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THE HAGUE/LONDON – A Russian submarine, the Novorossiysk, is reportedly “limping” home under tow through the North Sea after an alleged malfunction, an incident that has drawn mockery from Western leaders and highlighted continued tensions between NATO and Moscow.
Dutch authorities confirmed on Saturday that their navy had escorted the Russian Kilo-class submarine and its support tug as they passed through the North Sea. The vessel had previously been monitored by the UK’s Royal Navy warship, HMS Iron Duke, for three days, from October 7 to 9, as it transited the English Channel.
The situation was seized upon by Dutch leader Mark Rutte, who likened the military operation to a famous Tom Clancy novel.
“What a change from the 1984 Tom Clancy novel The Hunt for Red October. Today, it seems more like the hunt for the nearest mechanic,” Rutte said in a speech in Slovenia, noting the “broken” vessel was “limping” home. He also asserted there was “hardly any Russian naval presence in the Mediterranean left.”
The Russian Black Sea Fleet, however, firmly denied any reports of a malfunction.
The press service, as quoted by the Interfax news agency, stated on Monday that the Kalibr cruise missile-carrying submarine was conducting a “scheduled inter-fleet transit.” It explicitly dismissed media reports of a malfunction leading to an “emergency surfacing off the coast of France.”
The Russian statement also clarified a standard procedure, adding: “In accordance with international navigation regulations, submarines are to navigate the English Channel only while on the surface.”
Concerns over the vessel’s condition had been raised earlier. The Telegram channel VChK-OGPU, which purports to publish Russian security leaks, reported on September 27 that fuel was leaking into the Novorossiysk’s hold while it was in the Strait of Gibraltar, raising fears of a potential explosion.
The monitoring operation is the latest in a series of similar incidents, coming just two weeks after the Royal Navy tracked a Russian frigate and cargo vessel through the Channel. The vessel’s passage is viewed by the UK as a sign of collective resolve among NATO members.
Al Carns, Minister for the Armed Forces, stated the operation was “a clear sign of how the UK stands strong with our NATO allies to push back against Russian aggression.”
The incident also draws renewed attention to the broader issue of Russian maritime activity near NATO waters, particularly following a BBC investigation in June which found a Russian warship had disguised itself using a fake ID signal while escorting two sanctioned oil tankers—part of Russia’s so-called “shadow fleet”—through the English Channel.