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How to Control the Strait of Hormuz? US vs Iran Strikes

MS Daily brief- 29 JUNE 2026

In recent decades, the international security environment has undergone one of the most profound transformations of the post-war period. Conventional armed conflicts now coexist with hybrid threats, cyber-attacks, technological competition, pressures on critical infrastructure, energy vulnerabilities and disruptions to global supply chains. In this context, security can no longer be understood solely in terms of the military balance between states, but must be analysed as the result of the interaction between numerous political, economic, legal, technological and social systems, which are in a state of constant interdependence. This study is the result of research aimed at understanding the mechanisms through which seemingly distinct events – regional conflicts, maritime incidents, energy crises, attacks on critical infrastructure or the rapid development of artificial intelligence – come to influence the functioning of the entire international system.

READ ALSO THE MARITIME SECURITY FORUM’S STUDY

GLOBAL SECURITY IN THE 21ST CENTURY
Strategic transformations, critical infrastructure and the new architecture of the international order

Contents

BREAKING NEWS: Iranian drones have struck ships; US launches attacks; Hezbollah promises civil war | TBN Israel 1

News from Ukraine | Astonishing! Russia’s largest oil and fuel depot has been destroyed by Ukraine  1

2026 FIFA WORLD CUP (LAST 24 HOURS) – Maritime Security Forum.. 2

Escalating attacks between the US and Iran threaten the provisional peace agreement 5

The shadow war: how the use of proxy forces by Iran, Israel and the US is fuelling instability in the Middle East 8

Ukraine – Developments over the last 72 hours – Maritime Security Forum.. 11

Putin acknowledges that Ukrainian attacks are the cause of the fuel shortage in Russia. 13

Briefing on the war in Ukraine: Putin awaits US negotiators in Moscow; fuel rationing in Siberia as the crisis worsens. 14

Rebuilding Russia’s military capacity after the war in Ukraine: options for strategic decision-making – Maritime Security Forum.. 15

Decline in China’s seaborne oil imports: a cyclical signal or a structural shift? – Maritime Security Forum   18

The arrest of the Caffa in Sweden: a legal precedent in the fight against the shadow fleet associated with the Russian Federation – Maritime Security Forum.. 19

Egypt and Turkey: an alliance of convenience, tactical convergence or the beginning of a strategic partnership? – Maritime Security Forum.. 21

TAYFUN Block-2 ballistic missiles enter service with the Turkish armed forces: military modernisation, regional deterrence and strategic implications – Maritime Security Forum.. 24

Chinese and Russian aircraft entering the KADIZ: a coordinated military signal, a reaction test or a strategic routine? – Maritime Security Forum.. 28

The operational readiness of British attack submarines: a maintenance crisis, operational vulnerability or a strategic symptom? – Maritime Security Forum.. 30

Iran and the nuclear deterrence narrative: a doctrinal signal, negotiating leverage or a strategic threshold? – Maritime Security Forum.. 33

Sea Trident ST-1000: Ukraine’s heavy underwater drone and the new phase of unmanned naval warfare – Maritime Security Forum.. 35

BREAKING NEWS: Iranian drones have struck ships; US launches attacks; Hezbollah promises civil war | TBN Israel

News from Ukraine | Astonishing! Russia’s largest oil and fuel depot has been destroyed by Ukraine

2026 FIFA WORLD CUP (LAST 24 HOURS) – Maritime Security Forum

The last 24 hours have marked the start of the knockout stages, transforming the competition into a tournament where every match is decisive. The first clash in the Round of 32 offered both confirmation of the progress of North American football and an indication of the high level of parity in this year’s tournament. Canada became the first team to qualify for the round of 16 following a dramatic victory over South Africa, whilst attention now turns to the matches between Brazil and Japan, Germany and Paraguay, and the Netherlands and Morocco, scheduled for the coming hours.

Canada beat South Africa 1–0 thanks to a goal scored by Stephen Eustáquio in stoppage time, following an extremely evenly matched game in which the South African defence held firm for almost the entire match. The victory represents one of the most significant results in the history of Canadian football and confirms the steady progress of the host nation’s team, which continues its run in a tournament where home advantage is complemented by very solid tactical organisation.

The conclusion of the group stage has established the full line-up for the Round of 32. Among the most strategically significant fixtures are Brazil v Japan, a clash between one of the all- favourites and one of the tournament’s surprise packages; Germany v Paraguay, where the German side will be looking to confirm their status as the main contenders for the trophy; and the Netherlands v Morocco, considered one of the most evenly matched games of this stage. France will face Sweden, England will play against the Democratic Republic of the Congo, and the United States will take on Bosnia and Herzegovina in the coming days.

An analysis of performances so far suggests that Germany, France, Argentina and England remain the top favourites. Brazil are clearly improving after a hesitant start to the competition, whilst the Netherlands and Spain have shown consistency in their final group matches. At the same time, Morocco, Japan, Canada and the Democratic Republic of the Congo continue to cement their status as the tournament’s surprise packages and are opponents capable of producing further upsets in the knockout stages.

From a statistical perspective, this edition of the World Cup is characterised by a very high tempo of play. The available data show an average of approximately 2.95 goals per match in the group stage, alongside a reduction in the number of stoppages and fouls, due to a more lenient approach to refereeing. This style favours teams that employ intense pressing and quick transitions, but places additional physical demands on the players and increases the risk of injuries in the decisive stages of the competition.

As for developments off the pitch, Saudi Arabia’s elimination led to the first significant change at an institutional level in the tournament. The president of the Saudi Arabian Football Federation has announced his resignation, taking responsibility for the below-par results, in a decision that reflects the pressure on national federations following the major investments made in recent years.

Looking ahead, the next 24 hours will bring some of the most exciting fixtures of the Round of 32. Brazil will look to confirm their return to form against Japan, Germany will face Paraguay in a match where they start as favourites, and the clash between the Netherlands and Morocco is considered one of the most unpredictable of this stage. The results of these matches will significantly influence the make-up of the last 16 and will provide a much clearer picture of which teams can realistically aspire to win the 2026 FIFA World Cup.

The most likely paths to the final

Maritime Security Forum

Escalating attacks between the US and Iran threaten the provisional peace agreement

Tehran attacks Bahrain and Kuwait amid efforts to open the Strait of Hormuz without direct Iranian oversight

Jason Burke, International Security Correspondent

Sunday 28 June 2026, 15:45 CEST

A new round of increasingly intense attacks between Iran and the US has continued, further undermining the fragile provisional peace agreement between the two countries and prompting Donald Trump to threaten a violent response that would ensure Iran “ceases to exist”.

On Sunday, Tehran launched drone and missile attacks against Bahrain and Kuwait following fresh US strikes on targets in southern Iran, and threatened to ‘completely halt’ negotiations to end the war. Trump stated that the time may soon come when he will walk away from the negotiations, and the US will “finish the job by military means”.

The US President posted on social media: “If that happens, the Islamic Republic of Iran will cease to exist!”

On Sunday morning, Kuwait, which hosts a major US military base, said it had intercepted two ballistic missiles and that no casualties or damage had been reported, whilst Bahrain’s Ministry of the Interior stated that the Iranian attacks had damaged a residential building near the international airport and that there were no casualties.

Qatar’s Ministry of the Interior stated that a Qatari national had been killed and a second person injured by shrapnel from “military operations in the area”. The two were on a boat that went missing on Saturday and was located on Sunday morning.

The ministry did not specify the location of the incident or whether the shrapnel was linked to the Iranian drone attacks.

However, on Sunday evening, a US official stated that both sides had agreed to cease recent hostilities and resume talks regarding the Strait of Hormuz. “Technical discussions are scheduled to continue on all aspects of the memorandum of understanding. Both sides will withdraw for the time being, and ships will be able to move freely,” said the official, referring to the 14-point memorandum of understanding agreed earlier this month, under which the strait was to be reopened to traffic.

Civil defence and rescue personnel in Bahrain are responding to an incident at a residential building in Muharraq, which the Ministry of the Interior said had been struck by an Iranian drone. Photo: Bahrain Police Media/Reuters

The latest acts of violence were triggered by efforts to reopen the Strait of Hormuz to all vessels, without direct Iranian oversight. This strategically important waterway, which carried a fifth of the world’s oil and liquefied gas reserves before the war, has long been regarded as an international thoroughfare.

US Central Command stated in a press release that its strikes were “a direct response to Iran’s ongoing aggression against commercial shipping” and targeted Iranian military facilities for surveillance, communications, air defence, drone storage and mine-laying.

Washington has promoted a southern route along the coast of Oman, whilst Tehran, whose ultimate aim is to levy tolls for the use of the strait, wants ships to use a northern route through its waters and under its control.

Hundreds of ships, including oil tankers laden with crude, have been stranded inside the Persian Gulf following the closure of the strait at the outbreak of the war. Some have risked the crossing over the past two weeks, which has brought oil prices down to levels close to those seen before the war and provided relief to economies around the world.

The US military accused Iran of breaching the ceasefire on Saturday by attacking the Panamanian-flagged oil tanker Kiku, which was carrying crude oil for Qatar’s state-owned energy company. According to vessel-tracking websites, the Kiku appeared to be attempting to use the southern corridor, near the coast of Oman.

A Singapore-flagged container ship was struck by an Iranian drone whilst transiting the same route last week.

Abbas Araghchi, Iran’s foreign minister, reaffirmed Tehran’s claim to exclusive control of the waterway during a state visit to Iraq on Sunday. Speaking in Baghdad, he said: “Any interference in this matter, any attempt to establish new arrangements or ones separate from those currently applied by the Islamic Republic of Iran, will only lead to further complications, delay the reopening of the Strait of Hormuz and increase tensions.”

Observers say that Iran is using its ability to threaten maritime transport through the strait not only as leverage in negotiations with the US, but also to intimidate neighbouring countries and secure a more dominant role in the region.

Araghchi also called for the establishment of a security framework with the Gulf states, excluding the US. He stated: “We should arrive at a new framework that includes all countries in the region and without the presence or interference of any country from outside the region.”

Mediators from Qatar and Pakistan managed to bring representatives from Washington and Tehran together in Switzerland earlier this month, but failed to bridge major differences on contentious issues such as the future of the Strait of Hormuz, the lifting of sanctions against Tehran and the future of Iran’s nuclear programme. Under the memorandum of understanding signed earlier this month, the two countries have 60 days to work out the details before signing a final agreement.

Leaders in Tehran and Washington are facing domestic political pressure to avoid a return to conflict and appear determined to uphold the ceasefire for the time being, despite frequent bellicose rhetoric.

The Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps has claimed responsibility for both of Sunday’s new attacks. It stated: “Let the enemy know that any violation of the ceasefire … will lead to the complete halt of the ongoing processes.”

The Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, which controls Iran’s arsenal of ballistic missiles, has consolidated its influence in Iran in recent months. Its naval command has declared that US bases in the region will “go through hell in the coming days”.

Bahrain’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs condemned the attacks, describing them as “a dangerous escalation that reveals that Tehran’s actions are neither a passing phase nor an isolated incident, but rather a deliberate approach and a systematic pattern of repeated aggression against the kingdom’s sovereignty and the security of its citizens and residents”.

Bahrain is home to the US Navy’s Fifth Fleet, whose base there was the target of repeated attacks during the war.

Violence also continued in Lebanon, further threatening the agreement between Iran and the US to end the conflict between the two countries.

Israeli military officials said that a soldier was killed on Sunday when troops clashed with a “Hezbollah terrorist after entering a suspicious building in the Deir Seryan area of southern Lebanon”.

The Lebanese state news agency reported a new Israeli attack targeting the outskirts of the towns of Deir Seryan and Taybeh in southern Lebanon.

The new clashes in Lebanon come two days after Israel and Lebanon signed an agreement aimed at ending hostilities. The agreement provides for Israeli forces to begin an initial withdrawal from the south of the country and for them to be replaced by the Lebanese armed forces, who will take over responsibility for local security and the dismantling of Hezbollah’s military infrastructure.

They will also further undermine the prospects of a lasting peace agreement between Iran and the US, which Tehran has insisted depends on a ceasefire in Lebanon.

Israel, which is not a party to the US agreement with Iran, invaded southern Lebanon in March in a new offensive against Hezbollah, which is backed by Iran.

Israel and Lebanon have repeatedly agreed to US-brokered ceasefires, the most recent of which took place on Friday, but these have had only a limited effect, with Israel insisting that it will not withdraw from the Lebanese territory it has occupied, whilst Hezbollah has repeatedly rejected calls to lay down its arms as long as Israeli troops remain on the ground.

