
UK Forces Seize Russian Shadow Fleet Tanker in English Channel
In a first-of-its-kind operation, Royal Marines boarded the sanctioned vessel Smyrtos, striking at Moscow’s sanctions evasion tactics amid the Ukraine war.
British special forces and law enforcement officers boarded and seized a sanctioned oil tanker in the English Channel early on Sunday, in London’s first unilateral military operation against Moscow’s so-called shadow fleet. The six-hour pre-dawn mission saw Royal Marine commandos rappel from Chinook helicopters onto the deck of the Smyrtos, a Cameroon-flagged vessel suspected of carrying Russian crude in defiance of Western sanctions. Supported by a frigate, a minehunter, and maritime patrol aircraft, the boarding party secured the tanker without reported resistance, before moving it to an anchorage off the south coast of England for monitoring and investigation.
The Smyrtos had been under UK sanctions since last year for its role in shipping Russian oil, and it had recently departed the Baltic port of Ust-Luga with its automatic identification system switched off — a hallmark of the clandestine shadow fleet. London estimates that more than 700 such vessels now transport roughly 75 per cent of Russia’s seaborne oil exports, generating critical revenue for the Kremlin’s war effort. Sunday’s operation, coordinated with French authorities but led by Britain, marks a sharp escalation in the multinational campaign to disrupt these sanctions-busting networks, following similar French interceptions in the Channel and Atlantic over the past year.
Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer hailed the operation as “another blow to Russia” and a warning to those “fuelling Putin’s war in Ukraine.” Defence Secretary Dan Jarvis praised the skill and courage of the forces involved, while Kyiv’s foreign minister, Andriy Sybiga, said every tanker stopped “weakens the financial engine of the Russian war machine.” Western capitals have increasingly focused on the environmental and safety risks posed by the ageing, underinsured shadow fleet, which often conceals its movements and ownership, but Sunday’s boarding was primarily a sanctions enforcement action conducted in UK territorial waters.
Moscow’s reaction was predictably hostile. Kremlin economic envoy Kirill Dmitriev accused Starmer of using the seizure to distract from domestic problems with migration, while senior senator Grigory Karasin demanded legal justification, calling the interception “banditry.” Russia’s representative to international organisations in Vienna, Mikhail Ulyanov, derided the operation as “piracy.” These charges reflect Moscow’s long-standing position that unilateral sanctions and enforcement measures are illegitimate under international law, even as most G7 nations consider them essential tools to degrade Russia’s war economy.
Analysts in London view the boarding of the Smyrtos as a test case that could embolden further interceptions, though it raises complex legal questions about the extent of coastal states’ rights to detain foreign-flagged vessels on sanctions grounds. With the European Union tightening its own sanctions regime and shadow fleet operations growing more brazen, Sunday’s operation signals that the UK is prepared to move beyond diplomatic pressure and capacity-building support for partners to direct physical enforcement. As investigations continue, the fate of the tanker and its cargo will be closely watched by maritime insurers, energy traders, and governments balancing the imperatives of sanctions compliance with the risk of retaliatory escalation.
How the same story is told elsewhere.
2 editorial groups · 1 languages
British commandos stormed a Russian shadow fleet tanker in the Channel, dealing a lethal blow to the Kremlin’s war financing. The lightning operation, backed by helicopters and frigates, shows the West’s resolve against those fueling the war in Ukraine.
London illegally seized a tanker in the English Channel, an act of maritime piracy to divert attention from domestic failures like immigration. It is a reckless escalation by a panicked British government.
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