#U BOAT FOR SINKING SIMULATOR 2 SERIES#
As he refused to train Soviet submariners, he was allowed only a series of menial occupations. After the war Liebe returned to his hometown in the Soviet sector. In 1941 Liebe was assigned to the staff of Oberkommando der Marine, and from August 1944 was on the staff of the BdU. He rejoined the Bundesmarine in 1956, reaching the rank of Konteradmiral before retiring in 1969. He commanded the tactical training unit 27th U-boat Flotilla from late 1942, and served briefly as commander of the Type XXI Elektroboote U-3010 and U-2513 just before the end of the war.
Lüth was mistakenly shot and killed by a German sentry on. In January 1944 Lüth took command of the 22nd U-boat Flotilla, before being appointed commander of the Marineschule Mürwik in July. Wolfgang Lüth (1913–1945) was given command of U-9 in December 1939, going on to command U-13, U-138, U-43 and U-181, and sinking 46 merchant ships for a total 225,204 tons in 15 patrols, including one of 205 days, the second longest of the war. He retired in September 1970 with a rank of Flottillenadmiral. After the war, he rejoined the Bundesmarine, and became the Chief of Staff of the NATO Command COMNAVBALTAP in May 1965. As commander of U-35, U-23 and U-99 he sank 47 merchant ships totalling 272,043 tons in a remarkably short period of time, being captured in March 1941 and spending the rest of the war in the Bowmanville POW camp, Canada. Otto Kretschmer (1912–1998) was the most successful of the World War II Aces of the Deep. The currently accepted list is as follows: Top-scoring U-boat commanders of World War II # The term is related to flying ace, a World War I name for a pilot who shot down five or more enemy planes. The Aces of the Deep were the ten German U-Boat commanders during World War II who sank the most enemy merchant ships during their naval services, ranked according to the total tonnage of the ships they sank. Only sunk commercial vessels are included, not military (warships) nor damaged ships. This list contains the most successful German U-boats commanders during the Second World War based on total tonnage.