Enemy submarines and drones could exploit points of vulnerability, experts warn

by Kevin Mooney
Offshore wind projects could potentially enable foreign adversaries to hide submarines in U.S. territorial waters and penetrate U.S. air defenses, according to national security and energy policy analysts.
For this reason alone, they would like to see President Donald Trumpโs administration pull the plug on projects up and down the East Coast located near to where military exercises take place. The U.S. Air Force and Navy have in the past expressed concern over how wind farms might impact radar and sonar operations to the point where they compromise defensive and offensive capabilities.
The Trump administration seems to be listening.
Officials have already reversed at least some of the prior approvals President Joe Bidenโs administration extended to offshore wind plans. Trumpโs January executive order called for a temporary cessation and immediate review of federal wind leasing and permitting practices. The decision dealt a blow to several projects that were either already in motion or in the planning stages.
(more…)โThe U.S. Navy has good reason to be concerned with offshore wind because there could be interference with Navy sonars. Imagine a scenario where China and Russia could park their submarines in the seabed right outside the Chesapeake Bay because our sonars cannot operate as they should.โ















