LONDON -- NATO's deployment of a patrol and surveillance fleet to the Baltic Sea has kept "gray zone" attacks at bay, a commander told Nikkei Asia, as efforts gain pace to protect undersea cables from sabotage by Russia, China and other actors.
Eyeing Russia and China, EU mulls ways to improve security as Japan seeks cooperation

A helicopter lands on Swedish patrol ship HMS Carlskrona in February as part of NATO's Operation Baltic Sentry. (TT News Agency via Reuters)
LONDON -- NATO's deployment of a patrol and surveillance fleet to the Baltic Sea has kept "gray zone" attacks at bay, a commander told Nikkei Asia, as efforts gain pace to protect undersea cables from sabotage by Russia, China and other actors.