Why has HMS Dragon spent the last month in Crete?

Navy Lookout – After being rushed into theatre to help protect Cyprus during the recent regional crisis, Royal Navy destroyer, HMS Dragon, conducted a brief patrol off the island but has remained at Souda Bay in Crete since 23rd March, around 920 km away. While the optics are poor, the destroyer’s enforced time in Greece has not proved critical, and the time has not been wasted.

China Maritime Report #52: Everything Everywhere All At Once: The Growing Complexity of PLA Amphibious Exercises

China Maritime Studies Institute – In August 2025, the People’s Republic of China (PRC) conducted a large-scale exercise to simulate an invasion of Taiwan. This “capstone” amphibious exercise suggests that People’s Liberation Army (PLA) training and preparations for a future Taiwan campaign are becoming more focused, realistic, and sophisticated.

Australian Defence Strategy 2026 Spends Big On Submarines, Frigates

Naval News – The Australian government published the biennial National Defence Strategy (NDS) and the corresponding Integrated Investment Program (IIP). The publication occurs amidst a background of conflict in the Middle East and a shifting American national security posture across regions directly affecting Australia and the Indo-Pacific region.

CMSI Translations #29: Can “Armchair Strategizing” Secure Victory from a Thousand Miles Away?

China Maritime Studies Institute – In 440 BC, Mozi and Lu Ban—using a belt to represent a city wall and wooden tablets as weaponry—launched a “paper confrontation” in front of the palace of the King of Chu that changed the trajectory of warfare. This simulation of nine victorious battles not only neutralized the power of the State of Chu’s siege ladders in an abstract strategic contest, but also revealed the ultimate value of wargaming: utilizing simulated combat to anticipate the realities of the battlefield and employing logical deduction to avert the calamities of war.

Device found near Bali and Lombok identified as Chinese undersea monitoring system

ABC – A large torpedo-shaped device was found last week by a fisherman near an island in the Lombok Strait, a strategically important sea lane linking Australia to the South China Sea. It has been identified as a Chinese undersea monitoring system designed to be moored to an anchor on the sea floor while sending data home via communication buoys deployed to the surface.

(Thanks to Alain)

The Propulsion Disabler Will Be a Strategic Weapon (For Blockades)

Clio’s Musings – A propulsion disabler (PD) is a small, passive, torpedo-like device that serves as a cheap, non-lethal mine and torpedo warhead. The proposed munition’s purpose is to destroy a ship’s external propulsion or direction-control mechanisms, leaving the vessel stationary. Production of PDs is possible with today’s emerging robotics technologies.Future PD devices could be used in an autonomous swarm that combines the smallest explosive charge with the greatest disabling effect by attacking a ship at its most vulnerable point. Once PDs become widely available, they may well be the weapon of choice by all navies against civilian ships. Similarly, disabling an enemy’s naval ship rather than sinking it will almost always be the superior choice, certainly for the U.S. Navy. The logic that makes this so will compel adversary navies to make the same choice.

Mine Warfare in the Strait of Hormuz: What the U.S. Can Expect from Iran

Defense Opinion – Mine warfare is far less mysterious than it appears when one understands the types of mines involved, the ways in which they are deployed, and the methods available to counter them. Iran is certainly capable of laying mines, but U.S. Central Command has spent decades observing Iranian exercises and conducting its own mine warfare training. These efforts have provided planners with substantial insight into seabed conditions in the Persian Gulf and the Strait of Hormuz.