UK and Norway Launch Joint Naval Task Force to Hunt Russian Submarines and Protect Undersea Infrastructure
Thirteen-warship Anglo-Norwegian fleet to patrol the North Atlantic amid heightened concern over Russian submarine activity
The United Kingdom and Norway have established a new naval partnership to deploy a combined fleet dedicated to tracking Russian submarines and protecting undersea infrastructure across the North Atlantic.
The initiative reflects growing security concerns as both governments warn of increasingly assertive Russian naval behaviour near strategically important waters.
The pact brings together eight British vessels and at least five Norwegian frigates, recently acquired through a major defence programme centred on UK shipbuilding.
All participating ships are equipped for advanced anti-submarine warfare, allowing the two nations to operate as a single, highly coordinated maritime unit.
Beyond the fleet itself, the agreement deepens operational integration by enabling shared use of Norwegian missile systems aboard Royal Navy ships and by expanding opportunities for joint training and deployment.
Officials in London and Oslo framed the alliance as a decisive step to strengthen NATO’s northern defences and to protect the seabed cables and pipelines that underpin Europe’s economic and security networks.
The partnership is also expected to reinforce industrial investment in the UK, with the broader shipbuilding programme supporting thousands of jobs across national supply chains.
As both nations increase their maritime readiness, the new task force signals a firm commitment to deter hostile submarine activity and to uphold stability across the wider North Atlantic region.