With information from Reuters and the Associated Press

,,,, https://www.theguardian.com/world/2026/jun/28/escalating-us-iran-strikes-threaten-interim-peace-agreement

The shadow war: how the use of proxy forces by Iran, Israel and the US is fuelling instability in the Middle East

Jason Burke in Jerusalem

Across the region, there is a trend towards disarming militias and consolidating state authority, but the temptation to resort to proxy forces remains

Sunday, 28 June 2026, 09.00 CEST

As Marco Rubio wrapped up his brief visit to the Middle East on Friday, he sought to present his discussions with Gulf leaders in the best possible light. These leaders are deeply concerned that the agreement reached earlier this month between Iran and the US does not address their concerns regarding Iran’s ongoing efforts to project its power and influence across the region.

“They shared some very specific concerns with us,” the US Secretary of State acknowledged, insisting that any final agreement would require Tehran not only to restrict its nuclear programme, but also to cease its support for Hamas in Gaza, Hezbollah in Lebanon, militias in Iraq and the Houthis in Yemen.

However, Western security analysts and officials believe that Iran is likely to step up its support for these groups following the conflict, which has largely confirmed Tehran’s existing strategic thinking.

They also say that the activities of irregular fighters funded and armed by Israel – and, to a lesser extent, by the US – are likely to intensify.

Hezbollah remains the main pillar of Iran’s coalition of allied groups and proxies in the Middle East, despite the heavy losses it suffered in the protracted clashes with Israel in 2024 and 2025. The militant Islamist organisation has also clearly failed to fulfil its primary strategic role for Iran: that of deterring a direct attack by Israel.

Nevertheless, Tehran remains committed to Hezbollah, an organisation founded in Lebanon with the support of Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps more than 40 years ago.

“The Iranians view this situation as a temporary setback and believe that Hezbollah will recover… It is absolutely vital for the Revolutionary Guard to rebuild its proxy groups in the region and control their decisions,” said Hanin Ghaddar, a senior fellow at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy.

By making the ceasefire between Iran and the US conditional on an end to the fighting in Lebanon as well, Iran has caused significant tensions between Israel, which wishes to continue its offensive against Hezbollah, and Washington.

The Houthis in Yemen, who also have close ties to Tehran, only joined the conflict in its final days, but have demonstrated their ability to attack Israel – albeit without causing significant damage – and to threaten international shipping through the Red Sea. Nevertheless, they remain more independent of their main sponsors.

“[The Houthis] are very radical and were useful during the war, but… they have their own decision-making processes that do not involve the Iranians,” said Ghaddar.

In Iraq, too, the Shia militias – cultivated and supported by Iran for more than two decades – demonstrated their strength during the conflict, but never deployed their full offensive arsenal. Certain groups have claimed responsibility for dozens of drone and rocket attacks against US targets in the country and have targeted Kuwait, but they have not mobilised on a large scale. Deadly retaliatory air strikes and Iraq’s complex domestic politics have contributed to the reluctance of many faction leaders to escalate any conflict with the US.

“They are more risk-averse than the Iranians would probably like,” said Michael Knights, an expert on Iraqi militias at Horizon Engage, a global political risk consultancy.

Shi’a militias in Iraq have also been used by Iran to target Kurdish groups, with the aim of discouraging them from actively joining the war. In reality, the Kurds had their own reasons for shying away from any involvement.

Right at the start of the conflict with Iran, in January, the US and Israel attempted to mobilise armed groups from among Iran’s ethnic minorities, including Arabs in south-western Iran and Baloch in the south-east of the country. These efforts proved fruitless. “There were general contacts [with these communities], but they did not materialise,” said Michael Milshtein, a former intelligence officer who is now an analyst at Tel Aviv University.

Similarly, the US-Israeli strategy regarding the Kurdish factions in northern Iraq was unsuccessful, despite their historical ties to both countries.

Former senior Kurdish and American military officials have stated that a long-standing US plan, in the event of war, envisaged several thousand lightly armed Kurdish fighters crossing the border into north-western Iran, accompanied by US special forces. Protected by US and Israeli air power, these fighters would then have advanced as far and as fast as possible, with the aim of destabilising the regime in Tehran and sparking uprisings elsewhere. It was envisaged that Iran’s conventional military and paramilitary forces would have had to defend themselves against the Kurdish advance, which would have exposed them to devastating air raids.

Those with first-hand knowledge of the plan, which they described as having been ‘on the shelf’ for more than 20 years, hold differing views on its chances of success. A former adviser to US special forces, with extensive experience in the region, claimed that a Kurdish force, accompanied by US special forces, could have “cut through Iran like a circular saw”, but another said that advancing beyond the Kurdish-dominated regions in the north-west would have been difficult, if not impossible.

In reality, only “a few hundred” fighters were available for immediate deployment, and Kurdish leaders were wary of the US following what they regarded as a “betrayal” in Syria just a few weeks earlier, when Washington backed an imposed agreement that brought Kurdish civil and military authorities under the control of the central government.

Both former US and Kurdish officials stated that the plan envisaged a preparation period of 12 to 24 months to train a sufficient number of fighters, distribute weapons and establish a unified command structure amongst the Kurds – whilst the White House appeared to believe that it could be implemented within a matter of days.

A final factor was the strong personal opposition of Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, who persuaded Donald Trump to reconsider his position following several days during which Israeli warplanes had attacked Iranian police stations, barracks and border posts to enable Kurdish groups to launch an invasion.

In addition to its links with the Kurds, Israeli intelligence services are said to have provided money, intelligence and weapons to a new Druze militia in Syria. The Military Council was set up to protect the besieged religious minority, Israeli military officials said last week, although experts point out that it will also resist the consolidation of the new Syrian government’s authority in those regions, which serves Israel’s interests.

In Gaza, Israel has set up a number of Palestinian militias to fight Hamas, which has re-established its authority over the 2.3 million Palestinians living outside the 60 per cent or more of the territory occupied by Israel.

They have launched raids against Hamas and carried out other “very limited” tactical missions, but with very mixed results.

“They will in no way change the strategic situation in Gaza… They enjoy no popular support and… can in no way be an alternative to Hamas,” said Milshtein.

Across the region, there is a trend towards disarming militias and consolidating state authority to counter growing instability, but the temptation to use proxy forces remains, despite the obvious risks. Recent and ongoing conflicts in Syria, Libya, Sudan and elsewhere have all been marked by their widespread use.

“You cannot rely on proxy forces. They are not just useless,” said Milshtein. “They cause harm.”

,,, https://www.theguardian.com/world/2026/jun/28/gulf-us-iran-war-proxies-middle-east

Ukraine – Developments over the last 72 hours – Maritime Security Forum

The last 72 hours confirm a significant shift in the dynamics of the Russian-Ukrainian conflict. Whilst in previous months attention was focused on ground operations in the Donbas, the conflict is now increasingly evolving into a deep strategic confrontation, in which energy infrastructure, the military industry and logistics are the main targets. Both Ukraine and the Russian Federation have stepped up their use of drones and long-range weaponry, and the effects are already being felt on the logistical and economic capabilities of both sides.

The most significant development of this period is the continuation of Ukraine’s campaign of strikes deep into Russian territory. Over the past three days, Ukraine has carried out one of the largest waves of drone attacks since the start of the war, simultaneously targeting oil refineries, natural gas processing facilities, defence industry factories and energy infrastructure. President Volodymyr Zelenskyy has confirmed that these operations form part of the recently approved 40-day operational campaign, the aim of which is to deplete the economic and logistical resources underpinning the Russian military effort.

Among the most significant targets struck were the NORSI refinery, one of the largest petrol production facilities in the Russian Federation, the refinery in the Krasnodar region, oil facilities in the Yaroslavl area and the natural gas processing plant in Orenburg. The attacks caused widespread fires, the temporary suspension of operations at some facilities and further disruptions to fuel supplies in several regions of the Russian Federation. The Kremlin acknowledged the existence of difficulties regarding fuel distribution and set up a task force to manage the shortage of petroleum products.

At the same time, Ukraine continued its attacks on military and industrial infrastructure. Strikes were reported on an arms factory in the Volgograd region, involved in the production of artillery systems and components for missile launchers, as well as on electronic facilities used in the production of tactical missile systems. The strategy aims to reduce the capacity of the Russian defence industry and slow down the production rate of weapons used on the front line.

Occupied Crimea remains one of Kyiv’s main operational objectives. Over the past 72 hours, attacks on energy infrastructure, railway bridges, electrical substations and fuel depots have prompted the Moscow-installed authorities to maintain restrictions on energy consumption and fuel distribution. Measures to limit electricity consumption have been imposed in Sevastopol and other towns, and the Russian administration continues to regard the situation as an emergency. Ukraine’s aim is the gradual logistical isolation of the peninsula and the reduction of its role as the main base for Russian operations in southern Ukraine.

On the ground, the fiercest clashes took place in the Sumy, Kharkiv, Kupiansk, Pokrovsk, Toretsk and Zaporizhzhia sectors. Russian forces continued infantry attacks supported by artillery and FPV drones, but without achieving any decisive territorial gains. The fighting is characterised by a high tempo of tactical engagements and the continuous depletion of human and material resources. Russia is focusing its efforts on the complete capture of the Donetsk, Luhansk, Zaporizhzhia and Kherson regions, an objective publicly reaffirmed by President Vladimir Putin.

The Russian Federation has responded by intensifying drone and missile attacks on Ukrainian cities. The Dnipropetrovsk, Sumy, Kharkiv and Zaporizhzhia regions have been hit by further bombardments, with reports of civilian casualties and damage to residential and energy infrastructure. International organisations continue to draw attention to the rising number of civilian casualties, particularly as a result of the use of attack drones against urban areas.

In the Black Sea, the military situation remains relatively stable, with no direct naval clashes between military units. However, the Ukrainian campaign against infrastructure in Crimea and the pressure on Russian logistics are indirectly affecting maritime security. The corridor for agricultural exports continues to operate, and the littoral states and NATO allies are maintaining constant monitoring of naval traffic and air activity in the region.

On the political and diplomatic front, the prospects for a negotiated solution remain limited. Vladimir Putin has stated that the Russian Federation will continue its military campaign regardless of any new proposals put forward by Kyiv and has rejected the idea of a mutual suspension of long-range attacks. At the same time, nationalist circles in Russia are calling for an end to dialogue with the United States and the adoption of a far more aggressive military strategy, including the intensification of bombing raids on Ukrainian infrastructure.

From a strategic perspective, the last 72 hours confirm that the conflict has turned into a war of technological and economic attrition. Ukraine is attempting to shift the costs of the war onto Russian energy and industrial infrastructure, whilst the Russian Federation continues to exploit its numerical superiority and exert constant pressure on the front line and Ukrainian civilian infrastructure. Although the front line remains relatively stable, the intensification of deep-strike attacks and their impact on the Russian energy sector represent one of the most significant strategic developments of this period. In the coming days, attacks on refineries, energy facilities and logistics infrastructure in the Russian Federation are likely to continue, whilst Russian pressure on eastern and southern Ukraine is expected to persist.

Maritime Security Forum

Putin acknowledges that Ukrainian attacks are the cause of the fuel shortage in Russia

The Russian President states that Ukraine’s attacks on infrastructure are causing ‘obvious’ but not critical problems

Agence France-Presse

Sunday, 28 June 2026, 23:52 CEST

Russian President Vladimir Putin has acknowledged that the country is facing “a certain shortage” of fuel in an interview published on Sunday by the Kremlin, following repeated Ukrainian attacks during the four-year war.

Kyiv describes the attacks as just retaliation for Russia’s almost daily barrages of fire on Ukrainian civilians and energy infrastructure, dating back to the offensive in February 2022.

“As regards attacks on critical infrastructure in general, and on energy infrastructure in particular, of course these attacks on our infrastructure facilities are causing problems; that is obvious,” Putin said.

“At the moment we are seeing some shortages, but they are not critical.”

The main task now, he said, is to boost Russia’s air defence capabilities and ensure fuel supplies, particularly in Crimea.

The authorities in Crimea, which was annexed by Russia, declared a “state of emergency” on Friday due to fuel shortages and power cuts caused by Ukrainian attacks on logistics chains and oil facilities.

Russia annexed the territory from Ukraine in 2014, a move not recognised by the vast majority of countries.

A few hours earlier, in a speech delivered at the ‘United Russia’ party congress, Putin promised to ensure security and overcome the challenges as Ukraine steps up its retaliatory attacks on Russian territory.

“Yes, we see the problems, we are aware of them and we are taking measures, but we will certainly ensure the security of both the country and our citizens, as well as the inviolability of Russia’s borders,” Putin told party members.

“We will undoubtedly overcome all the challenges we face today, including terrorist attacks on our territory and infrastructure,” he added.

Putin’s speech came a few hours after a Ukrainian drone attack killed one person in the Krasnodar region of southern Russia and caused a fire at an oil refinery, according to the regional governor, Veniamin Kondratyev.

