The ongoing
escalation of hostilities in the Strait of Hormuz may have effects
far beyond the middle east. The capture of the British flagged oil
tanker Stena Impero by the Iranians forced the UK to step up their
presence in the region.
HMS Monmouth a Type 23 Frigate |
The reinforcements
the Royal Navy was able to send to the Persian Gulf were hardly
enough to escort the number of tankers in need of protection. The
present day 80-ship Royal Navy no longer rules the waves and is
actually struggling to deploy enough combat ships to cover the
existing commitments, let alone to take on a possible fight against
the Iranian navy or even provide the dozen or so escorts needed.
The British
government then sent a proposal to create a European naval mission to
escort the vital tanker traffic through the Hormuz. The response
frhciting the wish to avoid further escalations as the main reason,
both also have limited amount of shirps and other operations to
cover.
USA, under the Trump
administration, has declined to escort non-US assets through the
strait. The British government, that is currently in turmoil over
leadership change and Brexit, are also vary about the US intentions
on Iran as some elements of the Trump administration are perceived as
hawkish.
The problems of
creating an ad-hoc alliance for the tanker escort mission by a
founding NATO-member and major sea power like the UK, must look
rather troubling for the European nations that are relying for such,
out side of the NATO article no 5, arrangements to survive in a
future crisis.
Finland imports 77 %
of its goods and exports 90 % via the Baltic Sea. Its not
unforeseeable that someone, for example Russia, would like to impose
a naval blockade or random captures of merchant vessels to put
pressure on the Finnish government. The Finnish Navy alone, even in
its future form with 4 ocean-going corvettes and 4 Hamina-class FACs,
can hardly succeed in escorting the merchant traffic past Kaliningrad
and at the same time securing the territorial waters.
Hamina-Class FAC with a Finnish army NH-90 |
This issue is
further worsened by the inadequate naval power in the regions bigger
NATO-members. The German Navy is struggling to keep its ships
operational and the Polish Navy is also desperate to get its ships
modernized. The Swedish Navy, while technically in good condition, is
still rather small to fend of the Russian Navy and special operations
forces it is able to field in this kind of an ambiguous situation.
If the mighty UK is
having problems at creating a naval mission to protect a globally
vital waterway, how likely it is that Finland could succeed to build
a coalition to keep the local waterways open?
Russian Baltic Fleet on parade, ©REUTERS / Anton Vaganov |
It’s highly likely
that several nations have already taken notice of this reluctance to
commit forces to countering naval hybrid operations. The hesitation
alone has most likely reduced the threshold for such operations for
aggressive states like Russia and China. With such operations they
have the ability to pressure individual governments and to drive
wedges into the pre-existing fractures in alliances built to contain
them.
The western
democracies should perhaps build a standing system, within the NATO
framework, on how to keep the vital shipping lanes open, even in the
situations that do not warrant activating the Nato Article 5. Without
such structures and preparations these situations may fall into
victims of national politics and bickering between the allies over
secondary matters.
-Petri Mäkelä
-Petri Mäkelä
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