crushed into the sonar link being towed behind the frigate.

The crash caused impressive harm to the HMS Northumberland's sonar gadget which was raked across the Russian sub's structure, constraining the British team to cut short their main goal and return to base for fixes.

A present picture given by the British Ministry of Defense shows the HMS Northumberland (front) observing the Russian destroyer Vice-Admiral Kulakov as it cruises north-west of the Outer Hebrides, off the west shore of Scotland, in December 2020 +5

A freebee picture given by the British Ministry of Defense shows the HMS Northumberland (front) observing the Russian destroyer Vice-Admiral Kulakov as it cruises north-west of the Outer Hebrides, off the west bank of Scotland, in December 2020

The Russian submarine was hiding under the waters 200 miles north of Scotland when the team of HMS Northumberland was dispatched to chase it down (envisioned: a Russian Akula class submarine)

HMS Northumberland

Weapon:

1 × 32-cell Sea Wolf GWS.26 VLS canisters for 32:

Ocean Wolf (range 1–10 km) or Sea Ceptor rockets (1-25+ km)

2 × quad Harpoon launchers


2 × twin 12.75 in (324 mm) Sting Ray torpedo tubes

1 × BAE 4.5 inch Mk 8 maritime weapon

2 × 30 mm DS30M Mk2 weapons, or, 2 × 30 mm DS30B firearms

2 × Miniguns


4 × General-reason automatic rifles

Range: 7,500 nautical miles

Speed: 28 bunches (32mph)

Size: (l) 436ft

Team: 185

The crash, which occurred in 'late 2020' as per a Ministry of Defense (MOD) representative, came in the midst of a time of tense narrow escapes among British and Russian boats.

The Royal Navy announced it had shadowed a sum of nine Russian warships around the UK in the space of only fourteen days in the approach December 2020.

A Navy source told the Sun of the impact: '[The sonar device] was severely bitten up and unusable.

'The team of the submarine would have sh*t themselves,' he said, prior to adding that the submarine would've likewise possible caused harm because of the accident.

Tom Sharpe OBE, the previous boss of Royal Navy warship HMS St Albans, said: 'The inquiry is, was it conscious or was it a mishap?

'Boat and submarine location is certifiably not an accurate science. It might have been a nearby pass turned out badly.'

A MOD representative said: 'In late 2020 a Russian submarine being followed by HMS Northumberland came into contact with her towed cluster sonar.

'The Royal Navy consistently tracks unfamiliar ships and submarines to guarantee the guard of the United Kingdom.'

The Russian consulate in London declined to remark.

The fresh insight about the seaborne crash comes as Russia keeps on building up its tactical abilities in the midst of rising pressures in eastern Europe.

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