,,, https://www.theguardian.com/world/2026/jun/28/putin-admits-ukrainian-strikes-driving-russian-fuel-shortages

Update on the war in Ukraine: Putin awaits US negotiators in Moscow; fuel rationing in Siberia as the crisis worsens

The Russian president says he expects to receive US representatives once the crisis in the Middle East has eased; the Siberian region of Irkutsk has set a limit of 50 litres at state-run petrol stations. What we know on day 1,586

The Guardian team

Monday 29 June 2026, 01:52 CEST

Vladimir Putin says he expects US negotiators to come to Moscow once Washington has reached an agreement with Iran regarding the conflict in the Middle East. “We expect that, once all the events have concluded, once the active phase of negotiations with Iran is over, we will see the arrival of those representatives of the US administration with whom we have already met several times in Moscow,” the Russian president told Russian journalist Pavel Zarubin. “We are ready to continue negotiations and discuss all the details.” Putin was responding to a question about the state of Russian-American relations following the G7 summit in France, when Donald Trump stated that Russia should “reach an agreement with Ukraine”. On Wednesday, the US President said that his Ukrainian counterpart, Volodymyr Zelenskyy, was doing well in the war against Russia, although he had previously claimed that Zelenskyy did not have the “cards” needed to win.

The Russian president acknowledged “a certain shortage” of fuel after Ukrainian retaliatory attacks on energy infrastructure were triggered by his invasion of the country. “As regards attacks on critical infrastructure in general, and energy infrastructure in particular, of course these attacks on our infrastructure facilities are causing problems; that is obvious,” Putin said in an interview published on Sunday by the Kremlin. “At the moment we are seeing a certain shortage, but it is not a critical one.” The priority now is to improve air defences and ensure fuel supplies, particularly in Russian-occupied Crimea, he said. Fuel deliveries to the Black Sea peninsula, by land and sea, will be stepped up, Putin said.

A governor in Siberia has announced that drivers will be allowed to purchase a maximum of 50 litres (13 gallons) of fuel per vehicle per day at Rosneft state-owned petrol stations in the province. Igor Kobzev, governor of the Irkutsk region, made this announcement against the backdrop of a widening fuel shortage across Russia. Russian Deputy Prime Minister Alexander Novak said that Moscow is actively reviewing fuel export agreements to avoid compromising domestic needs.

Zelenskyy said his forces had struck two oil refineries deep inside Russia over the weekend. A drone attack that caused a fire at a refinery in Slavyansk-na-Kubani, a town in Russia’s Krasnodar region, killed one person in Slavyansk and injured another in a nearby village, local authorities said. Zelenskyy also claimed that another Russian refinery, located in the Yaroslavl region, approximately 700 km (435 miles) from the border with Ukraine, was hit during the night-time attacks. There were no immediate reports from the Russian authorities regarding the attack on the Yaroslavl refinery. The local governor, Mikhail Evraev, reported on Sunday morning that some roads between Moscow and the regional capital, Yaroslavl, had been temporarily closed due to “an enemy attack by Ukrainian drones”. Zelenskyy wrote on Telegram: “Every [attack] means a reduction in the resources fuelling the Russian war machine and another step towards peace.”

A Russian attack killed two people in Zaporizhzhia – a city in southern Ukraine – and injured 16 others, including two children, said the head of the regional administration, Ivan Fedorov. In the Russian border region of Belgorod, Ukrainian drone strikes killed one person and injured another on Sunday morning, according to the acting local governor, Alexander Shuvayev. The Russian Ministry of Defence said its forces had shot down 213 Ukrainian drones overnight, including over Russian territory, occupied Crimea, and the Black and Azov Seas. Meanwhile, Russia attacked Ukraine with 142 long-range attack drones and eight missiles overnight, according to the Ukrainian air force. Of these, 125 drones and seven missiles were shot down, the air force said.

,,, https://www.theguardian.com/world/2026/jun/29/ukraine-war-briefing-putin-expects-us-negotiators-moscow-fuel-rationing-siberia

Rebuilding Russia’s military capability after the war in Ukraine: a strategic decision – Maritime Security Forum

The strategic issue is not whether Russia will once again become a relevant military actor following the war in Ukraine, but how quickly it will be able to build up sufficient capability for intimidation, coercion or limited actions against European states. For decision-makers, the critical risk is the emergence of a window of vulnerability in which Russia is not yet fully restored, but possesses sufficient conventional, hybrid and industrial capabilities to test NATO’s cohesion and Europe’s resilience.

The recommended strategic decision is to accelerate the transition from declaratory deterrence to operational deterrence. This requires real, deployed and sustainable capabilities: air defence and anti-drone defences, ammunition stocks, military mobility, protected critical infrastructure, predictable industrial production and rapid political decision-making mechanisms in times of crisis.

For Romania, the strategic priority is to consolidate its role as a key state in the Black Sea region and as a logistical hub for the Eastern Flank. This requires the integration of air defence, the protection of the port of Constanța, maritime Danube infrastructure, military bases, energy security and capabilities to counter aerial and maritime drones within a single planning framework.

Russia’s war against Ukraine has fundamentally altered the European security calculus. For strategic planning, the focus must shift from assessing Russia’s immediate losses to evaluating Moscow’s capacity for military, industrial and political regeneration. Even though Russia has suffered significant losses, it retains the will to challenge the European security order and the capacity to mobilise resources for a protracted conflict.

Available estimates suggest that Russia could rebuild a military capability sufficient to exert pressure on Europe within a few years of the war in Ukraine winding down. During this period, the threat should not be defined solely by the scenario of a major conventional invasion, but by a spectrum of actions: limited incursions, drone strikes, sabotage, cyber-attacks, energy pressure, disinformation campaigns and attempts to politically divide the Alliance.

The implication for decision-makers is that the time available for preparation must be treated as a limited strategic resource. Every year without investment in critical capabilities, infrastructure and the defence industry erodes the credibility of deterrence. Conversely, accelerated and coordinated investment can raise the risk threshold for Moscow and reduce the likelihood of actions designed to test NATO.

Strategic risk assessment

Main risk: Russia may become sufficiently capable of military coercion before it is once again fully prepared for a major conventional war. This intermediate stage is particularly dangerous, as it may encourage limited actions that are difficult to categorise politically and legally, yet sufficiently destabilising for NATO and the European Union.

Risk vectors: the restoration of munitions and drone production, adaptation to attritional warfare, the use of electronic warfare, external support from authoritarian partners, the exploitation of gaps in European air defence, and pressure on critical infrastructure. These elements should not be analysed in isolation, but as part of an integrated model of strategic pressure.

European vulnerability: the rate of growth in industrial and military capabilities remains slower than the rate at which the threat is adapting. Fragmented procurement, insufficient stocks, limited transport infrastructure and slow decision-making procedures can turn European economic superiority into an insufficient advantage in crisis situations.

Strategic options for decision-making

Option 1 – Incremental continuity: maintaining the current pace of investment and defence build-up. The advantage is lower political and budgetary costs in the short term. The major disadvantage is that this option may leave Europe and the Eastern Flank in a position of delayed reaction in the face of a rapidly adapting Russia.

Option 2 – Selective acceleration: prioritising capabilities with an immediate impact on deterrence: air defence, anti-drone systems, munitions, military mobility, command and control, and the protection of critical infrastructure. This is the option offering the best balance between cost, time and strategic effect, as it rapidly strengthens the most vulnerable points.

Option 3 – Strategic transformation: adopting a long-term defence posture, with major investments in industry, reserves, mobilisation, dual-use infrastructure, autonomous technologies and regional coordination. This option is the most robust strategically, but requires political consensus, predictable funding and coordination between NATO, the European Union and the Eastern Flank states.

Priorities for action in Europe

Europe must treat the defence industry as strategic infrastructure, not merely as an economic sector. The priority is to create predictable demand for ammunition, air defence systems, drones, sensors, missiles and electronic warfare equipment. Without multi-year contracts and coordinated procurement, the industry will not be able to invest quickly enough in production capacity.

The second priority is to bridge the gap between political decision-making and operational capability. Defence budgets must be linked to measurable outcomes: available stocks, trained units, functional infrastructure, reduced mobilisation times and genuine interoperability. Simply spending funds is not enough if it does not produce verifiable military effects.

The third priority is societal and institutional resilience. Russia is likely to continue using hybrid actions below the threshold of open warfare. European defence must therefore include the protection of energy infrastructure, communications, transport, electoral processes and the information space.

Priorities for NATO’s Eastern Flank

The Eastern Flank must move from a symbolic presence to immediate operational capability. An allied presence is necessary but not sufficient; it must be supported by stocks, logistics, infrastructure, air defence, anti-drone capabilities and regional plans tested through realistic exercises.

An operational priority is the development of an integrated architecture of sensors, drones, electronic warfare and long-range firepower, inspired by the lessons of the war in Ukraine. This architecture must enable the rapid detection, credible attribution and neutralisation of air, land, maritime and cyber threats.

At the political level, the Eastern Flank requires consultation and rapid-response mechanisms for ambiguous scenarios. Russia’s limited actions may be aimed precisely at delaying allied political decision-making. Therefore, procedures for incidents involving drones, sabotage, airspace violations or cyber-attacks must be clarified before a crisis arises.

Strategic priorities for Romania

Romania must define its role in the Black Sea as a central strategic function, not as a regional extension of national defence. Its geographical position, the port of Constanța, the maritime Danube infrastructure, its proximity to Ukraine and its role as a host to allied forces make Romania a critical hub for NATO deterrence in south-eastern Europe.

The first priority is layered air and anti-drone defence. Romania must be able to detect, track and neutralise aerial and maritime drones, including in sensitive areas such as Dobrogea, the port of Constanța, the Danube Delta and the vicinity of offshore energy infrastructure. This capability must be integrated with NATO and regional surveillance systems.

The second priority is dual-use infrastructure. Roads, railways, bridges, ports, airports and military bases must be assessed from the perspective of military mobility, not merely economic development. The ability to rapidly receive, deploy and sustain allied forces could prove decisive in a regional crisis.

The third priority is the protection of critical infrastructure and internal resilience. The Port of Constanța, energy infrastructure, communications, transport networks and public institutions may become targets of hybrid pressure. Romania needs an integrated civil-military coordination mechanism, inter-institutional exercises and partnerships with the private sector.

Decision matrix

AreaRequired decisionIntended strategic effect
EuropeMulti-annual contracts and coordinated procurement for ammunition, air defence and drones.Reducing reliance on ad hoc responses and increasing the capacity to sustain a protracted conflict.
Eastern FlankIntegration of sensors, anti-drone defences, electronic warfare and military mobility.Raising the risk threshold for Russia and reducing vulnerability to limited or ambiguous actions.
RomaniaAn integrated national plan for the Black Sea, Dobrogea, Constanța, the Danube and critical infrastructure.Turning its geographical position into a strategic advantage for NATO and for national security.

Conclusions for decision-making

The first conclusion is that Russia must not be assessed solely in terms of its current losses, but also in terms of its capacity for recovery and its willingness to use military and hybrid coercion. A partially recovered Russia may be dangerous enough to test NATO, especially if it perceives Western indecision or fragmentation.

The second conclusion is that credible deterrence must be operational, not merely political. This means available capabilities, sufficient stocks, functional infrastructure, rapid decision-making and coordination between NATO, the European Union and member states.

The third conclusion is that Romania must prioritise the Black Sea as an integrated strategic space. National defence, energy security, military mobility, port infrastructure and internal resilience must be planned together. Fragmentation of these areas would reduce the effectiveness of the response to a crisis.

The final recommendation is to adopt an approach of selective acceleration, followed by strategic transformation. In the short term, Romania and its allies must prioritise air defence, anti-drone capabilities, munitions, mobility and the protection of critical infrastructure. In the medium term, these measures must be integrated into a regional deterrence architecture in the Black Sea, capable of simultaneously responding to conventional, hybrid and technological threats.

Maritime Security Forum

The decline in China’s seaborne oil imports: a cyclical trend or a structural shift? – Maritime Security Forum

China’s seaborne crude oil imports fell in June to around 6.4 million barrels per day, according to preliminary Kpler data cited by Bloomberg and reported by specialist publications. This would be the lowest level since October 2016 and approximately 8 per cent below the May figure. Vessel tracking data provided by Vortexa indicates a similar trend, suggesting that the reduction is not merely a statistical anomaly but a noticeable adjustment in the world’s largest importer’s seaborne crude oil demand.

The decline must be interpreted on several levels. In the short term, the reduction in purchases is linked to the disruptions caused by the conflict in the Middle East and the risks associated with traffic through the Strait of Hormuz, one of the world’s most important energy routes. In the medium term, China has been able to avoid aggressive competition for additional cargoes because it holds substantial commercial stocks, has reduced refinery activity and has limited exports of petroleum products. In this way, Beijing has cushioned the supply shock without passing on the full pressure to the international market.

