NATO as the Fly in Russia’s Baltic Sea Soup

Last week NATO announced that it is increasing its presence in the Baltic Sea. The pretext is damage in recent months to undersea cables allegedly caused by ships associated with Russia’s “shadow fleet.”

Anonymous intelligence officials admit to Jeff Bezos’ Washington Post that there’s really nothing nefarious about the incidents; they were just accidents. Nevertheless the West is using it as an opportunity to check off three boxes: push ahead with more military encirclement of Russia, harass Russia’s oil trade, and gaslight the public in order to sell increased defense budgets with the corresponding social spending cuts.

The new NATO operation purportedly in response to the damaged cables involves more ships, surveillance planes, drones in the air and underwater, and other types of intelligence gathering. The U.K. — that AI superpower in the North Sea —  is leading the charge on an AI-based system to track suspicious ships in the Baltic. The Commander Task Force Baltic Command Center in Germany’s Baltic port city of Rostock will take a lead role in oversight. The operation is called  “Baltic Sentry.”

“If the Russians see that we are present there, the likelihood of such sabotage acts immediately decreases, because saboteurs can be caught in the act, and once caught, it’s much easier to deal with them,” Arjen Warnaar, commander of NATO’s Standing Naval Maritime Group 1, told the Estonian ERR news outlet.

The reason for NATO’s beefed up presence is predicated on a lie, however — at least according to some anonymous Western intelligence officials.

The Washington Post cited several from the US and Europe in a Sunday report highlighting that damage in recent months to underwater power and communications cables in the Baltic was more likely than not the result of simple maritime accidents rather than nefarious actions from Moscow. That would hardly be surprising. According to Telegeography, cables and other underwater infrastructure suffer minor damage all the time:

Submarine cables break all the time. On average, two to four break somewhere in the world every week. While damage is more common in some areas than others, these breaks—or “faults”—eventually happen to almost every cable…

Most come from fishing equipment, normal anchoring activity, and natural disasters like undersea earthquakes. Internal component or equipment failure causes another, smaller category of faults.

And in none of these cases are we talking about the sophisticated level of destruction like in the case of the Nord Stream pipelines. These are all relatively benign incidents that caused little disruption, were quickly repaired, and likely would have gone mostly unnoticed in absence of NATO hullabaloo and media attention.

Instead Western officials have seized on the cable damage to make escalatory statements and float the idea of closing the “NATO lake” to Russian ships. Some of the NATO Keystone Cops in the Baltics and elsewhere probably are crazy enough to try some funny business to effectively shut down a few of Russia’s busiest ports on the Baltic (which might help explain Bezos’ WaPo piece throwing cold water on the allegations of Russian sabotage).

Upon the announcement that Finland and Sweden would join NATO, former Secretary General of the military bloc Anders Fogh Rasmussen proclaimed it was a strategic victory because “If we wish, we can block all entry and exit to Russia through St. Petersburg.”

Estonia, which has a population smaller than Russia’s armed forces, has in the past made noise about causing problems in the Gulf of Finland with Estonian Minister of Defense Hanno Pevkur talking about how the integration of Estonian and Finnish coastal missile defense the two sides are working on will allow them to close the Gulf of Finland to Russian ships. That would effectively blockade Saint Petersburg, which Russia would consider an act of war. How would that integrated missile defense system handle Russian hypersonic missiles?

Roughly 60 percent of Russia’s total seaborne oil exports pass through the Danish straits on its way to international markets, and Moscow’s updated version of the Naval Doctrine of the Russian Federation lists the Baltic Sea and and the Danish Straits as “important areas,” in which the use of force will be available as a last resort after the other options have been exhausted.

It’s more likely that this is just another point in the tails-we-win, heads-you-lose game the West thinks it’s playing. On the one hand, ramping up the militarization of the Baltic — as well as everywhere else — is in line with the overall NATO racket. On the other hand, who knows, maybe this attempt to cause another headache for Moscow will, according to the wishful thinking in the West, finally lead to the implosion of the Putin government.

