How will NATOs Baltic Sentry work to protect undersea cables in the Baltic Sea?
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In the wake of serious undersea cable damage throughout 2024, particularly towards the end of the year, NATO has developed a response named Baltic Sentry.
Announced on 14 January 2025 at a summit in Helsinki, Baltic Sentry has combined warships, drones, patrol aircraft and advanced surveillance systems, such as the UK-led Nordic Warden system, both to act as a deterrent to potential threats from adversary craft, and to potentially challenge saboteur vessels before or during their detrimental actions.
But can such a surface approach genuinely work to deliver safety to Baltic Sea underwater infrastructure? And if it can, how can
Announced on 14 January 2025 at a summit in Helsinki, Baltic Sentry has combined warships, drones, patrol aircraft and advanced surveillance systems, such as the UK-led Nordic Warden system, both to act as a deterrent to potential threats from adversary craft, and to potentially challenge saboteur vessels before or during their detrimental actions.
But can such a surface approach genuinely work to deliver safety to Baltic Sea underwater infrastructure? And if it can, how can

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