At the same time, the decline in imports cannot be explained solely by geopolitical factors. Several analyses point to weaker domestic demand, reduced refining margins and a gradual shift in the structure of energy consumption. The rapid growth of electric vehicles in China is reducing demand for road fuels, particularly petrol and diesel, whilst a larger share of petroleum product consumption is shifting towards petrochemical feedstocks. This trend suggests that part of the reduction in oil demand could become structural, rather than merely temporary.

Consequently, the current situation has dual implications. On the one hand, the reduction in China’s imports has helped to temporarily stabilise the global market and has limited price rises above key psychological thresholds, even against a backdrop of high risk in the Middle East. On the other hand, the market’s dependence on China’s purchasing behaviour remains very high: a rapid resumption of imports, particularly if it coincides with further disruptions in the Persian Gulf, could put renewed pressure on prices and on the availability of maritime cargo.

Economic, energy and maritime implications

For the global oil market, the fall in Chinese imports has acted as a temporary stabiliser. Against a backdrop where risks in the Middle East could have pushed prices significantly higher, the reduction in Chinese demand has eased some of the pressure on the market. However, this balance is fragile. If Chinese demand recovers rapidly or if commercial stocks are depleted sooner than anticipated, the market could become strained once again.

In terms of energy security, the case of China highlights the importance of stocks, refinery flexibility and the ability of countries to rapidly adjust exports and domestic consumption. Countries with substantial commercial and strategic reserves can avoid panic reactions in times of crisis. By contrast, import-dependent economies without sufficient storage capacity remain exposed to volatility, high costs and competition for supplies.

For maritime transport, the reduction in Chinese imports temporarily alters tanker flows, demand for tonnage and trade routes. Weaker demand from China may ease pressure on certain maritime corridors, but may also redirect vessels to other Asian or European markets. At the same time, risks in the Strait of Hormuz remain a concern: even if traffic partially returns to normal, insurance premiums, freight costs and routing decisions may remain sensitive to military and diplomatic developments.

For Europe, the temporary decline in Chinese demand may offer a respite by easing pressure on international prices. However, this situation should not be interpreted as a lasting reduction in energy risks. Europe remains exposed to global market volatility, competition for alternative supplies and geopolitical risks in the Middle East. Furthermore, a resurgence in Chinese imports could once again drive up energy costs for European economies.

For Romania, the implications are indirect but significant. The Port of Constanța, Black Sea infrastructure and regional supply chains may be affected by changes in global maritime flows and energy price volatility. An unstable oil market can impact transport costs, inflation, economic competitiveness and security of supply. In this context, it is in Romania’s interest to strengthen its storage capacities, energy interconnections, port infrastructure and monitoring of maritime risks.

Conclusions

The fall in China’s seaborne oil imports to their lowest level in nearly a decade is an important signal for global energy markets. It reflects, simultaneously, the effects of a geopolitical crisis, the drawdown of commercial stocks, reduced refinery activity, weak domestic demand and the gradual transformation brought about by the electrification of transport.

In the short term, the reduction in Chinese demand has helped to stabilise prices and avert a more severe crisis in the oil market. In the medium term, however, the situation remains uncertain. If stocks decline, if Chinese refineries return to higher levels of activity, or if new disruptions arise in the Middle East, pressure on the market could return rapidly.

The strategic conclusion is that energy security can no longer be analysed solely in terms of production and import volumes, but must be considered in conjunction with maritime risks, the energy transition, the behaviour of major consumers, and states’ ability to manage stocks and critical infrastructure. For Europe and Romania, the key lesson is the need for greater energy resilience, based on diversification, storage capacity, robust port infrastructure and continuous monitoring of the geopolitical risks affecting global maritime routes.

Maritime Security Forum

The arrest of the vessel Caffa in Sweden: a legal precedent in the fight against the shadow fleet associated with the Russian Federation – Maritime Security Forum

The arrest of the vessel Caffa by the Swedish authorities represents a case of legal and operational significance for international efforts to combat maritime networks used to circumvent sanctions and to transport goods originating from occupied Ukrainian territories. According to information provided by the Ukrainian authorities and reports in the international press, the vessel is suspected of having been involved in the illegal transport of grain from occupied Crimea, including through the use of the port of Sevastopol and documents or records intended to conceal the true origin of the cargo.

The case has attracted attention because a Swedish court approved the seizure of the vessel following a request for international legal assistance made by Ukraine. Sources such as Euromaidan Press, Euronews, United24 Media, Breakbulk News and ArmyInform reported that the Swedish authorities intercepted the vessel in the Baltic Sea, off Trelleborg, and subsequently carried out searches, documentary checks and interviews with the crew. According to available reports, the Caffa was sailing under a flag considered to be false or invalid, and in some databases it was listed under the designation ‘Guinea False’.

From a maritime law perspective, the central issue in the case is the challenge to the vessel’s legal identity. A vessel’s flag functions as the equivalent of a jurisdiction and determines the flag state’s responsibility, the inspection regime, safety obligations and the framework for liability. If a vessel is flying a false flag or cannot demonstrate a valid legal link to a flag state, port and coastguard authorities may have additional grounds for intervention, verification and restrictive measures.

According to information attributed to the Ukrainian investigation, the Caffa is said to have previously entered ports in the occupied territories of Ukraine and to have been involved in grain shipments that did not comply with Ukrainian law. Some reports indicate that the vessel loaded grain in Sevastopol in 2025 and was subsequently sanctioned by Ukraine. These details were used by the Ukrainian authorities to request Sweden’s cooperation, including the provision of data on the vessel’s routes, port calls, ship’s papers, AIS behaviour and possible commercial links.

This precedent is significant because it shifts the application of sanctions and investigations into goods originating from occupied territories from the realm of political declarations to that of concrete legal instruments. Until now, much of the pressure on the shadow fleet has been exerted through sanctions lists, monitoring, the refusal of insurance services or port restrictions. In the Caffa case, however, the Swedish authorities agreed to treat the vessel as the subject of legal proceedings and as potential material evidence in an investigation into the illegal export of goods.

The case also highlights the role of technical documentation. The Ukrainian authorities used information from open sources, satellite imagery, AIS data, shipping registers, port documents, national sanctions and criminal investigations to compile a dossier for submission to external partners. This approach demonstrates that monitoring the shadow fleet does not depend solely on naval operations, but also on the ability to correlate commercial, legal, financial and maritime data into a body of evidence sufficiently robust for courts in other jurisdictions.

At the same time, the case must be assessed with caution. The fact that a vessel has been seized does not automatically mean that all criminal or commercial liabilities have already been definitively established. Proceedings may include appeals, further checks, an assessment of the flag state, an analysis of ownership documents and an examination of the links between operators, charterers, beneficial owners, intermediaries and buyers. Consequently, the significance of this precedent lies not only in the final outcome, but in demonstrating that mechanisms for legal cooperation can be activated against opaque maritime networks.

Legal, maritime and strategic implications

With regard to the sanctions regime, the Caffa case shows that sanctions can become more effective when coupled with judicial instruments, international cooperation and technical evidence. The mere fact that a vessel is on a sanctions list may restrict access to services, but seizure in a third-country jurisdiction can impose higher costs on owners, operators, charterers and intermediaries.

For the shipping industry, this precedent increases compliance risks for all companies dealing with goods originating from occupied regions or with vessels characterised by opaque ownership, frequently changed flags or incomplete AIS records. Insurers, brokers, port agents, terminals, banks and end buyers will need to strengthen their due diligence procedures to avoid exposure to sanctions, litigation or confiscation.

For the Russian Federation and its associated networks, the case sends a signal that the use of flags of convenience, successive re-registrations and dubious documentation does not guarantee impunity. If the Swedish model is replicated by other states, part of the shadow fleet may become more costly, slower and more vulnerable to legal intervention.

For Ukraine, the seizure of the vessel confirms the effectiveness of a combined strategy: technical documentation, sanctions, criminal investigations, international legal cooperation and public communication. This approach may make it possible to extend pressure to other vessels involved in transport from occupied Crimea or other Ukrainian territories under Russian control.

For Europe, the case highlights the need for a unified approach to the shadow fleet. European states have a shared interest in safeguarding the integrity of sanctions, maritime safety, the environment and subsea infrastructure. Vessels with uncertain legal status, opaque ownership or suspicious sailing histories may pose not only a commercial risk but also a security risk, including through potential acts of sabotage or intelligence gathering.

For Romania and the Black Sea region, this precedent is relevant because the ports, trade routes and maritime infrastructure in the area may be exposed to vessels, cargo or operators linked to sanctions-evasion networks. It is in Romania’s interest to strengthen port inspections, cooperation with European partners, the exchange of maritime data, the analysis of beneficial owners, and the monitoring of vessels that have operated in ports in the occupied territories. The Port of Constanța, as a regional logistics hub, can become a key location for the consistent application of compliance standards.

Conclusions

The arrest of the vessel Caffa in Sweden marks an important milestone in the transformation of the fight against the shadow fleet from a predominantly political and sanctions-based issue into a legal, evidential and operati . The case demonstrates that vessels involved in suspicious shipments from occupied territories can be tracked, documented and subject to judicial measures in third countries.

This precedent does not automatically guarantee rapid replication across all jurisdictions, but it establishes a practical model: identifying the vessel, documenting its route, verifying its flag, cross-referencing maritime data with criminal investigations, and utilising international legal assistance. The more coordinated the application of these mechanisms, the higher the costs for sanctions-evasion networks.

From a strategic perspective, the Caffa case demonstrates that maritime security can no longer be separated from sanctions, international law, food security, the protection of critical infrastructure and geopolitical competition. For Europe and Romania, the main lesson is the need for a more robust system for monitoring and responding to opaque maritime activities, particularly in the Black Sea and on the routes connecting the region with European ports.

In conclusion, the seizure of the Caffa is not merely an isolated incident, but a test of states’ ability to transform maritime intelligence, legal cooperation and the pressure of sanctions into an effective tool. If this model takes hold, the shadow fleet associated with the Russian Federation will operate in a riskier, more costly environment that is more exposed to international legal intervention.

Maritime Security Forum

Egypt and Turkey: an alliance of convenience, tactical convergence or the beginning of a strategic partnership? – Maritime Security Forum

Relations between Egypt and Turkey are undergoing a phase of accelerated normalisation, following more than a decade of political rivalry, regional competition and strategic mistrust. The central question is not whether the two states have become allies in the formal sense, but whether their interests converge sufficiently to produce sustainable coordination in areas such as energy, maritime security, defence, Gaza, Libya, Sudan, Somalia and the regional security architecture. At present, the evidence points more to a pragmatic and reversible alliance of convenience than to a consolidated political-military alliance.

An important sign of this rapprochement was the meeting in Baku between the Egyptian Minister of Petroleum and Mineral Resources, Karim Badawi, and the Turkish Minister of Energy and Natural Resources, Alparslan Bayraktar. Discussions focused on expanding cooperation in oil, natural gas and mining; attracting investment at the corporate level; exchanging technical expertise; and the possible use of the two countries’ infrastructure to strengthen energy security in the Eastern Mediterranean. This framework is significant because it transforms political normalisation into an economic and energy agenda with regional implications.

Energy cooperation makes practical sense. Egypt is facing a decline in domestic natural gas production and a greater need for LNG imports to meet domestic consumption and electricity demand. JODI data cited by economic sources indicate a significant reduction in Egyptian production compared to the peak reached in 2021, whilst analyses by the US Energy Information Administration highlight that the decline in domestic production has pushed Cairo towards additional imports and the use of floating storage and regasification units. In this context, the agreement between BOTAS and EGAS for the use of a Turkish floating storage and regasification unit in Egypt is of both commercial and strategic importance.

Risks in the Strait of Hormuz and instability in the Middle East increase the value of alternative energy infrastructure in the Eastern Mediterranean, the Red Sea and the Suez area. For Turkey, cooperation with Egypt offers access to a major energy market in North Africa and the opportunity to export energy infrastructure, services and know-how. For Egypt, the partnership with Turkey can provide flexibility at a time when domestic gas production is under pressure and security of supply is becoming increasingly dependent on import, storage, regasification and maritime routing capacity.

The economic dimension is also significant. Turkey regards Egypt as its most important trading partner in Africa, and the announced target of increasing trade to $15 billion points to an ambitious economic agenda. For Cairo, cooperation with Ankara can diversify its external partnerships, attract investment and support industrial, logistical and energy projects. For Ankara, Egypt offers access to the African market, the Suez Corridor and a strategic position in the Eastern Mediterranean.

The military and security dimension

The resumption of joint Egyptian-Turkish exercises signals a shift in the relationship from diplomatic normalisation to practical military cooperation. The Anatolian Eagle 2026 air exercise, held in Turkey with the participation of multi-role aircraft from Egypt, Turkey and Azerbaijan, as well as a NATO early warning aircraft, was officially presented as an initiative to unify operational concepts and enhance interoperability. Previously, air exercises held in Egypt and the resumption of naval exercises after a long hiatus had shown that bilateral rapprochement was extending into sensitive areas of defence.