Despite the Washington Post report revealing that “intercepted communications and other classified intelligence” collected by NATO countries indicate that crews and poorly maintained ships were behind the accidents, I have yet to see NATO recalling its “Baltic Sentry. That’s hardly surprising because stopping damage to cables isn’t really the point.

The Financial Times noted as much after a similar incident in the Fall of 2023 when some NATO states were making noise about UN Convention on the Law of the Sea laws permitting states to to “institute proceedings, including detention of the vessel” given “clear objective evidence” that the vessel poses a threat of environmental damage.:

But officials briefed on the proposal say it relies on the capacity of Denmark’s naval authorities to stop and check the tankers, and raises the question of what Copenhagen would do if a ship refused to stop.

“Discussions appear to be centred on making life more complicated for Russia and the buyers of its oil,” said Henning Gloystein at Eurasia Group. “If you can make the bureaucracy and risk associated with trading Russian oil a lot more onerous the expectation is buyers will start to demand larger discounts again for their trouble.”

There you have it. It’s really about going after the ominously-named ghost ships or shadow fleet. NATO, at enormous cost to itself, will try to cause problems for ships transporting Russian oil, which might mean Moscow takes a small hit on revenue.

As Alexander Mercouris explains, the so-called “shadow fleet” are simply ships without Western insurance —  freighters that are expanding the sale of oil and natural gas to much of the world in spite of Western sanctions and while eluding the insane $60-per-barrel price cap imposed by the West. As even the Associated Press admits:

The shadow fleet in fact isn’t all that shadowy. The ships don’t hide their stops at Russian oil terminals. Some have direct connections to Russia, as with the vessels owned by Sovcomflot. In other cases, it’s often unclear who exactly is behind the listed owners, and what kind of safety practices and insurance the vessels have. What sets them apart is that they transport Russian oil and operate outside the jurisdictions of the sanctioning G7 countries.

The intensifying effort to harass these ships, which are often registered to offshore firms, goes hand in hand with the recent sanctions on 183 shadow fleet vessels — an “unprecedented number.”

It’s a sign of increasing frustration as nothing has worked so far in choking off Russia’s oil sales. As Reuters reported last week, Russia’s oil exports fell in 2024, but revenue climbed by $3.8 billion.

By further militarizing the Baltic, however, NATO creates more opportunity for misunderstandings or mishaps that could dramatically escalate the conflict with Russia. Case in point:

French Navy Atlantique 2 maritime patrol aircraft has been reported to have been illuminated by the targeting radar of a RussianS-400 long range surface to air missile system on the night of January 15-16, at a time when the aircraft was flying over the Baltic Sea. The system is thought to have been located in Russia’s westernmost territory of Kaliningrad, where modern air defence systems are heavily concentrated to provide security against NATO forces that encircle it from all directions. The Atlantique 2 was reportedly conducting inspections near Swedish and Baltic waters at the time, and scanning around 200 ships. The aircraft carry heavy surveillance equipment, and can deploy both cruise missiles and torpedoes, providing them with a comparable role to the Russian Tu-142 or the American P-8. The S-400’s engagement of the French aircraft was condemned by French Defense Minister Sebastien Lecornu, and occurred at a time of particularly high tensions between Moscow and Paris primarily over the ongoing Russian-Ukrainian War.

The Narrative Build Up 

The most recent much ballyhooed damage was to the Estlink 2 undersea power cable and four undersea communications cables between Finland and Estonia by the Eagle S, a 750-foot-long, Cook Island-flagged tanker carrying Russian oil. It isn’t the first in the Baltic to receive outsize attention. We’ve had a solid couple years now of horror stories over renegade ships and  activities in the Baltic — not including the US destruction of Nord Stream of course.No, here we’re talking about nefarious actors like Russia and China. Just a few other recent examples:

  • In October of 2023 The NewNew Polar Bear, a Chinese vessel damaged — intentionally, the West alleged — the Finnish-Estonian Balticconnector gas pipeline. To add insult to injury in the West, the NewNew was the first Chinese-owned containership to use Russia’s Northern Sea Route to reach the Russian port in Kaliningrad after a six-week passage.
  • Telecom cables linking Finland, Estonia and Sweden were damaged allegedly inflicted by the Yi Peng 3 bulk carrier in November.

