Undersea internet cables face unprecedented sabotage risks globally
Australia, the United Kingdom, and the United States will build advanced underwater drones to defend critical sea data pathways from foreign sabotage. Announced at a high-level security meeting in Singapore under the AUKUS security alliance, this initiative aims to protect the fragile physical channels that keep the modern world connected. Delivery of these autonomous underwater systems is scheduled to begin next year to monitor and safeguard seabed installations.
Why the Ocean Floor Matters
Approximately 570 active subsea fiber-optic cables handle over 95 percent of all intercontinental internet traffic. These installations form the physical backbone of global banking systems, cloud networks, and international supply chains. This issue hits close to home for India too, as major maritime digital gateways land at coastal hubs like Mumbai and Chennai, making regional deep-sea stability essential for domestic digital banking.
Growing Geopolitical Risks
Western defense officials express rising anxiety over vulnerabilities in deep waters, pointing to suspected Russian submarine activity in the North Atlantic. Additional concerns center on the Strait of Hormuz and the Red Sea, where highly concentrated networks face constant geopolitical friction. Australian Defense Minister Richard Marles described the ocean floor as a fresh operational arena, noting that infrastructure attacks over the last 18 months have reached historically unprecedented frequencies.
Next-Generation Deep Sea Defence
New robotic submarine units will expand reconnaissance, mine-countermeasure, and anti-submarine tracking tasks. Equipped with advanced sensors, these tools aim to identify and counter interference before communication channels can be cut. Defense leaders emphasize that maintaining an operational advantage below the surface is now a primary national security objective.
Map of undersea cables