Since the Second World War, several wars, such as the
Korean War,
Indo-Pakistani War of 1971, the
Falklands War and the
2026 Iran War have involved limited use of submarines. Later submarine-launched
land-attack missiles were employed against Iraq and Afghanistan. With these exceptions, submarine warfare ceased after 1945. Hence strategic thinking about the role of submarines has developed independently of actual experience. The advent of the
nuclear-powered submarine in the 1950s brought about a major change in strategic thinking about submarine warfare. These boats could operate faster, deeper and had much longer endurance. Their larger sizes also allowed them to become missile launching platforms. Nuclear power would allow submarines to have greater accuracy and the ability to use torpedoes against ships, other submarines, and land targets. In response to this the
attack submarine became more important, particularly in regard to its postulated role as a hunter-killer. The US also used nuclear submarines as
radar pickets for a while. There have also been major advances in sensors and weapons. During the Cold War, the United States and the
Soviet Union played what was described as a 'cat-and-mouse' game of detecting and even trailing enemy submarines. As the likelihood of unrestricted submarine warfare has diminished, thinking about conventional submarines has focused on their use against surface warships. The mere existence of a submarine may curtail surface warships' freedom to operate. To counter the threat of these submarines, hunter submarines were developed in turn. The role of the submarine has extended with the use of submarine-launched autonomous unmanned vehicles. The development of new
air independent propulsion methods has meant that the
diesel-electric submarine's need to surface, making it vulnerable, has been reduced. Nuclear submarines, although far larger, could generate their own air and water for an extended duration, meaning their need to surface was limited in any case. In today's more fractured geopolitical system, many nations are building and/or upgrading their submarines. The
Japan Maritime Self-Defense Force has launched new models of submarines every few years;
South Korea has upgraded the already capable
Type 209() design from Germany and sold copies to Indonesia. Russia has improved the old Soviet
Kilo model into what strategic analysts are calling equivalent to the 1980s-era , and so on. At the end of his naval warfare book
The Price of Admiralty, military historian
John Keegan postulates that eventually, almost all roles of surface warships will be taken over by submarines, as they will be the only naval units capable of evading the increasing intelligence capabilities (space satellites, airplanes etc.) that a fight between evenly matched modern states could bring to bear on them. However, thinking about importance of the submarine has shifted to an even more strategic role, with the advent of the nuclear
ballistic missile submarine carrying
Submarine-launched ballistic missiles with
nuclear weapons to provide
second strike capability. A 2024 study found that
climate change may decrease the detectability of submarines in certain locations. In March 2026, during Operation Epic Fury, the United States sank an Iranian frigate near Sri Lanka with a MK 48 torpedo. ==See also==