However, this cooperation should not automatically be interpreted as an anti-Western military alliance or as a formal coalition against a regional actor. Egypt and Turkey are pursuing their own objectives: Cairo is seeking stability along its borders, control over issues relating to Gaza, Libya, Sudan and the Red Sea, as well as the modernisation of its military capabilities; Ankara is seeking a return to its role as a central player in the Eastern Mediterranean, economic access, diplomatic influence and an opening towards Africa. There is genuine convergence, but it remains contingent on national interests, relations with the US, ties with the Gulf states and competition for regional influence.

Regional issues: Gaza, Libya, Sudan, Somalia and Iran

The war in Gaza has accelerated the rapprochement between Cairo and Ankara, as both states have an interest in influencing post-conflict arrangements, humanitarian flows, border security and reconstruction. Egypt plays a direct role through the Rafah border crossing and its mediation capacity, whilst Turkey seeks to project its political and economic influence in the Palestinian issue. In Libya, the two states previously held opposing positions, but normalisation is creating the conditions for limited coordination in support of Libyan stability and territorial integrity. In Sudan and Somalia, their interests intersect around security in the Red Sea, influence in the Horn of Africa, control of maritime routes and competition with other regional powers.

With regard to Iran, Egypt and Turkey share a common interest in avoiding a major escalation that would affect the Strait of Hormuz, the Red Sea, the Suez Canal and energy markets. Ankara maintains a channel of dialogue with both Tehran and Washington, whilst Cairo is directly exposed to the economic effects of any maritime destabilisation, including through Suez Canal revenues and the costs of energy imports. For this reason, the Egyptian-Turkish rapprochement may function as a crisis management mechanism, rather than necessarily as a cohesive ideological bloc.

Egypt’s balancing act between the US, Russia, Turkey and regional actors

Egypt’s foreign policy generally aims to diversify its partnerships and avoid exclusive dependence on a single centre of power. Cairo remains linked to the United States through military aid, security ties and diplomatic cooperation, whilst at the same time maintaining functional relations with Russia, China, the Gulf states and Turkey. This approach reflects a balancing strategy: Egypt seeks to secure economic, energy and military benefits from multiple sources, without severing ties with its traditional partners.

The relationship with Russia remains particularly significant due to the El Dabaa nuclear power plant project, developed with Rosatom; this project comprises four 1,200 MW reactors and is presented by Cairo as a key element in diversifying its energy mix and ensuring long-term energy security. Russian-Egyptian cooperation also encompasses trade, industry, tourism and food sectors. However, this relationship does not preclude Egypt’s pragmatic orientation towards multiple partnerships, nor does it hinder the development of cooperation with Turkey, Europe or the United States.

Geopolitical implications

The rapprochement between Egypt and Turkey may alter the balance of power in the Eastern Mediterranean. Over the past decade, tensions between Ankara and Cairo have favoured forms of cooperation between Egypt, Greece, Cyprus and Israel, particularly in the fields of energy and maritime delimitation. A functional relationship between Egypt and Turkey does not nullify these arrangements, but it introduces a new variable: Cairo may use dialogue with Ankara to increase its room for manoeuvre, whilst Ankara may reduce the degree of regional isolation it feels in the Eastern Mediterranean.

For Israel, the Egyptian–Turkish rapprochement is a development to monitor, but it does not automatically equate to the emergence of a hostile front. Egypt maintains its peace treaty with Israel and has direct security interests in the Sinai and Gaza, whilst Turkey combines tough political rhetoric with fluctuating economic and diplomatic relations. For Greece and Cyprus, the normalisation of relations between Ankara and Cairo may create additional diplomatic pressure, particularly on energy and maritime issues. For the European Union, a more stable relationship between Egypt and Turkey could be beneficial if it reduces risks in the Eastern Mediterranean, but could become problematic if it results in arrangements that marginalise European interests or complicate the sanctions regime and energy security.

Geostrategic implications

From a geostrategic perspective, the Egypt–Turkey rapprochement links several critical maritime areas: the Eastern Mediterranean, the Red Sea, the Suez Canal, the Strait of Hormuz, the Black Sea and the energy routes between the Persian Gulf, Europe and Africa. The two states control or influence key maritime hubs: Egypt through the Suez Canal and its position on the Red Sea, and Turkey through the Bosphorus and the Dardanelles, as well as through its capacity to project power into the Mediterranean and the Black Sea. Better coordination between Cairo and Ankara could create an arc of influence linking North Africa, the Middle East, the Caucasus, the Black Sea and South-East Europe.

In terms of maritime security, this convergence may have positive effects if it fosters cooperation against illegal trafficking, threats to critical infrastructure, attacks on trade routes and instability in the Red Sea. At the same time, it may give rise to competition if Ankara and Cairo use bilateral coordination to extend their influence over Libya, Sudan, Somalia or energy issues in the Eastern Mediterranean. What is at stake is not just control of resources, but control of access corridors, ports, regasification infrastructure, transport routes and the ability to influence regional crises.

Conclusions

The first conclusion is that the rapprochement between Egypt and Turkey represents a pragmatic convergence of interests, not a fully consolidated formal alliance. Energy, trade, maritime security and regional issues create strong incentives for cooperation, but differences in priorities, relations with other actors and the memory of recent rivalries limit the depth of the partnership.

The second conclusion is that the energy dimension acts as a catalyst: the decline in Egyptian gas production, the need for LNG, vulnerabilities in maritime routes and Turkey’s interest in exporting energy infrastructure make bilateral cooperation a practical solution to economic and geopolitical pressures.

The third conclusion is that the geostrategic impact extends beyond the bilateral relationship: closer coordination between Cairo and Ankara could influence the balance of power in the Eastern Mediterranean, the security of the Suez Canal, the situations in Gaza and Libya, competition in the Horn of Africa, and the way in which Europe shapes its energy security.

For Romania and the Black Sea region, these developments are worth monitoring, as Turkey is a key player in the Black Sea, whilst Egypt is a vital hub for energy and trade routes through the Suez Canal. The analytical recommendation is that this rapprochement should be treated as a fluid process: it may lead to regional stabilisation if it remains focused on economic cooperation and crisis management, but it may become a factor in competitive realignment if it turns into an instrument of power projection in the Eastern Mediterranean, the Red Sea and the Middle East.

Maritime Security Forum

TAYFUN Block-2 ballistic missiles enter service with the Turkish Armed Forces: military modernisation, regional deterrence and strategic implications – Maritime Security Forum

The induction of TAYFUN Block-2 ballistic missiles into the Turkish Armed Forces’ inventory marks an important milestone in the maturation of the Turkish defence industry and in strengthening Ankara’s capability to deliver precision strikes at operational-strategic ranges. The system should not be viewed merely as a new military platform, but as part of a broader transformation: Turkey’s shift from dependence on imports and foreign licences to the production of indigenous capabilities, with a direct impact on the regional balance of deterrence.

According to statements attributed to the Turkish Ministry of National Defence and reports in the defence press, the Land Forces Command has completed the verification, testing and acceptance procedures for an unspecified number of TAYFUN Block-2 missiles. The system is developed by the Turkish company Roketsan, one of the key entities within the national defence ecosystem. Open sources such as the specialist publications Defence Diary, Defence Turkey, C Savunma, TurDef, GlobalSecurity.org and the technical data sheet published by Roketsan confirm the system’s mobile nature, its range of over 500 km and its focus on striking high-value targets.

From a military perspective, the TAYFUN Block-2 expands Turkey’s capability to strike targets deep within the enemy’s defences, including air defence systems, command and control centres, military aircraft hangars, depots, critical infrastructure and other strategic objectives. In an operational environment where air defence, electronic warfare, drones and long-range munitions are shifting the balance between attack and defence, a mobile ballistic missile, capable of very high speeds and high precision, provides Turkey with a tool for deterrence and political-military pressure.

The TAYFUN programme first came to public attention in October 2022, with the first known test, conducted from the Rize-Artvin area towards the Black Sea. Subsequently, tests and public demonstrations have indicated a gradual evolution of the missile family, from variants with a stated range of over 280 km to configurations reported by open sources in the range of over 500 km and, for later variants, possibly even further. TAYFUN Block-2 was presented as an improved version in terms of accuracy, manoeuvrability and effect on target, whilst TAYFUN Block-4, unveiled subsequently, indicates Ankara’s ambition to further extend the range, payload and strategic role of the missile family.

This assessment must be made with caution, as some of the exact specifications remain classified or are presented differently in open-source material. Official data published by Roketsan for the TAYFUN system indicate a range of over 280 km, a length of 6.5 m, a diameter of 610 mm, a mass of approximately 2,300 kg and an accuracy of no more than 10 m CEP, whilst defence publications and recent reports on Block-2 mention a range of over 500 km and, in some cases, higher figures. Consequently, the table below summarises the publicly available information, distinguishing between relatively confirmed data and estimates or open-source reports.

Technical and military specifications summarised from open sources

ParameterTAYFUN / TAYFUN Block-2 – public dataAnalytical observations
System typeMobile, short- to medium-range surface-to-surface ballistic missile.Generally classified as an SRBM, with some estimates suggesting that later variants approach the MRBM threshold.
Developer / manufacturerRoketsan, Turkey.Indigenous programme, part of Turkey’s strategy for autonomy in the defence industry.
OperatorThe Turkish Armed Forces, primarily the Land Forces Command.Inclusion in the inventory marks the transition from technology demonstration to operational capability.
RangeOfficial: over 280 km; open-source estimates for Block-2: over 500 km, with some estimates suggesting over 600 km.The discrepancies reflect the classified nature of the performance data and deliberate ambiguity for deterrence purposes.
LengthApproximately 6.5 m for the TAYFUN/Block-2 variant.A figure consistent across several open-source reports and Roketsan’s data for TAYFUN.
DiameterApproximately 610 mm.A key feature for compatibility with mobile launchers and transport-launch containers.
MassApproximately 2,300 kg for the base variant/Block-2; Block-4 is reported separately at approximately 7.2 tonnes.The increase in mass for Block-4 indicates the family’s expansion towards longer ranges and heavier payloads.
PropulsionComposite solid propellant, according to specialist sources.Solid-propellant propulsion facilitates reduced preparation time and survivability through mobility.
SpeedReported to reach hypersonic speeds during certain phases of the trajectory, exceeding Mach 5 according to several sources.High speed reduces the reaction time of missile defence systems, but the term ‘hypersonic’ must be interpreted in a ballistic context.
GuidanceCoordinate-based guidance; INS with GPS/GLONASS satellite corrections in open-source reports; resistance to GPS jamming.The ability to operate in electronically contested environments is essential for the system’s military credibility.
AccuracyRoketsan specifies a CEP of ≤10 m for the TAYFUN; some sources mention approximately 5 m for recent configurations.High accuracy makes the system a means of striking point targets, not merely an area-attack weapon.
WarheadConventional warhead with high-explosive/fragmentation effect; sources mention enhanced-effect variants for critical targets.There are no credible public data on unconventional warheads; the analysis must be limited to the conventional role.
Launch platformMobile ground-based launcher, capable of rapid movement after launch.This mobility supports the ‘shoot-and-scoot’ concept and makes pre-emptive neutralisation more difficult.
Probable targetsAir defence systems, C2 centres, hangars, depots, critical military installations, strategic infrastructure.The primary role is precision strikes deep behind enemy lines and regional deterrence.

