NATO’s overseas leader, Mark Rutte, laughed at a Russian submarine that unexpectedly surfaced south of France last week. In a speech in Slovenia, Rutte said the incident shows “there’s hardly any Russian naval presence left in the Mediterranean.” He added that the damaged sub “is limping home like a tired frog.”
The sub, named Novorossiysk, suffered a fuel leak and the Dutch defence ministry confirmed that a Royal Netherlands Navy destroyer was escorting it through the North Sea. Rutte joked that the story now feels like a “hunt for the nearest mechanic” rather than Thomas Clancy’s 1984 thriller The Hunt for Red October.
Russia’s Black Sea Fleet denied that a malfunction caused the submarine to surface. Instead, officials said the vessel was following navigation rules in the English Channel and was on a “scheduled inter‑fleet transit” after completing work in the Mediterranean.
French authorities were quick to react. NATO’s Maritime Command posted on X last Thursday that the French navy had spotted the sub. Later, France opened an investigation into the Benin‑flagged Boracay oil tanker, which was berthed off Saint‑Nazaire. The tanker is part of Russia’s “shadow fleet” – older ships with opaque ownership that often lack Western‑regulated insurance.
Why does this matter? The shadow fleet’s age and uncertain insurance raise serious environmental concerns. A fuel leak on a surfaced submarine could have similar dangers. NATO’s message remains clear: the alliance watches the waters closely and stands ready to defend its members across the Atlantic.
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