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Video shows the moment Royal Navy sailors realized they were hit by the Russian submarine they were tracking

Jan 7, 2022, 19:08 IST
Business Insider
The Royal Navy Type 23 frigate HMS Northumberland seen in Portsmouth, England.Andrew Matthews/PA Images via Getty Images
  • HMS Northumberland was hit by a Russian submarine in the north Atlantic in late 2020.
  • The moment was caught on video by a documentary film crew from the UK's Channel 5.
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New video footage shows the moment that sailors with Britain's Royal Navy realized they had been hit by the Russian submarine they were tracking.

HMS Northumberland, a 133-meter submarine tracker, collided with the Russian vessel in the north Atlantic in late 2020, the UK Ministry of Defence (MOD) told Insider in a statement.

At the time of the collision, a camera crew from the UK's Channel 5 network were on board to film an episode of "Warship: Life at Sea."

A clip from the episode was obtained by MailOnline and The Times of London. The episode is due to premiere on January 17.

In the clip published by MailOnline, a loud alarm begins to sound in the bridge, and crew members are heard asking "what the hell was that?" and "what happened?"

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Watch the moment around the 1-minute, 33-second mark:

According to the MOD, the Russian submarine had just hit the ship's sonar equipment, which is trailed hundreds of meters behind the vessel.

"In late 2020 a Russian submarine being tracked by HMS Northumberland came into contact with her towed array sonar," a spokesman for the MOD said. "The Royal Navy regularly tracks foreign ships and submarines in order to ensure the defense of the United Kingdom."

HMS Northumberland had been sent on a 48-hour mission to track down the Russian submarine, over fears that it may try to access undersea cables and intercept communications.

A British defense official told Insider there was no indication that the collision was deliberate.

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The Kremlin did not immediately respond to Insider's request for comment.

After the collision, HMS Northumberland returned to a port in Scotland so the damaged equipment could be replaced.

In the Channel 5 episode, the ship and camera crew briefly spot the periscope of the Russian submarine above the water, The Times of London reported.

"We are very close to the submarine — we are probably parallel. If they were on the surface we would definitely see faces," Commander Thom Hobbs told the Channel 5 crew shortly before the collision.

On December 4, 2020, the Royal Navy said it had tracked nine Russian vessels close to UK waters in recent weeks.

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