TAYFUN Block-4 technical and military specifications – public data and estimates from open sources

ParameterTAYFUN Block-4 – publicly reported specificationsAnalytical observations
System typeMobile, ground-to-ground ballistic missile with a hypersonic profile and a deep-strike role.It is presented as the largest and most powerful variant in the TAYFUN family.
Developer / manufacturerRoketsan, Turkey.Part of Turkey’s indigenous ballistic missile and strategic autonomy programme.
Programme statusUnveiled to the public at IDEF 2025; subsequently demonstrated on an 8×8 launcher at SAHA 2026; series production is reported to commence in 2026, but operational details remain limited.Should be regarded as a system in transition from public unveiling and testing towards operational maturity.
RangeNot officially disclosed. Open-source estimates range from approximately 800 km to 1,000–1,500 km; some speculative assessments suggest greater potential.The absence of an official figure maintains the ambiguity required for deterrence. If the range exceeds 1,000 km, the system falls into the category of medium-range ballistic missiles.
LengthApproximately 10 m.Significantly larger than the TAYFUN Block-1/Block-2, indicating a more powerful engine and greater volume for fuel and payload.
DiameterApproximately 938 mm.The diameter is about 50% larger than that of the basic variants, suggesting an increase in mass, range and payload capacity.
Launch massApproximately 7,200 kg.The mass is more than three times that of the original TAYFUN variants, indicating a shift from a tactical-operational role to a strategic-operational role.
PropulsionComposite solid-fuelled rocket motor, according to public assessments.Solid propellant allows for rapid response, reduced maintenance and superior operational mobility compared to liquid-fuelled systems.
SpeedMach 5+; some sources suggest a possible range of Mach 5–10 in the terminal phase.The term ‘hypersonic’ should be interpreted in a ballistic context: very high speed reduces the reaction time of defences, but does not automatically confirm HGV-type hypersonic gliding capabilities.
TrajectoryBallistic or quasi-ballistic trajectory, with possible manoeuvring during certain phases of flight.A quasi-ballistic trajectory can complicate interception, as it combines altitudes that are difficult for conventional defences to handle with a short reaction time.
GuidanceSatellite-aided inertial navigation system, reported as INS with GPS/GLONASS; exact details are not public.Resistance to jamming and the ability to maintain accuracy in contested environments are essential, but remain difficult to verify publicly.
AccuracyPublic estimates: approximately 5–10 m CEP; other sources indicate more conservative figures, below 10–50 m CEP.The stated accuracy would allow for strikes on point targets, but the figures should be treated with caution until independently confirmed.
WarheadMultifunctional conventional warhead; sources mention explosive, fragmentation and possibly penetrating capabilities.The penetrating capability would enhance its effectiveness against hardened targets, such as bunkers, hangars and protected command centres.
Warhead massEstimates from open sources: approximately 700–1,000 kg.There is no full official confirmation; the range is plausible given the total mass of 7.2 tonnes, but should be regarded as an estimate.
Launch platform8×8 mobile ground launcher; public sources indicate the use of a Koluman DERMAN / VOLAT 8×8 chassis.Mobility supports dispersion, survivability and ‘shoot-and-scoot’ tactics. Unlike smaller variants, Block-4 appears to carry one missile per launcher.
Probable targetsAir defence systems, command and control centres, hangars, air e bases, depots, critical infrastructure, fortified military installations.Its primary role is the precision strike against high-value and targets, and the reinforcement of conventional deterrence at long range.
Data limitationsThe exact range, guidance configuration, full flight profile, countermeasures and operational status are not officially disclosed.The analysis must distinguish between data confirmed by public presentations and estimates from specialist publications.

From an operational perspective, the TAYFUN Block-2 offers Turkey three main advantages: sufficient range to strike targets beyond the front line, mobility that reduces the vulnerability of launchers, and accuracy that allows the system to be used against specific military targets. These characteristics can shorten the adversary’s reaction time, force the dispersal of forces, and increase the costs of air and missile defence. At the same time, the system does not replace aircraft, drones or cruise missiles, but complements a portfolio of long-range strike capabilities.

The programme’s significance is amplified by the broader context of Turkey’s military modernisation. Ankara has consistently invested in drones, cruise missiles, guided munitions, naval systems, air defence and autonomous platforms. Within this ecosystem, the TAYFUN Block-2 is designed to provide a rapid strike capability with a greater range than traditional tactical systems and a higher level of technological autonomy. This reduces Turkey’s dependence on external suppliers and increases its freedom of action in regional crises.

Geopolitical implications

From a geopolitical perspective, the entry into service of the TAYFUN Block-2 reinforces Turkey’s profile as a regional military power with ambitions for strategic autonomy. Within NATO, this development has a dual significance: on the one hand, an ally gains an additional conventional deterrent capability; on the other hand, the expansion of the national ballistic arsenal may raise questions regarding transparency, allied coordination, escalation control and doctrinal compatibility. Turkey thus becomes a more influential player in negotiations, but also one whose strategic profile is more difficult to fit strictly within the traditional frameworks of NATO planning.

In the Eastern Mediterranean, the TAYFUN Block-2 may influence the calculations of Greece, Cyprus, Israel, Egypt and other regional actors, as its reported range theoretically allows for the coverage of sensitive targets across a wide geographical arc. The system does not automatically shift the military balance in Turkey’s favour, but it increases the complexity of defence planning for neighbouring states and highlights the importance of missile defence, the dispersal of critical infrastructure and the resilience of military bases. In the Middle East, the system strengthens Ankara’s ability to exert pressure on areas of interest in Syria, Iraq and, indirectly, on areas where it competes with Iran, Russia or certain Arab states.

Geostrategic implications

Geostrategically, the TAYFUN Block-2 must be analysed in the context of Turkey’s position at the crossroads of the Black Sea, the Eastern Mediterranean, the Caucasus, the Middle East and the Balkans. A mobile ballistic missile with a range of over 500 km extends Turkey’s strike capability to critical maritime, air and land targets, including logistics hubs, bases, ports, airports, command centres and energy infrastructure. In crisis scenarios, such a system can serve as a deterrent, a strategic signal or a means of rapidly neutralising enemy capabilities.

For the Black Sea, the relevance is indirect but significant. Turkey controls the Straits under the Montreux Convention and plays a central role in the regional naval balance. A mobile ballistic capability enhances defence and deterrence options against threats originating from the northern Black Sea, the Caucasus or the eastern Mediterranean. For Romania, this development warrants monitoring because Turkey is a NATO ally, an indispensable actor in Black Sea security and, at the same time, a regional power pursuing its own strategic interests. The strengthening of Turkish capabilities may reinforce regional deterrence, but it may also heighten the need for allied coordination, transparency and interoperability.

Conclusions

The first conclusion is that the TAYFUN Block-2 represents a conventional deterrent capability, not merely a technological achievement. The system provides Turkey with a rapid, mobile and precise strike option against strategic targets deep within the adversary’s defences. The second conclusion is that the programme confirms the maturing of the Turkish defence industry and Ankara’s drive towards strategic autonomy. By developing a family of ballistic missiles, Turkey is reducing its dependence on external suppliers and increasing its room for manoeuvre in regional crises. The third conclusion is that the geopolitical impact extends beyond the strictly military dimension: TAYFUN Block-2 influences defence calculations in the Eastern Mediterranean, the Middle East and the Black Sea, and for NATO it presents both opportunities for deterrence and the need for clearer doctrinal coordination. For Romania, this development must be viewed pragmatically: a militarily more capable Turkey can contribute to regional balance in the face of common threats, but this requires constant allied dialogue, interoperability and careful assessment of the implications for security in the Black Sea.

Maritime Security Forum

The entry of Chinese and Russian aircraft into the KADIZ: a coordinated military signal, a reaction test or a strategic routine? – Maritime Security Forum

The entry of more than ten Chinese and Russian military aircraft into South Korea’s Air Defence Identification Zone, known as KADIZ, represents a significant development in the security dynamics of North-East Asia. According to South Korea’s Joint Chiefs of Staff, the aircraft were detected before entering the zone, and the South Korean Air Force scrambled fighter jets as a preventive tactical measure. The incident did not involve a violation of South Korea’s sovereign airspace, but it confirmed the intensification of coordinated air activities by China and Russia in the vicinity of the Korean Peninsula.

Reports published by The Korea Herald, Yonhap, The Korea Times, Chosun Ilbo and The Straits Times indicate that the aircraft entered and exited the KADIZ in sequence over the Sea of Japan – known in Korea as the East Sea – and the waters south of the Korean Peninsula. South Korean sources emphasised that this was not an intrusion into national airspace, but rather activity within an air defence identification zone, which serves a preventive and operational purpose, without having the same legal status as sovereign airspace.

Operational and legal context

An air defence identification zone is not equivalent to national airspace. Sovereign airspace extends, in principle, over a state’s territory and territorial waters, whilst an ADIZ is a zone unilaterally declared for the early identification of aircraft approaching national airspace. In practice, foreign military aircraft are expected to notify the authorities prior to entry, but this expectation does not carry the same legal force as the prohibition on violating sovereign airspace. Consequently, Seoul’s response was a military and pre-emptive one, rather than one involving direct engagement.

According to South Korean assessments, the flight appears to have been linked to joint Sino-Russian exercises or aerial patrols. Beijing described the operation as a strategic air patrol conducted over the Sea of Japan, the East China Sea and the western Pacific Ocean, whilst Moscow stated that the flight was carried out in accordance with international law and was not directed against any third countries. These statements are significant as they reflect the difference between the perception of the coastal states, which view such incidents as military pressure, and the official message from China and Russia, which present them as routine exercises in strategic cooperation.

Military significance

Militarily, the incident has greater significance than a mere entry into an air defence identification zone. The coordinated flights by China and Russia are testing South Korea’s reaction times, interception procedures, air surveillance capabilities and the level of coordination between Seoul, Tokyo and Washington. Even though there was no airspace violation, such activities force the South Korean air force to expend resources, keep aircraft on alert and gather intelligence on flight patterns, formation composition and the level of Sino-Russian interoperability.

The repetitive nature of these incidents is key. Similar incidents were reported in November 2024 and December 2025, and in recent years joint Sino-Russian air patrols have become a recurring instrument of strategic signalling in the vicinity of South Korea and Japan. The repetition of these flights diminishes the exceptional nature of each individual episode, but increases the structural pressure on regional air defences. Over time, such a routine may normalise the Chinese and Russian military presence in sensitive areas and blur the distinction between exercises, demonstrations of force and operational readiness.

Geopolitical implications

Geopolitically, the incident confirms the operational closeness between China and Russia in a theatre where their interests intersect: limiting American influence, putting pressure on US-led alliances and challenging the security architecture in the Indo-Pacific. For China, such patrols serve to demonstrate its ability to operate at a distance, to send a message to South Korea and Japan, and to signal that Beijing can act in coordination with Moscow in the vicinity of US allies. For Russia, participation in these flights partly offsets the isolation caused by the war against Ukraine and shows that Moscow remains capable of projecting a military presence in North-East Asia.

For South Korea, this episode strengthens the case for maintaining a robust air posture and for deepening cooperation with the United States and Japan. At the same time, Seoul must carefully manage the balance between deterrence and avoiding escalation. The prompt response by the South Korean air force sent a message of vigilance, but the absence of an airspace violation necessitated a measured response. For Japan, such activities are relevant because Chinese and Russian air routes frequently intersect with areas of Japanese interest, and Tokyo views these patrols within the broader context of Chinese pressure around Taiwan and Russian activities in the North Pacific.

Geostrategic implications

Geostrategically, the area covered by the flights lies at the intersection of critical maritime and air routes: the Sea of Japan, the East China Sea, the Tsushima Strait, the western Pacific and the vicinity of the Korean Peninsula. These areas are important for South Korea’s defence, for the mobility of US forces in Japan and South Korea, for scenarios relating to Taiwan, and for monitoring North Korea. The Sino-Russian patrols can be interpreted as a form of pressure on the network of US bases and on the trilateral US–South Korea–Japan mechanisms.

From a military perspective, these flights contribute to the development of Sino-Russian interoperability in patrol, escort and long-range navigation missions, as well as coordination between bombers and fighter aircraft and communication in contested areas. Even though they do not form a formal NATO-style military alliance, repeated air cooperation indicates an ever-increasing capacity for operational synchronisation. This may complicate US and allied planning, as Washington must factor in the possibility of simultaneous or interrelated crises in Eastern Europe and the Indo-Pacific.

For maritime security, the incident has indirect but significant implications. Air control and surveillance over the marginal seas of North-East Asia are essential for the protection of trade routes, anti-submarine operations, the defence of ports and the protection of supply chains. If such patrols become more frequent, states in the region will be forced to invest further in radar, interceptor aircraft, early warning systems, air defence, electronic warfare and real-time information sharing.

Relevance for Europe and Romania

Although the incident is localised in North-East Asia, its relevance to Europe and Romania lies in illustrating a broader strategic pattern: coordination between China and Russia to exert simultaneous pressure on Western alliances in different theatres. For Europe, this means that Indo-Pacific security and Euro-Atlantic security can no longer be analysed entirely in isolation. A crisis involving Taiwan or the Korean Peninsula could affect the US resources available to Europe, whilst an escalation in Eastern Europe may encourage probing actions in Asia.

For Romania, the lesson relates to air surveillance, rapid response and regional resilience. Incidents involving aircraft or drones near national airspace, including in the context of the war in Ukraine, highlight the importance of an integrated architecture comprising sensors, air defence, interception and public communication. The KADIZ case demonstrates that identification zones and response procedures are essential tools for preventing surprise, reducing the risk of incidents and maintaining the credibility of deterrence.

Conclusions

The first conclusion is that the entry of Chinese and Russian aircraft into the KADIZ does not constitute a violation of South Korean airspace, but represents a coordinated military signal of strategic significance. The legal distinction between an ADIZ and sovereign airspace is important, but from an operational perspective, such flights test the vigilance, procedures and response capabilities of the states concerned.

The second conclusion is that Sino-Russian air patrols indicate increasingly visible military cooperation, even if this does not amount to a formal alliance. China and Russia are using these activities to send messages to the United States, South Korea, Japan and other regional actors, whilst improving their operational coordination.

