A Greek Hellenic Navy Type-214 Submarine Surfaced In The Aegean Sea After Becoming Entangled With Fishing Nets

National Security Journal – A Greek Hellenic Navy Type-214 submarine surfaced in the Aegean Sea after becoming entangled — or potentially nearly entangled — with the nets of a civilian fishing trawler. The incident occurred during the Kataigis 26 (“Storm 26”) naval exercise on Thursday. The submarine was operating submerged in waters between Andros and Tinos when it detected a nearby fishing vessel.

(Thanks to Alain)

The Navy Needs Precise Mass and Here Is How to Get There

War on the Rocks – Investing in medium autonomous warships, lower-cost long-range munitions, and surface drones is not about affordably generating the volume and diversity of effects necessary to survive and fight in a contested environment. The Navy should treat these capabilities not as adjuncts to the existing fleet but as central components of future maritime power.

UK F-35 fleet stretched by combat operations and upgrade delays

Navy Lookout – The UK has now received all 48 F-35B Lightning aircraft ordered under its initial programme, supposedly providing the Royal Navy with the nucleus of the fast jet force intended to underpin carrier strike operations for decades to come. This may appear to be a healthy number, but it is far from adequate, given its availability and the multiple roles it must perform.

First Sea Lord warns Royal Navy ‘ever bigger, ever more expensive platforms’ era is over

Navy Lookout – In the Keynote speech for the 2026 Combined Naval Event at Farnborough, First Sea Lord General Gwyn Jenkins delivered his sharpest challenge yet to the concept of building ever more expensive warships. His insistence that the RN must move away from the need for “ever bigger, ever more expensive platforms”carries pointed implications for significant warship programmes still in the planning pipeline.

Maritime Cost Imposition: A New Approach to Great Power War

CIMSEC – The U.S. Navy remains intent on using its high-end platforms for sea denial. To its credit, it is developing the kinds of unmanned systems that are ideally suited for this mission, but only at too slow a pace. To optimize its force structure and accelerate the development of technology, the U.S. Navy should instead commit to a strategy of customized, low-end sea denial coupled with high-end global maritime punishment, and then tailor its doctrine, tactics, and weapons systems to each mission.

US Admiral says Iranian navy and its stocks of sea mines have been substantially eliminated

Navy Lookout – The United States has claimed the destruction of 90% of Iran’s stockpile of around 8,000 mines, as well as 161 naval vessels of all types during 38 days of combat operations. Admiral Cooper, Commander CENTCOM, delivered the assessment in testimony before the Senate Armed Services Committee yesterday.