These were all relatively minor incidents that along with a few others received quite a bit of attention, and almost all stories didn’t question the allegations of some Russia-China plot to destroy Western infrastructure. Yet, the Washington Post now reports that the Estlink 2 incident, as well as those involving the NewNew Polar Bear and Yi Peng 3, have “clear explanations,” suggesting the damage was accidental.

Nonetheless, by using these incidents as an excuse NATO is well on its way to implementing the Center for Strategic and International Studies 2022 plan for NATO near-term actions in the Baltic:

  • Bring Sweden and Finland into NATO. The ratification of these two nations needs to move forward without delay. Elevating them from strong partners to alliance members changes the calculus of a Baltic conflict significantly. The alliance can immediately leverage these two nations to increase strategic depth.

  • Forward stage capabilities. Mines, anti-submarine capabilities, missile defense, and secure supply and logistics infrastructure should be forward staged across all domains, increasing deterrence.

  • Increase patrol. A whole-of-government approach from each Baltic nation and its allies is needed to ensure that energy, communications, and sea routes remain secure. This includes Baltic Air Policing, readiness to shift the balance of A2/AD, and the monitoring and protection of maritime infrastructure.

  • Strengthen command and control. Existing multi-domain command and control should be tested and ready for use. The need for effective command and control will be swift and will require resilient disaggregated nodes, though an eye should also be kept on future capability.

Baltic Sentry is a small part of the plan to encircle and pressure Russia. Perhaps more importantly it’s another piece of the ongoing dramatic overhaul of European society.

It’s another spot the fear mongers can point to and say more money must be spent on defense, and it comes as Trump and company all push for more military hardware purchases at the expense of all other social programs, which are being starved and privatized.

That restructuring and plundering of the social commons is probably a more accurate description of what “Baltic Sentry” is guarding.

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27 comments

  1. JohnA

    And how will the Baltic chihuahuas bark/whine if and when Trump looks to make good his demand to annex Greenland? I guess there is no chance of them forming any kind of Greenland Sentry plan.

    1. Max Z

      I think they’d be happy to be annexed if US asked! In fact, they’d do it for free with or without any referendums!

  2. Zagonostra

    I wonder if Putin will follow Trump’s lead and rename the Gulf of Finland, the Gulf of Russia?

  3. The Rev Kev

    This is all crazy talk this. You are talking about some minor countries saying that they have control over an international seaway and who is allowed to use it. Do they intend to try to board every Russian ship out of St. Petersburg? What if each Russian commercial ship has a squad of Russian Marines aboard that tell those boarders ‘Nyet.’ Ff they try something stupid such as use military force, are they aware that the Russians could call on their fleet, their air force and especially their missile force? I may be wrong but I think that these Baltic yappers are trying to set themselves up to be a sort of trip wire force here. They want to engineer some sort of deliberate provocation and when the Russians reply, they will run off to have the US come over to sort things out. The European elites are desperate to keep the US in Europe and not just the Ukraine and I think that this is one of the traps that they are laying for the Trump regime to keep the US committed to Europe.

    1. Zephyrum

      Thanks, Rev, that sounds exactly right.

      My understanding of the Trump view is that Europe needs to stand on its own. They’ve been acting like spoiled teenagers living in their parents home. Time to go out and take responsibility for themselves.

      That may be uncomfortable, but is probably the best thing that could happen for them in the long term.

      1. Mike

        IF, by “taking responsibility for themselves” means making their own economic and trade decisions in their own best interest, it would probably lead Germany to return to using Russian gas, and de-escalating the military buildup. How many other nations without American envy/dependence would turn their governments on such a basis? If, however, it means they must only think in military terms, and arm themselves to the teeth for misadventures with Russian forces ( the neocon method), provocations and “oopses” will occur, with the US at the sway of its own neocons or not. Anybody’s guess welcome.