The third conclusion is that North-East Asia is becoming an arena where aerial, maritime and information-based competition overlaps with great-power rivalry. For US allies, the challenge is to maintain deterrence without unnecessary escalation, to improve interoperability and to avoid the normalisation of repeated military pressure.

The final conclusion for Europe and Romania is that such episodes must be viewed as part of a global strategic competition, not as isolated regional incidents. Coordination between China and Russia in the Indo-Pacific has indirect effects on Euro-Atlantic security, as it may divert Western attention and resources. Romania must monitor these developments from the perspective of air defence, maritime surveillance, the resilience of critical infrastructure and allied coordination in scenarios of simultaneous crises.

Maritime Security Forum

The Operational Readiness of British Attack Submarines: Maintenance Crisis, Operational Vulnerability or Strategic Symptom? – Maritime Security Forum

Recent reports regarding the absence of British attack submarines at sea point to a serious operational availability issue within the Royal Navy, but any analysis must be undertaken with caution. The UK Ministry of Defence does not usually comment on the exact location or state of readiness of submarines, for reasons of operational security. However, monitoring of open-source information and reports in the defence press suggest that the fleet of Astute-class nuclear attack submarines is undergoing a maintenance bottleneck, with several vessels simultaneously in dock for repairs, modernisation, testing or post-deployment preparation.

The UK Defence Journal reported, based on OSINT monitoring, that the UK was once again without an attack submarine on patrol. Similar information was reported by The Telegraph, Brussels Signal, Defence Security Asia, 19FortyFive and other specialist publications, whilst documents from the House of Commons Library confirm the existence of long-standing concerns regarding maintenance, fleet availability, specialist personnel and industrial capacity. Official Royal Navy sources describe the Astute class as the most advanced category of attack submarines operated by the United Kingdom, equipped with Spearfish torpedoes and Tomahawk cruise missiles, but do not publish current data on operational availability.

The structural causes of the deadlock

The problem does not appear to lie with the technical performance of the submarines whilst on mission, but rather with the capacity to sustain a complex nuclear fleet. The Astute-class submarines are sophisticated platforms, with strictly regulated maintenance, lengthy certification cycles and specialised industrial requirements. Routine maintenance can be carried out at HMNB Clyde/Faslane, but major refit, ‘ ’ modernisation and deep maintenance work is concentrated at HMNB Devonport, the only major British facility capable of carrying out such work on nuclear submarines.

The concentration of maintenance at Devonport creates a critical bottleneck. The same infrastructure must support the Astute-class attack submarines, the Vanguard-class strategic submarines that ensure continuous nuclear deterrence, and the decommissioning or defuelling programmes for submarines withdrawn from service. The National Audit Office has previously highlighted significant delays in the management of decommissioned nuclear submarines, and government documents relating to the Submarine Dismantling Project show that Devonport and Rosyth already host a significant number of decommissioned submarines, which require safety supervision and maintenance.

The bottleneck is exacerbated by a lack of available dry docks, delays in upgrading facilities, a shortage of nuclear engineers, welders, technicians and specialist submariners, as well as supply chain difficulties for parts and equipment. The case of HMS Audacious, which waited a long time to enter dry dock at Devonport, is frequently cited by analysts as an example of the pressure on the infrastructure. In a numerically small fleet, any delay in refit or repair has a disproportionate effect on overall availability.

The status of the Astute-class fleet and the limits of availability

The Astute class is planned to comprise seven nuclear-powered attack submarines. HMS Astute, HMS Ambush, HMS Artful, HMS Audacious and HMS Anson are listed as in service; HMS Agamemnon is undergoing testing and integration; and the class’s final vessel, HMS Achilles, remains under construction. This structure results in a limited rotation capacity: even though the fleet is technologically advanced, the actual number of vessels available simultaneously for patrol depends on maintenance, training, crew rotation and certification cycles.

Normally, a submarine fleet should not be assessed solely by the number of existing platforms, but by the ratio of vessels on mission, those undergoing training, those undergoing maintenance and those undergoing major refits. When several submarines undergo major maintenance simultaneously, and new platforms are not yet fully certified, actual patrol capability may temporarily fall to a critical level. For this reason, the absence of attack submarines at sea is less a one-off incident and more a symptom of a fleet operating at the limit of its industrial support capacity.

Operational impact

British nuclear-powered attack submarines have multiple roles: hunting enemy submarines, protecting the Vanguard-class strategic submarines that provide nuclear deterrence, supporting aircraft carrier strike groups, gathering intelligence, conducting covert surveillance, and launching Tomahawk cruise missiles against land-based targets. Their temporary absence from the seas reduces the United Kingdom’s operational flexibility and weakens an important component of conventional deterrence and anti-submarine defence.

The most significant impact concerns the North Atlantic, the GIUK Gap, the protection of undersea infrastructure and the monitoring of Russian naval activity. Given that Russia has maintained or intensified its submarine activity in the North Atlantic, the Arctic and the waters near the UK, the temporary absence of British attack submarines may reduce the capacity for covert surveillance and shift a greater share of the burden onto allies, maritime patrol aircraft, anti-submarine frigates, fixed sensors and multinational surveillance systems.

Institutional response and limitations on recovery

Naval Command and the Ministry of Defence have recognised the need to improve availability through maintenance catch-up plans, investment in Devonport, strengthening capabilities at Clyde/Faslane, and preparing the infrastructure for future generations of submarines. However, these measures are slow to take effect. Nuclear submarines cannot be rapidly returned to service through administrative solutions, as each stage of maintenance, testing and certification is linked to nuclear safety, complex technical standards and the availability of qualified personnel.

Geopolitical implications

Geopolitically, the reduced availability of British attack submarines undermines the United Kingdom’s credibility as a global naval power and as a European pillar of NATO. London remains a major military player, with nuclear deterrence, aircraft carriers, naval aviation, special forces and intelligence capabilities. However, a submarine strike force that is temporarily unavailable sends a signal of vulnerability to adversaries and may fuel the perception that British strategic ambitions exceed its industrial capacity to sustain them.

For NATO, the issue is of direct relevance. British submarines contribute to the surveillance of the North Atlantic, the protection of sea routes between North America and Europe, the deterrence of Russia and the security of critical undersea infrastructure. If British operational readiness declines, pressure will mount on the United States, France, Norway and other allies to partially fill the gaps in surveillance and patrols. At the same time, the British case shows that the problem is not merely budgetary, but industrial: without docks, engineers, supply chains and skilled personnel, advanced platforms remain unavailable.

Geostrategic implications

Geostrategically, the absence of British attack submarines particularly affects the area between the Arctic, the GIUK Gap, the North Atlantic and the waters around the British Isles. This is the corridor through which Russian submarines may attempt to exit their northern bases towards the North Atlantic, where commercial routes, submarine cables, pipelines, communications hubs and transatlantic reinforcement lines are located. Control of this area is essential to NATO’s ability to rapidly deploy forces and supplies from North America to Europe in the event of a crisis.

More broadly, the crisis in the availability of British submarines highlights the vulnerability of the major Western naval powers to domestic industrial constraints. AUKUS, the future AUKUS SSNs and the modernisation of allied fleets may bolster long-term capability, but they do not immediately resolve the current availability issue. At a time when Russia, China and other actors are investing in submarines, underwater drones, sensors, underwater sabotage and long-range missiles, the ability to conduct continuous patrols is becoming just as important as the individual performance of the platforms.

Relevance for Europe and Romania

For Europe, the British case serves as a warning regarding the relationship between strategic ambition and maintenance capacity. European states are investing in expensive and sophisticated platforms, but their effectiveness depends on availability, stocks, infrastructure, personnel and industry. A frigate, an aircraft or a submarine that is unavailable due to maintenance does not provide an operational deterrent, regardless of its theoretical performance.

For Romania, the key lesson applies to the Black Sea: actual availability matters more than nominal inventory. Naval defence, maritime surveillance, drones, air defence, port infrastructure and communications protection must be assessed in terms of their ability to operate continuously during a crisis. The Port of Constanța, offshore energy infrastructure, NATO cables and logistics routes depend on a combination of sensors, ships, aviation, anti-drone defences, allied cooperation and predictable maintenance.

Conclusions

The first conclusion is that the situation regarding British attack submarines should not be simplistically interpreted as a lack of capability, but rather as an availability crisis within an extremely complex naval system. The United Kingdom possesses advanced submarines, but the ability to maintain them all at operational readiness simultaneously is constrained by infrastructure, personnel, maintenance cycles and the prioritisation of strategic nuclear deterrence.

The second conclusion is that this vulnerability has implications for NATO, not just for the United Kingdom. The North Atlantic, the GIUK Gap and critical submarine infrastructure are shared strategic spaces. Reduced availability of British submarines forces allies to compensate through patrols, sensors, maritime aviation and more intensive anti-submarine cooperation.

The third conclusion is that maintenance, dry docks, spare parts and specialised personnel are components of deterrence. In the current strategic competition, fleets are not judged solely by the number of platforms, but by how many can actually be deployed on mission, for how long and at what rate of rotation.

The final conclusion for Europe and Romania is that operational readiness must be treated as a strategic objective in its own right. For the Black Sea, the British lesson is clear: infrastructure, maintenance, crew training and allied integration are just as important as the acquisition of new platforms. Without these elements, technological superiority can quickly turn into a latent capability, insufficient for deterrence in a crisis.

Maritime Security Forum

Iran and the nuclear deterrence narrative: doctrinal signal, negotiating leverage or strategic threshold? – Maritime Security Forum

The message published by the Iranian state-affiliated press, according to which Iran would have ‘no other option’ but to acquire the atomic bomb in order to remove the military scenario against it from the table, represents one of the most explicit recent formulations of a nuclear deterrence logic espoused in the media sphere close to the security establishment in Tehran. International reports have indicated that the article attributed to the Fars news agency – a publication associated with hardline circles and close to the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps – argued that Iran needed to achieve ‘nuclear deterrence’ before negotiations with the United States could be conducted from a position deemed appropriate.

The significance of this episode lies not only in the hardline rhetoric, but in the fact that the message shifts the argument from the traditional formula of strategic ambiguity towards an explicit justification of nuclear weapons as a means of ensuring the regime’s survival and counterbalancing American-Israeli pressure. In the past, Iran has publicly insisted that its nuclear programme is for peaceful purposes and has invoked religious or political prohibitions on nuclear weapons. However, following the attacks on its nuclear infrastructure, the degradation of certain components of its regional deterrence network, and US and Israeli military pressure, domestic discourse appears to have become more open to the idea of a change in doctrine.

Credible sources such as the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, Al Jazeera, France 24 and publications specialising in proliferation have shown that the Iranian nuclear debate is not new, but has become more visible following the escalation of the conflict with Israel and Washington’s use of military threats as a means of exerting pressure. In this context, the Iranian media’s invocation of the threats made by Donald Trump is being used as a domestic political argument: if adversaries speak of destroying Iran’s infrastructure or of catastrophic consequences, then Iran should, according to this logic, create an ultimate guarantee of its security.

From a strategic perspective, this does not automatically mean that Iran has taken the final political decision to manufacture an operational nuclear weapon. There is a fundamental difference between deterrence rhetoric, the accumulation of latent nuclear capabilities, uranium enrichment, the development of delivery technologies, and the actual decision to weaponise. However, even without a final decision, the normalisation of pro-nuclear weapons rhetoric may reduce the domestic political costs of a future change in doctrine and may prepare public opinion for a possible official repositioning.

Geopolitical implications

The first geopolitical implication is an increased risk of proliferation in the Middle East. If Iran were to move from a latent nuclear threshold to an explicit doctrine of nuclear deterrence, Saudi Arabia, Turkey, Egypt and other regional states might be encouraged to step up their own civil nuclear options, technological hedging or strategic cooperation with external nuclear powers. Even without the immediate emergence of new arsenals, the region would enter a phase of heightened strategic suspicion, in which civil nuclear programmes would be assessed through the prism of their military potential.

The second implication concerns Iran’s relationship with the United States and Israel. A more explicit nuclear posture could, paradoxically, strengthen both Iran’s arguments regarding the need for deterrence and the Israeli and American arguments regarding the use of force to prevent Iran’s nuclearisation. The result would be a security spiral: each side would interpret the other’s actions as evidence of aggressive intentions, and the scope for diplomatic compromise would narrow.

The third implication relates to the credibility of the global non-proliferation regime. Iran is a state party to the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty, and a potential move towards nuclear weapons would undermine the authority of the IAEA, the inspection mechanisms and the ability of the major powers to maintain the distinction between civilian and military nuclear programmes. At the same time, the perception of a double standard – fuelled by the existence of undeclared or not fully regulated nuclear arsenals in the region – could be exploited by Tehran to justify a change in doctrine.

