Investigations: Russia used Cyprus front to build Arctic sub-listening net


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Summary

Hidden network

Records and court files trace over 50 million euro in Western sonar, cables and underwater vehicles, routed via Mostrello in Cyprus. The system, “Harmony,” aims to detect NATO subs near Russia’s Northern Fleet.

Sanctions evasion

German prosecutors called Mostrello a front; broker Alexander Shnyakin received four years and ten months for illegal dual-use sales. Officials admit sanctions are hard to make “watertight.”

Arctic arc

Ship movements and purchased gear indicate sensors span from Murmansk toward Novaya Zemlya and Franz Josef Land. Harmony enables “delousing,” revealing if U.S. subs are trailing Russian boats.


Full story

A joint investigation found Russia used a front company to build a secret Arctic net of surveillance to catch Western submarines tracking its nuclear submarine fleet. Moscow secretly bought sonar, underwater vehicles and cabling starting in 2013, according to coordinated investigations by The Times, The Washington Post and the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists (ICIJ).

The project, known as “Harmony,” purchased equipment from Europe, the United States and Asia through Mostrello Commercial Ltd., a Cyprus-based firm tied to Russian defense contractors.

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Code-name ‘Harmony’

Harmony’s seabed sensors are designed to spot U.S. and NATO submarines as they approach Russian “bastions,” strengthening Moscow’s second-strike deterrent and complicating Western tracking. Bryan Clark, a former U.S. naval officer, told the Post that Harmony seeks to reduce America’s ability to surveil areas near Russian bases and track deploying submarines.

Leaked financial records and court files indicate the network procured more than 50 million euro in sensitive gear between 2014 and 2024, The Times and ICIJ reported. Purchases included a British-made remotely operated vehicle, advanced sonar, subsurface antennas and hundreds of miles of fiber-optic cable. Suppliers said sales complied with rules in force and that they were told the goods were for civilian use.

German prosecutors said Mostrello was a front that equipped Project Harmony, and that trader Alexander Shnyakin was convicted of coordinating “dual-use” technology sales. Shnyakin received a prison sentence and denies knowingly reselling to Russia.

Norway’s intelligence chief said Moscow set up “complex procurement networks with legitimate European companies as contact points,” obscuring the Russian end user. The EU’s sanctions envoy, David O’Sullivan, said “there is no such thing as a perfectly watertight sanction system.”

In the U.K., a parliamentary committee chair said enforcement must counter circumvention: “A sanctions regime is only as good as its enforcement,” and Britain’s trade department cited post-2019 controls on submersibles and wider machinery bans after 2022.

Where the system is and how it works

By tracing ship movements and equipment, reporters found clues that sensors form an arc from the northern Russian outposts of Murmansk toward Novaya Zemlya and Franz Josef Land. According to naval experts cited by the Post, the array enables “delousing,” confirming whether a submarine is being tailed as it crosses known sensors.

“If you’re afraid that somebody is following you, you drive over a sensor at a known time,” Tom Stefanick, an expert on naval strategy and technology at the Brookings Institution, told the Post. “If somebody’s following you, they have to go over that sensor too, and they get detected.”

What’s next

The U.S. Treasury sanctioned Mostrello and related entities in 2024, while European authorities have investigated and prosecuted members of the network. Key Harmony locations remain classified.

Mathew Grisham (Digital Producer) contributed to this report.
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Why this story matters

Arrests in London of three men suspected of assisting Russian intelligence services highlight ongoing efforts by U.K. authorities to counter foreign espionage and threats to national security amid heightened geopolitical tensions.

Foreign espionage

The arrests underscore concerns by U.K. authorities about increased recruitment of proxies by foreign intelligence services, especially Russia, as stated by Metropolitan Police officials and echoed in multiple media sources.

National security laws

The use of the 2023 National Security Act in these detentions demonstrates the U.K.'s strengthened legal framework to prosecute individuals accused of aiding foreign intelligence activities.

SAN provides
Unbiased. Straight Facts.

Don’t just take our word for it.


Certified balanced reporting

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Transparent and credible

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100/100

Welcome back to trustworthy journalism.

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