      2. lyman alpha blob

        Indeed. I saw some headline the other day about European whinging regarding the two bad choices they face, allying with either Russian or the US. My thought was maybe ally with neither, and stand up on their own two feet.

    2. ilsm

      “Detaining” or whatever the diplomatic term, a ship in international waters is an act of war. US gets away with it bc usually far from support.

      Watch the Russian marine infantry take the “boarders” as POW! Then drop them at a neutral port……

      Or if treat them as pirates they have yardarms!

    3. Kilgore Trout

      The Baltic as a NATO lake is one more Neocon pipe dream with a US origin. The Center for Strategic and International Studies, whose plan it is, is centered at Georgetown University, the hive mind of Neocon thinking. This once again shows, as Alexander Mercouris says, that the Neocons have no reverse gear.

    4. bertl

      Essentially, this latest provocative indulgence by the least competent generation of European politicians in eight generations will merely speed up the drift from Europe that, following Biden’s destruction of the European economies, President Trump has set in motion. The Baltic States, and perhaps others, will fall with Russia’s sphere of influence out of necessity if they wish to avoid prolonged political, economic, and military retribution by the Russian Federation who also “have tools”.

      Indeed, the most important country in Europe for Europe is Russia, that is if European decide to elect politicians who have a real regard for their “national” interests or, more closely defined, the interests of their people – always asuming the eurocrats are preparing to develop alternative hobbies in place of destroying democratic elections in its member states.

      Rather than attempting to hijack Russias natural resources through a war of unparalleled stupidity, to avoid collapsing into an economic, gangster-ridden wasteland, Europe needs to come to much less favourable trading terms with Russia than before the calamitous “new sanctions every quarter” regime if it is to return to growth and, rather than arming to go to a losing war with Russia, learn to politely, and with great delicacy, kiss Putin’s arse, and those of his successors, as a monthly fealty ritual to be televised at high noon from the Kremlin to ensure the fertility of their economies and the continued welfare of their people.

      I think the Georgian and the Romanian peoples have recently worked this out, as the Hungarians and Slovakians did long ago (the latter two being exempt from the arse kissing ritual). I suspect and hope the Germans may well show their increased inclination for a more grownup kind of politics than the offerings of Scholz and the idiots of the Green Party on 23 February.

  4. AG

    Thank you for the piece.
    Will share it.

    “Baltic Sentry is a small part of the plan to encircle and pressure Russia.”

    Encircle – that depends on which side of the prison walls you are standing.

    With 80% of the world not part of this merry party it’s rather EU letting itself getting boxed in.
    Without any access to the Pacific.

    Good God. How dumb are these people. The Baltics were merchants for centuries.
    But internet has apparently fried their brains.

    Also – how is it possible that Rotterdam, Hamburg, Bremerhaven are so into this NATO-ideology?

  5. AG

    Nature of this idiocy reminds me of the incredible lies and subterfuge (up to the chancellor’s press office) of the “GRAIN DEAL”, which never was a deal obviously.

  6. ilsm

    The recent comings and goings of US/NATO make true the edict of George Washington to stay out of Europe and its juvenile militarists ways!

  7. Balan Aroxdale

    “Discussions appear to be centred on making life more complicated for Russia and the buyers of its oil,” said Henning Gloystein at Eurasia Group. “If you can make the bureaucracy and risk associated with trading Russian oil a lot more onerous the expectation is buyers will start to demand larger discounts again for their trouble.”

    I think the fatal error here is thinking that trading and shipping oil is inherently complex or bureaucratic or intricate when in reality most of this complexity is coming from financialisation or neoliberal policies which assume that oil must be traded using sophisticated instruments, contracts, insurance, subcontracting, etc, etc all using SWIFT bank accounts and index linked pricing. Making all that more onerous and complicated (than it already is), doesn’t change the fact that the oil buyer and oil seller could just agree a fixed price between themselves, over the telephone or in person. I realize it’s not quite as simple as cash-on-delivery, but pretending that it can be stopped by gummed up (US/London based) institutional bureaucracy alone is no less naive.

