UK says Russia ran submarine operation over cables and pipelines

UK Defence Secretary confirms Russian submarine activity near critical Atlantic infrastructure, but reports no damage.

UK Defence Secretary confirms Russian submarine activity near critical Atlantic infrastructure, but reports no damage. | Contesto: cronaca

Punti chiave

  • UK says Russia ran submarine operation over cables and pipelines

Contesto

The UK government has publicly confirmed that Russian naval vessels conducted a sustained operation in the Atlantic, surveilling and potentially threatening undersea cables and pipelines vital to national infrastructure. Defence Secretary John Healey stated the activity was monitored by the Royal Navy and allied forces, though he emphasized there is currently "no evidence" of any physical damage to UK assets. The announcement, made from London, formalizes long-held suspicions within Western intelligence and military circles regarding Moscow's strategic interest in subsea systems. The confirmation underscores a significant and escalating dimension of geopolitical competition, where the deep ocean floor has become a new theater of strategic rivalry. Undersea fiber-optic cables carry an estimated 95% of global data and financial transactions, while pipelines are critical for energy security. Their vulnerability, lying in vast, difficult-to-patrol depths, presents a profound security challenge. Military analysts have warned for years that these infrastructures represent a key strategic target, offering a potential avenue for coercion or disruption with a level of plausible deniability difficult to achieve in other domains. Russia has steadily expanded its specialized submarine and surface fleet designed for deep-sea operations, including vessels like the *Yantar*, officially an oceanographic research ship but widely assessed by NATO as an intelligence collection platform equipped for cable inspection and manipulation. This latest reported Atlantic patrol fits a pattern of increased Russian naval assertiveness, from the North Sea to the Mediterranean. The UK's public attribution serves as a diplomatic signal, aligning with a broader NATO effort to expose and deter so-called "grey zone" activities—actions that fall below the threshold of open warfare but aim to sow uncertainty and test allied resolve. The immediate reassurance of "no evidence" of damage will be weighed against longer-term concerns about espionage and the mapping of vulnerabilities. Such operations are not merely about immediate sabotage; they enable detailed charting of cable routes, connection...

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Categoria: cronaca