Why do they call freighters "spy ships"? The Yantar does reconnaissance, and it's equipped for it. Freighters are not.
External Quote:
Russia's only Mediterranean naval base. Where Russian submarines dock.
Coincidence?
Not a coincidence. It's the only Russian port in the Mediterranean, so we
expect Russian ships of all types to dock there.
It's not a coincidence, but it's meaningless. Same with the Russian ship that was overhauled in Russia.
External Quote:
According to classified BKA reports obtained by the team: 1,072 incidents involving 1,955 drones in 2025 alone (as of November 19). Forty-five percent occurred in evening hours. Drone swarms flew "almost exclusively over or near military installations."
In only 29 of 498 investigated cases could drone pilots be identified. In none of those cases were they state actors. In 88 percent of cases, authorities couldn't even identify the drone type.
3 "drone incidents" per day, on average. Many sightings in the evenings, when people are off work (and other people fly their hobby drones). And military installations have bored guards filing reports. Missing information: are those military reports also predominantly in the evenings?
Then we have the UFO thing going: all resolved incidents are not malicious, most incidents are so deep in the LIZ that not even a type can be determined, so the logical conclusion is that these are hobbyist drones as well. Instead,
those are the cracks where the real scary drones are hiding, that nobody has ever seen close enough.
External Quote:
The team's final tally: they could draw 19 temporal and geographic correlations between drone sightings and the positions of the three ships.
The article mentions these "correlations":
"Distance from the Lauga incident: 115 kilometers. Within drone range."
"Then it started circling—25 kilometers offshore, directly in front of a Belgian military base."
"Seventy kilometers away, the HAV Dolphin had been anchored in the Ems estuary for three days."
So basically, these ships don't pull into port between jobs (because these are Russian shadow fleet, they can't just take any job), and instead circle at sea, presumably to save harbor fees. Missing information: how many other ships do this that are not spy ships?
And a "correlation" is whenever during this time there's a "sinister" drone report in a 150 km range during that time (remember, 3 reports per day). Coincidence? Probably!
A drone with 230+ km range should be big enough to be identifiable and trackable.
Belgium's coastline is 65 km long, Ostende is right in the middle, and probably has a naval base, so the "25 km offshore, directly in front" is meaningless.The ship may have been killing time waiting for a job in Ostende.
And these were their best examples, picked for the presentation!
For context, "Axel Springer Academy for Journalism and Technology" reads the same as "Rupert Murdoch School for Journalism". I don't know anything about them, but the mental association is "boulevard" and "yellow press".