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Security07:09 · 12m ago

Russia Conducts Extensive Drone Espionage on NATO Nuclear Bases Using Oil Tankers

Kikar HaShabbatReligious
Translated & summarized from Kikar HaShabbat by baba
The story · English

A recent intelligence report by the London-based International Institute for Strategic Studies (IISS) reveals that Russia executed a sophisticated espionage campaign targeting NATO's sensitive nuclear facilities in Europe. Over an 18-month period from August 2024 to February 2026, Russian forces used a "shadow fleet" of old oil tankers as mobile launch platforms for miniature drones. These drones infiltrated airspace over 13 European countries, including the UK, France, Belgium, and the Netherlands, without being intercepted by NATO air defenses.

The oil tankers operated under "dark sailing" tactics, disabling navigation and tracking systems to avoid detection while launching drones that exploited vulnerabilities in NATO's air defense systems, which are primarily designed to counter larger conventional threats. Key targets included RAF Lakenheath in the UK, preparing to host US nuclear bombs; the Île Longue nuclear submarine base in France; and the Kleine Brogel and Volkel air bases in Belgium and the Netherlands, known for storing tactical nuclear weapons.

The report highlights a significant strategic failure in NATO's defense capabilities against small, slow, and covert unmanned aerial vehicles operating under civilian cover. This hybrid warfare approach poses a challenge for European nations, which must respond without escalating tensions. In response, Poland and the United States have begun establishing permanent military bases in the region, though the effectiveness of these measures remains uncertain.

Beyond intelligence gathering, Russia's campaign delivered a psychological message to European leaders, exposing vulnerabilities within their most secure military installations. The findings raise urgent questions about Europe's ability to defend against advanced, low-profile threats. Some countries, like Romania, are acquiring advanced Israeli air defense systems to address these gaps, but it remains to be seen if these technologies can close the newly exposed vulnerabilities.

This episode underscores the evolving nature of security threats, emphasizing the need for NATO and its allies to develop countermeasures against small, cost-effective drone technologies that bypass traditional defense systems.

Read the original at Kikar HaShabbat
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