    The core assumption is that the all-powerful deregulated globalized market is going to retain the same clout in the middle of a new Cold War. How much clout can you wield if the rules don’t even allow you to talk Russian?

  8. Chip Dipson

    That’s worse. An accident is worse. Dragging your anchor for 60 miles far out at sea while drifting in the middle of the night without your GPS switched-on is embarrassing. Unless you have a “Mary Celeste” scenario, we’re talking ship-to-ship sanctioned cargo exchange, done poorly, missing the rendezvous point by 60 miles. And getting caught.

    Accidents are risks, and risks raise cost. The grey maritime market operates parallel to the white market, slim margins, differences only semantics and fraud. If the crew is so inexperienced, the ship low-performance (anchor: non-functioning?) it means the cost of sanction-evading is consequential. The relay-accident happening so close to Primorsk and Ust-Luga means the illicit cargo is really vital to Russian interests, and this business is getting really hard to do year-in, year-out. And Ukraine just struck the oil terminal at Ust-Luga yesterday with a drone, one of three terminals on the Baltic Sea.

    In any case, NATO protects a maritime empire. Word “empire” gets thrown around a lot so let’s go with it. Russia has always been a land empire that should have adequate roads and rail to their markets. But wars and roads are expensive. You can’t beat the mileage savings of floating your tea on mega-ships. Whereas Europe is a peninsula and NATO exists solely to prevent it from blockade.

    1. Format

      (anchor: nonfunctioning?)

      I was once a long time ago working on a ship, and remember talking to another crew member about how common it is for ships to forget to raise the anchor. Not that every ship does it, but it is more common than many think.

      People actually believe that an anchor somehow keeps a ship still. Maybe smaller vessels, and maybe a hundred years or so when ships were smaller, but for today’s 100+ ton ships, no way. Anchors are not some underwater magnetic drills that lock a ship into place. They only work if they hook to a big rock on the bottom on the sea. Otherwise the anchor just scrapes the sea bottom and maybe slows the ship by some barely noticeable amount.

      If you’ve ever been to a port, you’ve probably seen how the ships are tied to bollards with thick ropes. These would not be needed if anchors actually worked the way people think they do.

  9. Aurelien

    This is an example of my universal syllogism for desperate politicians: (1) we must do something (2) this is something (3) OK, let’s do it. NATO has retained a decent maritime capability, and a number of its members border the Baltic, so this is easy to announce, and can be made to appear strong and decisive. The hope is that it will win the Internets over the next few days and people will stop talking about Ukraine coming apart. Next week is a long time away.

    1. scott s.

      Back in my cold war days East Germany, Poland, and Sweden maintained pretty robust maritime forces in the Baltic. Whether that continues under the “NATO” umbrella or otherwise seems unsurprising to me. That Russia maintains control of East Prussia has always seems a bit anomalous to me.

  10. Mikel

    “It’s another spot the fear mongers can point to and say more money must be spent on defense, and it comes as Trump and company all push for more military hardware purchases at the expense of all other social programs, which are being starved and privatized.

    That restructuring and plundering of the social commons is probably a more accurate description of what “Baltic Sentry” is guarding.”

    Saving the best for last.

  11. Milton

    With the Arctic ocean rapidly becoming ice free, the Baltic will be superfluous for Russia as they can just go up and over Finland/Norway from Murmansk into the Atlantic. Let the Baltic chihuahuas play in their little lake.

  12. Jokerstein

    Cables can break for non-nefarious reasons too.

    When I first heard the headline “Taiwan internet cable broken” (or close equivalent) I fully expected to hear screams of “China did this!” from DC, and was surprised when the story actually mentioned that Taiwan was saying it was “wear and tear”.

    1. Mickey Hickey

      The Taiwanese and Chinese see themselves as being the same people. With both being equeally intelligent it is highly unlikely that the freedom and democracy empire will be able to foment a Chinese civil war.

  13. Cato the Uncensored

    Essentially a tempest in a teapot.

    Has anyone in NATO ever heard of Concentration of Risk?

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