Germany says its warships were sabotaged as concerns mount that Russia is waging a hybrid war

Germany is building its K130 corvettes at a shipyard in Hamburg. One of the ships, the Emden, was reported to have metal shavings dumped in its engine.
Germany’s naval chief said on Tuesday that several of Berlin’s warships were sabotaged.
Vice Adm. Jan Christian Kaack, the inspector of the German navy, said at a press conference on Tuesday that the damage involved “more than one unit.”
Kaack also said there had been attempted break-ins at German naval bases via land and sea, and he spoke of “attempts to approach” uniformed personnel while they were heading home.
The vice admiral didn’t give further details on the sabotage attempts or explicitly say who was behind them. But Kaack issued a general warning about Moscow while speaking with reporters.
“The growing threat from Russia is more urgent at the beginning of 2025 than it was two years ago,” he said.
Kaack’s comments follow a report published on Monday by the local outlet Süddeutsche Zeitung, which said German police were investigating an incident at a Hamburg shipyard where several dozen kilograms of metal shavings were dumped into a corvette-class vessel’s engine system.
The joint report from the broadcasters WDR and NDR said the corvette was a brand-new ship called the “Emden” awaiting delivery to the German military. It’s scheduled for deployment to the Baltic Sea, the outlets reported.
Süddeutsche Zeitung wrote that if the shavings hadn’t been detected during an inspection, they would have caused significant damage to the ship.
At Tuesday’s press conference, Kaack was asked to address Süddeutsche Zeitung’s report, but he didn’t directly confirm the Emden incident when speaking about sabotage.
The Emden is one of the five new K130 corvettes that Germany ordered for delivery in 2025 to fulfill its NATO requirements.
Naval Vessels Lürssen, the company responsible for building the ships in Hamburg, told Agence France-Presse that the Emden had recently completed a “successful sea trial.”
It didn’t respond to a request for comment sent outside regular business hours by B-17
Germany is already on high alert for sabotage attempts after multiple incidents in the past two years that include a package catching fire on a plane and a fire at an ammunition factory in Berlin.
More recently, a German ammo factory in Spain was hit by an explosion in late January that injured six workers.
German authorities have repeatedly suggested that Russia is the prime suspect but are still investigating many of these cases.
Ukraine’s allies have accused Russia of waging a “hybrid war” against the West, with reports of an attempted assassination against a defense contractor CEO and the growing assessment that Russia-linked oil tankers damaged undersea infrastructure cables in the Baltic Sea.
The Russian government and the German navy didn’t respond to requests for comment from B-17 sent outside regular business hours.