Several undersea cables running under the surface of the Baltic Sea have been damaged in suspected sabotage incidents in ...
The video, filmed from the perspective of the Russian pilot, shows the Russian plane flying very closely to the Italian F-35.
referring to how it was part of an escalatory move by Russia to regain control over the "NATO Lake." Newsweek has contacted the Russian foreign ministry and NATO for comment. The incident is the ...
The alliance's Secretary-General Mark Rutte announced the deployment of roughly 10 ships to monitor the waters known as NATO Lake. The mission, dubbed Baltic Sentry, will see these ships monitor ...
Even before ships began damaging cables in the Baltic region, the strategic sea -- referred to by some allied leaders as the "NATO lake" after the accession of Sweden and Finland to the alliance ...
the Baltic Sea has effectively been turned into a NATO lake. Russia, which has used the Baltic for centuries as a key trading route and maintains a Baltic fleet, confronts hostile states on all ...
The Baltic Sea has clearly not become a NATO lake. The most recent incident of cable damage has highlighted, once again, the vulnerability of undersea energy and communications infrastructure — both ...
The Baltic Sea is no longer the “Soviet lake” that it was during the Cold War. The three Baltic states, once part of the USSR, are now members of NATO. Poland, once a Warsaw Pact member ...