Sea Breeze 2026: the Royal Navy hosts Ukraine and allies to build mine warfare expertise

Navy Lookout – Exercise Sea Breeze, the annual US-Ukraine-led maritime exercise, has returned to Portland for its 2026 mine countermeasures phase. This is the largest UK-hosted iteration to date and is building Ukrainian capability while sharpening the mine warfare skills of allied navies at a time when the discipline has regained wider strategic urgency.

Operation Firecrest: HMS Prince of Wales Demonstrates Royal Navy’s ‘Hybrid’ Shift

Naval News – The current deployment of the UK Royal Navy’s (RN’s) HMS Prince of Wales carrier strike group (CSG) across the North Atlantic and into the High North is building deterrence against regional threats – but is also demonstrating the navy’s quickening transition towards a ‘hybrid’ crewed/uncrewed operational force structure.

China Maritime Report #56: The Silent Service: Assessing PLAN Influence in the Central Military Commission

China Maritime Studies Institute – Despite its impressive expansion, the People’s Liberation Army Navy (PLAN) is more of a “decision-taker” than a “decision-maker,” with its growth driven by top-down political directives from leaders like Xi Jinping rather than by its own institutional influence. The PLAN’s bureaucratic influence within the high command remains modest, with minimal representation on the powerful Central Military Commission (CMC) or in its subordinate departments. The PLA Army (PLAA) continues to dominate top leadership and management roles, limiting the navy’s ability to compete for resources and influence key decisions despite a strategic shift toward the maritime domain.

Ukraine sinks Russian patrol ship near Novorossiysk

Defence Blog – Ukraine’s navy sank a Russian border guard ship near Novorossiysk using an unmanned strike boat. The Ukrainian Navy said its sailors sank the Rubin-class patrol ship Izumrud (354), a Russian Federal Security Service border guard vessel, using the Sargan-3000, a domestically built unmanned surface strike platform that has entered service with Ukraine’s naval forces over the past year.

(Thanks to Alain)

History in the Making: Ukraine Conducts First Fully Unmanned Amphibious Raid at Kinburn Split

Naval News – The Ukrainian armed forces have reportedly conducted a groundbreaking amphibious raid against Russian-held positions at the Kinburn Split. Executed entirely by unmanned vehicles operating across the sea, land, and air domains, the operation marks the first completely automated amphibious assault in military history conducted under wartime conditions.

Romania Destroys Five Naval Drones in Black Sea

Kyiv Post – Romanian Defense Minister Radu Mîruță announced on Friday, July 10, that authorities have intercepted and destroyed five naval drones in the Black Sea, some of which were armed with explosives. Four of the drones were discovered prior to a June 5 incident where a stray Ukrainian drone exploded in the port of Constanța, with a fifth found subsequently. Mîruță also clarified that the military is not primarily responsible for port security during peacetime, explaining the lack of a separate army report on the Constanța explosion.

(Thanks to Alain)

U.S. Navy buys drone boats modeled on drug smuggler design

Defence Blog – The U.S. Naval Sea Systems Command awarded ReconCraft LLC, a boatbuilder based in Anchorage, Alaska, a $24.96 million contract for autonomous low-profile vessels, a category of uncrewed watercraft the military has openly borrowed from the same low-visibility, semi-submersible design smugglers pioneered to avoid radar and visual detection while running narcotics through open water.

(Thanks to Alain)

HMCS Ottawa Fires MK 46 Torpedoes with Operational Test of New Underwater Warfare Suite Upgrade (UWSU)

Ready Aye Ready – The UWSU project modernizes the underwater sensor suite across the Halifax-class fleet. Led by General Dynamics Mission Systems–Canada in partnership with Ultra Maritime and other Canadian industry partners, it replaces or upgrades key components to restore and enhance tactical superiority against modern submarines and torpedoes.

The Grid is the Arsenal: Power Wars and the New Foundations of Military Strength

CIMSEC – Just as oil fueled the mechanized warfare of the 20th century, electricity is becoming the foundational resource for militaries of the 21st century. Echoing First Lord of the Admiralty Winston Churchill’s historic decision to switch the Royal Navy from domestic coal to imported oil, today’s energy transition means the ability to generate, store, and deliver electricity will increasingly dictate national power. In order to meet this urgent challenge, the United States government and military must treat grid expansion as a national security priority by creating “Defense Energy Security Zones” to expedite federal permitting, intentionally and aggressively leveraging the Defense Production Act (DPA) to secure critical grid components, and integrating power resilience into how the Pentagon chooses to fund firms that produce munitions and weapon systems.

The Cost of Abandoning Taiwan: How Appeasement Leads to an Outcome Far Worse Than Defeat

CIMSEC – The strategic situation, in other words, is not that the United States might defend Taiwan and suffer severe consequences. It is that choosing not to defend Taiwan would impose even greater long-term costs on American power. The preferred outcome remains a peaceful resolution that maintains preservation of Taiwan’s democratic autonomy and the cross-Strait status quo. But a peaceful appeasement that effectively abandons Taiwan to coercive unification would be cataclysmic for America and the entirety of the western world.

China is Rehearsing More Than Amphibious Landings

CIMSEC – For years, the public debate over a possible Chinese Communist invasion of Taiwan has focused on a single question: Does the People’s Liberation Army have sufficient amphibious lift to move an invasion force across the Taiwan Strait? That question remains important. However, recent Chinese exercises suggest that the People’s Liberation Army is not simply trying to solve the problem of getting forces onto a Taiwanese beach. It is rehearsing how to move, sustain, and conceal a large amphibious campaign across multiple locations.