Maritime and energy implications

The Iranian nuclear issue has direct implications for maritime security. The Strait of Hormuz remains one of the most important chokepoints for global exports of oil and liquefied natural gas. A nuclear crisis between Iran, the United States and Israel could lead to higher insurance premiums, the rerouting of ships, delays in energy shipments, the militarisation of routes in the Persian Gulf and pressure on international energy prices. Even without an open conflict, the perception of risk may be enough to affect the market.

For Europe, the vulnerability is not only energy-related but also logistical. An escalation in the Persian Gulf or the Red Sea could put a strain on alternative routes, increase maritime transport costs and disrupt the supply chains linking Asia, the Middle East and European markets. In such a scenario, Mediterranean and Black Sea ports, including Constanța, could be indirectly affected by volatility in trade flows, energy prices and transport costs.

Implications for Europe and Romania

For Europe, Iran’s message confirms that the nuclear issue cannot be separated from energy security, sanctions policy, transatlantic relations and global competition between the major powers. Iran’s potential acquisition of nuclear weapons would complicate the European Union’s relations with the Gulf states, affect energy negotiations and place additional pressure on European diplomatic mechanisms, which are already constrained by the erosion of trust between Tehran and the West.

For Romania, the implications are indirect but strategic. Romania is not a central player in the Iranian nuclear issue, but it is part of the NATO architecture, a Black Sea littoral state and an important logistical hub for the Eastern Flank. A major crisis in the Middle East could divert the attention and resources of the United States, increase pressure on energy markets and heighten the risk of simultaneous crises: Russia in the Black Sea, Iran in the Persian Gulf, tensions in the Eastern Mediterranean and instability in the Red Sea. In this context, Romania must treat energy security, air defence, port resilience and allied cooperation as integral parts of the same strategic equation.

Conclusions

The first conclusion is that the article published in the Iranian press, which is close to the security apparatus, should not be treated as mere propaganda, but as an indicator of a genuine doctrinal debate within the Iranian system. Even if the final decision on nuclear armament rests with the highest political echelons, the public normalisation of the idea of nuclear deterrence narrows the gap between the technological threshold and the political threshold.

The second conclusion is that external military threats may have the opposite effect to that intended. Rather than leading to the abandonment of nuclear ambitions, they may strengthen the domestic argument of those who maintain that only a credible nuclear capability can guarantee the regime’s survival. This is the classic logic of the security dilemma: pressure exerted to prevent a threat may actually accelerate the very behaviour it seeks to prevent.

The third conclusion is that the Iranian nuclear issue must be analysed in conjunction with maritime routes, energy, sanctions, missile defence and regional competition. A shift in doctrine in Tehran would have implications not only for Israel and the United States, but for the entire security architecture of the Middle East, Europe and the Euro-Atlantic area.

The ultimate conclusion for Europe and Romania is that the prevention of nuclear proliferation must go hand in hand with energy resilience, preparedness for maritime crises and allied coordination. If Iran moves towards an explicit nuclear doctrine, the effects will not be confined to the Middle . They will be reflected in energy costs, maritime transport security, NATO’s priorities and the ability of European states to simultaneously manage strategic pressures across multiple theatres.

Maritime Security Forum

Sea Trident ST-1000: Ukraine’s heavy underwater drone and the new phase of unmanned naval warfare – Maritime Security Forum

The public unveiling of the Ukrainian Sea Trident ST-1000 system at the Eurosatory 2026 exhibition in Paris marks the Ukrainian defence industry’s transition to a more ambitious phase of unmanned naval warfare: autonomous, long-range underwater operations with a low signature and heavy payload. According to reports published by Naval News, the Kyiv Post, United24 Media, Euromaidan Press and naval analyst H. I. Sutton/Covert Shores, the platform developed by the Ukrainian company Global Mark falls into the category of extra-large autonomous underwater vehicles, being designed for strikes, logistical transport, cargo delivery and the interception of other unmanned underwater vehicles.

The significance of the Sea Trident ST-1000 stems not only from its size, but also from the shift in operational logic it suggests. Ukraine has already demonstrated the effectiveness of surface naval drones against the Russian Black Sea Fleet, through platforms such as the Magura V5 and Sea Baby. The Sea Trident extends this campaign to the underwater domain, where detection is more difficult and the protection of ports, naval bases, ships at anchor and critical infrastructure becomes more complex. Whilst surface drones have shifted the cost ratio between attacker and defender, heavy underwater drones can shift the competition into the realm of sensors, underwater barriers, sonar, harbour patrols and anti-UUV countermeasures.

According to publicly available data, the Sea Trident ST-1000 has a mass of approximately 10 tonnes, a length of 10 metres, a width of 2 metres, a height of 1.5 metres and can carry a payload of up to 1,000 kg. Its reported range extends to 2,000 nautical miles, with a cruising speed of approximately 6 knots and a maximum speed of approximately 10 knots. The stated operational depth is up to 60 metres, suggesting a platform optimised primarily for coastal areas, continental shelf waters, port routes and relatively shallow maritime areas, rather than for deep-sea oceanic operations.

This assessment should be treated with caution, as the system was presented to the public at a defence exhibition, and much of the data comes from the manufacturer’s specifications or OSINT observations. There is not yet sufficient public information regarding the exact stage of testing, operational integration, the number of units, the full communications system, the actual level of autonomy, resistance to jamming, launch and recovery methods, or potential customers. However, even as a technology demonstrator, the Sea Trident ST-1000 points the way in which naval warfare is evolving: unmanned platforms, relatively inexpensive compared to conventional ships, capable of carrying large payloads and creating disproportionately costly defence dilemmas.

Sea Trident ST-1000 technical and military specifications – public data and estimates from open sources

ParameterSea Trident ST-1000 – publicly available figuresAnalytical observations
CategoryExtra-large unmanned underwater vehicle, XLUUV/AUV.A niche platform, situated at the intersection between a naval drone, a heavy torpedo, an autonomous mini-submarine and an underwater logistics vehicle.
DeveloperGlobal Mark, Ukraine.A company previously known for aerial drones, FPV systems, UGVs and electronic warfare solutions.
Public statusUnveiled at Eurosatory 2026; full operational status has not been publicly confirmed.Should be regarded as a system currently at a stage between technology demonstration, industrial validation and potential operational maturity.
LengthApproximately 10 m.Its dimensions allow for road transport and, according to some sources, integration into a standard ISO container.
Width / beamApproximately 2 m.The oval hull, which is wider than it is tall, can contribute to stability and the carriage of a large payload.
HeightApproximately 1.5 m, excluding the mast assembly.Low profile, useful for operating in shallow waters and reducing visual or radar detectability on the surface.
MassApproximately 10,000 kg.This mass places it in the category of heavy underwater platforms, with the potential to have a strategic impact on port or naval targets.
Payload / LoadUp to 1,000 kg.It can be configured for strike missions, logistical transport, equipment delivery or other specialised missions.
RangeUp to 2,000 nautical miles, approximately 3,700 km; some sources indicate slightly different figures, of approximately 1,700–2,000 nautical miles.The reported range would allow for long-duration missions and the engagement of targets from unconventional directions, but the actual range depends on speed profile, batteries, navigation and communications.
Cruising speedApproximately 6 knots, around 11 km/h.The low speed favours range and a lower acoustic signature, but increases the time taken to reach the target.
Maximum speedApproximately 10 knots, around 18.5 km/h.This may be relevant in the terminal phase or for repositioning, but does not turn the platform into a high-speed vehicle in the torpedo sense.
Operational depthUp to 60 m.Important limitation: the platform appears to be geared towards coastal, port and continental shelf operations, not deep-sea operations.
Navigation and rangeFull autonomy and adaptive navigation, according to the manufacturer and specialist reports.The actual level of autonomy, performance in GPS-denied environments and resistance to electronic warfare require operational confirmation.
PropulsionA counter-rotating propeller was observed in the OSINT analysis; full details of the propulsion system are not publicly available.The configuration may offer efficiency, control and potential terminal acceleration, but performance remains unconfirmed by independent sources.
Stated missionsKamikaze/strike missions, logistics, cargo delivery, UUV interception and neutralisation, and possibly the transport/launch of FPV drones.Its multi-role nature increases its appeal, but also its technical and doctrinal complexity.
Probable targetsShips, ports, naval infrastructure, logistical facilities, strategic maritime targets and other underwater drones.The main threat lies in forcing the adversary to defend port areas and underwater routes across a much wider area.

Military and operational implications

The first military implication is increased pressure on Russian port defences in the Black Sea. A heavy, long-range underwater platform with a one-tonne payload would force Russia to extend its protection zone beyond surface barriers, anti-drone nets and conventional patrols. Defences would need to include underwater sensors, fixed and mobile sonar, patrols with fast boats, counter-drone underwater drones, seabed monitoring and procedures for verifying access to ports.

The second implication is the emergence of a new cost-effectiveness ratio in naval warfare. Even though the Sea Trident ST-1000 is not cheap in absolute terms, its cost is likely to be much lower than that of a warship, port infrastructure or a damaged submarine. This imbalance forces the defender to invest disproportionately in protection, surveillance and response, which can deplete resources and complicate operational planning.

The third implication concerns underwater competition between unmanned systems. The fact that Sea Trident is presented not only as a strike weapon but also as a platform capable of intercepting other UUVs suggests the start of an underwater ‘drone-versus-drone’ race. In the future, the protection of ports, submarine cables, pipelines and naval bases could increasingly depend on networks of autonomous defensive vehicles, rather than just military ships and divers.

Geopolitical and maritime implications

Geopolitically, the Sea Trident ST-1000 reinforces Ukraine’s image as a laboratory for rapid military innovation. Given that Ukraine’s access to large combat vessels is limited, autonomous solutions allow for the asymmetric compensation of conventional naval inferiority. This trend will be closely watched by the Black Sea littoral states, NATO, Russia and the maritime powers of the Indo-Pacific, as it demonstrates that actors without conventional fleets can achieve strategic effects through a combination of drones, intelligence, software, sensors and precision strikes.

For the Black Sea, the key implication is that maritime security can no longer be reduced to the control of surface vessels. Ports, anchorages, offshore energy installations, submarine cables, oil terminals and supply routes may become vulnerable to systems that are small or medium in size but have disproportionate effects. In this context, the protection of critical maritime infrastructure becomes an ongoing task, not merely one reserved for times of open warfare.

For Romania, this development is directly relevant. The Port of Constanța, offshore energy infrastructure, commercial terminals, NATO logistical support routes for the Eastern Flank and the country’s proximity to the Ukrainian theatre of operations necessitate the development of an integrated maritime and underwater surveillance architecture. The lesson is not that Romania must automatically copy the Ukrainian model, but that it must treat the unmanned underwater domain as a future component of Black Sea security.

Implications for naval doctrine

The Sea Trident ST-1000 signals a doctrinal shift: the transition from naval platforms centred on manned vessels to distributed networks of autonomous systems. In such a doctrine, the objective is not necessarily the direct destruction of the opposing fleet, but rather the imposition of permanent operational uncertainty. If the adversary does not know how many drones there are, where they are launched from, what their attack profile is, or what targets they are pursuing, they must disperse their forces, restrict the movements of their ships, and expend resources on continuous protection.

However, autonomous underwater systems have significant limitations. Underwater communication is difficult, long-distance navigation can be affected by cumulative errors, the acoustic environment is complex, and real-time mission recovery or updates are more difficult than with aerial or surface drones. Furthermore, the operational depth of 60 m limits the platform’s use in certain areas and makes it more suitable for coastal waters, ports, coastal routes and continental shelves than for oceanic submarine warfare.

Conclusions

The first conclusion is that the Sea Trident ST-1000 represents more than just a new Ukrainian drone: it is a sign of the maturing of autonomous naval warfare. The platform demonstrates that Ukraine is seeking to shift the pressure on Russia from the realm of surface drones to the underwater domain, where detection and defence are more difficult.

The second conclusion is that publicly available technical data must be treated with caution. The range of 2,000 nautical miles, the payload of 1,000 kg and the stated endurance are impressive, but actual performance depends on testing, production, operational integration, navigation, communications and resistance to countermeasures. The distinction between a prototype, an exhibition model and a mature operational system remains crucial.

The third conclusion is that future naval defence must necessarily include an anti-UUV component. States that focus solely on anti-ship missiles, air defence and surface vessels risk overlooking an emerging threat: autonomous underwater attacks on ports, critical infrastructure and vulnerable ships at anchor.

The final conclusion for Romania and NATO is that the Black Sea is becoming a testing ground for the maritime warfare of the future. The protection of the Port of Constanța, offshore energy infrastructure, logistics routes and submarine cables must include underwater sensors, allied data-sharing, defensive drones, adapted port procedures and rapid response capabilities. The Sea Trident ST-1000 does not, on its own, alter the strategic balance, but it confirms that unmanned underwater systems will become a central component of modern maritime security.

Maritime Security Forum

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