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Home » Russia arms civilian gas ship with machine guns in ‘hostile message to Nato’ – UK Times
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Russia arms civilian gas ship with machine guns in ‘hostile message to Nato’ – UK Times

By uk-times.com1 July 2026No Comments4 Mins Read
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Russia arms civilian gas ship with machine guns in ‘hostile message to Nato’ – UK Times
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On The Ground

Estonia has released striking images revealing machine guns and sandbags mounted on a Russian-flagged liquefied natural gas (LNG) carrier in the Baltic Sea this spring, a move that signals a more confrontational approach from Moscow in safeguarding its civilian fleet.

The surveillance photographs depict fortified machine gun positions situated on the bridge roof of the Marshal Vasilevskiy, a civilian vessel whose home port is Kaliningrad.

While armed guards are a common sight on ships navigating piracy hotspots, geopolitical analyst Yoruk Isik, who leads the Bosphorus Observer consultancy, described this development as “a crazy new step” for civilian vessels operating in the Baltic.

A machine gun on a sandbag-protected post on the civilian Russian-flagged LNG tanker Marshal Vasilevskiy.
A machine gun on a sandbag-protected post on the civilian Russian-flagged LNG tanker Marshal Vasilevskiy. (Reuters)

“This is a hostile move by Russia to send a message to EU and Nato nations that it will actively oppose any attempt to detain or inspect its ships,” Mr Isik told Reuters. He added: “There is no justification for self ​defence ⁠posture like a machine gun in the Baltic… This clearly shows that the high seas are becoming increasingly lawless.”

The Marshal Vasilevskiy, owned by Gazprom unit Gazprom Flot LLC, has transported LNG to Kaliningrad from a port near St Petersburg four times since the start of 2025, most recently in May, according to LSEG ship tracking data. Theroute runs along Estonia’s coastline. The images “were taken this spring on ‌the Baltic Sea… within Estonia’s area of responsibility”, a spokesperson for the Estonian Police and Border Guard service said on Monday.

Gazprom did not reply to Reuters request for comment. “We cannot allow the blockade of our key maritime routes. The Baltic and ‌Black Seas handle the majority of our maritime trade,” Nikolai Patrushev, Russian President ‌Vladimir Putin’s aide on maritime affairs, said in an interview published on June 15.

A machine gun on a sandbag-protected post on the civilian Russian-flagged LNG tanker Marshal Vasilevskiy.
A machine gun on a sandbag-protected post on the civilian Russian-flagged LNG tanker Marshal Vasilevskiy. (Reuters)

“It is crucial to ensure the timely dispersal and combat readiness of the (Russian) fleet, its ability to counter the full spectrum of threats.”

Sanctions and seizures

Nine suspected shadow fleet oil tankers – vessels linked to Russia with opaque ownership and sailing under ⁠flags of convenience to skirt Western sanctions since the start of the war in Ukraine – have been seized across Europe since the start of the year, most recently by France on June 26.

The Marshal Vasilevskiy was sanctioned by the United Kingdom in October 2024, by Canada in February 2025 and Australia in December 2025. Gazprom Flot was sanctioned by the EU in April. A Baltic security official said the vessel was unlikely to be seized, as it does not fall into the shadow fleet category and sails under the Russian flag.

“It’s hard to say what the Russians are thinking,” the official said. “Since the Baltic Sea became a NATO lake, Russians have been stressed about anything that is going on over there – so maybe they are just overthinking and overreacting.” In April, Estonian Navy Commander Ivo Vark told Reuters that Russia is increasing its ‌military presence in the international waters between Estonia and Finland — ⁠the access route to the ports around St Petersburg, where a significant share of Russia’s energy exports is loaded.

A French Maritime Gendarmerie boat patrols around the Mozambique-flagged oil tanker named Deyna, which France says is part of Russia's shadow fleet.
A French Maritime Gendarmerie boat patrols around the Mozambique-flagged oil tanker named Deyna, which France says is part of Russia’s shadow fleet. (Reuters)

Vark in April said Estonia had stopped attempting to detain Russia-linked vessels that do not pose an immediate danger because “the risk of military escalation is too high”. The ‌Estonian Navy did not respond to ​a request for comment this week.

The Marshal Vasilevskiy, which can regasify ‌LNG directly into a natural gas pipeline, was inaugurated ​by Putin in January 2019 as a backup supply route for the militarised Kaliningrad exclave, in case pipeline gas deliveries through NATO member Lithuania are disrupted.

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