The NATO military alliance said Tuesday it would launch a Baltic Sea monitoring mission following the suspected sabotage of undersea cables in recent months.
Several telecom and power cables habeenveĀ severed with experts and politicians accusing Russia of orchestrating a hybrid war against the West as the two sides square off over Ukraine.
The āBaltic Sentryā mission would involve āfrigates and maritime patrol aircraftā among other assets, NATO chief Mark Rutte said at a regional meeting in Finlandās capital Helsinki on Tuesday.
But he declined to give details on the number of vessels ābecause that might differ from one week to anotherā and he did not want to make āthe enemy any wiser than he or she is alreadyā.
NATO was also tight-lipped on the duration, saying in a statement the operation would continue āfor an undisclosed amount of timeā.
The suspected sabotage has been blamed on a āshadow fleetā of vessels ā often ageing and operating under opaque ownership ā that carry Russian crude oil and petroleum products, embargoed since the invasion of Ukraine.
āInvestigations of all of these cases are still ongoing, but there is reason for grave concern,ā Rutte said.
He said protecting undersea infrastructure was of āutmost importanceā not only for energy supplies but also for internet traffic.
ā āStrategic signalā ā
Leaders of NATOās Baltic countries said in a statement after the Helsinki meeting that the shadow fleet āposes a particular threat to the maritime and environmental security in the Baltic Sea region and globallyā.
They said the fleet āsignificantly supports funding of Russiaās illegal war of aggression against Ukraineā.
Finlandās President Alexander Stubb said foreign ministries from the Baltic Sea NATO states would set up a group of legal experts to assess what they could do without affecting freedom of navigation.
NATO said in late December it would increase its presence in the region but had not announced an operation.
Iro Sarkka, a researcher from the Finnish Institute of International Affairs, told AFP that NATO had been pushed into action by the Russian shadow fleet.
A comprehensive operation would serve as a ādeterrent and a strategic signalā that NATO was prepared to act, according to Sarkka.
ā Repeated incidents ā
Tensions have mounted around the Baltic Sea since Russiaās invasion of Ukraine in February 2022.
A series of underwater blasts ruptured the Nord Stream pipelines that carried Russian gas to Europe in September 2022, the cause of which has yet to be determined.
In October 2023, an undersea gas pipeline between Finland and Estonia was shut down after it was damaged by the anchor of a Chinese cargo ship.
Two telecom cables in Swedish waters were severed on November 17-18 last year.
And weeks later, on December 25, the Estlink 2 electricity cable and four telecom cables linking Finland and Estonia were damaged.
Investigators suspect the cables were damaged by the anchor of the Eagle S, a Cook Island-flagged oil tanker believed to be part of the āshadow fleetā.
Finnish police seized the Eagle S on December 28 as part of a criminal investigation.
Finnish authorities last week deemed the ship unseaworthy, barred it from sailing and have banned eight crew members from leaving the country while police carry out a probe.