
Russian civilian gas tanker spotted with heavy machine guns on Baltic route
Estonian border guard photographs reveal two Kord 12.7mm weapons and military personnel aboard a Gazprom vessel supplying Kaliningrad, marking a first for a Russian commercial ship.
A Russian-flagged liquefied natural gas tanker, the Marshal Vasilevskiy, has been photographed operating in the Baltic Sea with two heavy machine guns mounted on its bridge and protected by sandbags. The images, captured by an Estonian border guard aircraft in mid-May 2026 and shared with a consortium of European media, show 12.7mm Kord weapons positioned on both sides of the vessel. Passenger manifests obtained by investigators indicate that since August 2025 the ship has also carried up to 50 individuals, at least 22 of whom have served in the Russian armed forces, the FSB or the National Guard. The vessel, owned by the state-controlled energy company Gazprom, is a floating regasification unit that plays a central role in supplying the Kaliningrad exclave and is not part of the shadow fleet used to evade sanctions.
Viewed from Tallinn, the deployment represents an unprecedented militarisation of a civilian logistics asset. An unnamed Baltic intelligence official cited in the investigation described the weapons as “50% a signal to the West,” suggesting that even the perception that shadow-fleet tankers could be similarly armed would alter NATO risk assessments regarding boarding operations. Estonian authorities, who provided the photographs, have not publicly commented on any operational response, but the images were released through journalistic channels, indicating a decision to expose the practice without immediate escalation.
Western military analysts interpret the move as a deterrent against potential interdiction. Jens Wenzel Kristoffersen, a Danish naval expert, noted that the machine guns appear aimed at authorities who might consider boarding the vessel, and that warning shots could trigger an escalation chain. Patrick Bolder of the Hague Centre for Strategic Studies assessed the step as part of sustained Russian pressure on NATO countries. Several experts, however, question the weapons’ effectiveness against aerial drones, noting that a large-calibre machine gun is poorly suited to counter fast-moving unmanned aircraft. The ship is not subject to international sanctions, and under the principle of freedom of navigation, NATO states currently have no legal basis to stop or inspect it, making the visible armament a political rather than a strictly military signal.
The arming of the Marshal Vasilevskiy follows a period of heightened tension in the Baltic, where NATO reinforced patrols in early 2025 after suspected sabotage damaged undersea cables. Russia has previously responded by having military vessels escort tankers from its shadow fleet. The new development also comes months after a Ukrainian sea-drone attack damaged the Russian LNG carrier Arctic Metagaz in the Mediterranean in March 2026, an incident the Kremlin called a terrorist act. Gazprom has not replied to requests for comment on the machine guns. The dossier remains open, with no announced plans by littoral states to alter their patrol posture, though intelligence services in the region are monitoring the practice for any wider adoption across the Russian commercial fleet.
How the same story is told elsewhere.
2 editorial groups · 2 languages
Western media circulated images of weapons on a Russian civilian vessel, but this is a defensive measure to protect energy cargoes. Russia is merely responding to repeated inspections and threats against its ships in the Baltic.
Russia is arming its civilian gas tankers with heavy machine guns and military personnel, in a dangerous escalation in the Baltic. This unprecedented move, following NATO inspections, raises serious concerns about the militarization of civilian shipping.
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