The Admiralty has logged a fresh incursion. Three Russian vessels, identified as intelligence-gathering platforms of the Vishnya class, have been detected conducting provocative manoeuvres within the UK’s exclusive economic zone, some fifteen nautical miles off the coast of Cornwall. This is not a sabre-rattling exercise. It is a calibrated probe of our coastal defences and a direct challenge to the NATO alliance’s Article 5 guarantees.
For months, Whitehall has tracked a steady uptick in Russian subsurface and surface activity along the G-I-UK gap, the Greenland-Iceland-UK choke point through which any Atlantic reinforcement must pass. But this latest development shifts the threat vector closer to home. The vessels have not entered our territorial waters. They do not need to. From their current position, they can intercept undersea cables, monitor naval communications, and map the acoustic signatures of our submarine fleet.
The Prime Minister has now formally invoked the NATO consultation mechanism under Article 4. This is a strategic pivot away from diplomatic patience toward collective deterrence. The request demands an immediate show of force: frigates from the Standing NATO Maritime Group, maritime patrol aircraft from Italy, and a clear statement that the English Channel is not a grey zone.
Let us be precise about the hardware. The Vishnya class, Project 864, displaces 3,500 tonnes and carries advanced SIGINT arrays. They are slow but persistent. They operate with impunity because the Royal Navy’s surface fleet, hollowed out by years of budget cuts, lacks the hulls to maintain constant surveillance. The Type 45 destroyers are tied to carrier escort duties. The Type 23 frigates are ageing. The new Type 31s are not yet in service. This gap is known to Moscow. They are exploiting it.
There is also a cyber warfare dimension. These ships deploy with the capacity to conduct electronic attack on civilian GPS and AIS systems. Any escalation could degrade our maritime traffic management or blind coastal radar. The threat is not limited to kinetic confrontation. It is an information operation designed to test our response times and political resolve.
The intelligence failure here is not in detection. The UK has excellent satellite imagery and acoustic surveillance networks. The failure is in deterrence. The Russians calculate that we will protest but not respond aggressively. They see a divided NATO, a distracted US, and a UK military stretched across global commitments. The only way to correct that calculation is to meet their ships at sea, shadow them with armed escorts, and make clear that any further incursion will be treated as a hostile act.
The next 48 hours are critical. NATO’s response will set the precedent for future operations. If we fail to act decisively, the Russian Federation will simply repeat the exercise closer to Faslane, to the Thames estuary, to our nuclear deterrent transit routes. This is not a crisis. It is a warning shot.
Dominic Croft, Defence and Security Analyst.








