MEKO A400 model baseline for Germany’s future air defence frigate, the F-127. Credit: thyssenrupp.
Earlier this week, Germany’s largest surface ship, a Berlin Class replenishment vessel, docked in the Arctic climes of Nuuk, the capital of Greenland, an autonomous territory on the periphery of the Kingdom of Denmark.
The sight of the vessel so far outside Germany’s immediate sphere of interest on the continent mirrored the Bundeswehr’s message that Germany will assume responsibility for defending the remote albeit increasingly contested Arctic waters as well as the wider North Atlantic region.
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“One thing is clear: Russia’s unbridled claim to power is not limited to Ukraine or parts of the Baltic Sea region,” said the Parliamentary State Secretary Nils Schmid. The largest European economy will not leave its Northern allies to fend for themselves.
Dr Nils Smid (left), German parliamentary state secretary, makes clear Germany’s holistic geopolitical duties, 19 August 2025. Credit: Bundeswehr.
But each navy must have a balanced force structure. For Germany, with a capability focus below the surface, the nation may be lacking when it to comes to its layered air defence. In fact, toward the end of 2024, the Navy had to reroute a frigate and supply ship around the Cape of Good Hope, avoiding a chance encounter with Houthi missiles on their return journey from the Indo-Pacific.
Although the German Navy will embed within a wider Nato maritime force operating across areas of collective interest, other navies are severely lacking, none more so than the UK, which is a terrestrial bastion along the GIUK (Greenland-Iceland-UK) gap whose fleet reduction leaves a lot to be desired.
Below the surface
“In the 21st century, Germany has been known to focus more on land capabilities,” identified Fox Walker, GlobalData defence analyst, “to meet its aims, Germany will need to use a significant portion of its rising defence budgets to enhance its maritime capabilities.”
In March, the Bundestag voted to remove the debt brake to provide more funds available across defence.
GlobalData intelligence signals report that of Germany’s ongoing acquisitions, the major maritime systems to be delivered in the next decade include six F-126 multirole combat ships, 13 P-8A maritime patrol aircraft, and three Class 424 auxiliary, general intelligence ships, and 27 NH90 Sea Tiger maritime helicopters.
Notably, these maritime capabilities are focused on intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance (ISR) as well as underwater effects. Using these assets, the German Navy will contribute to situational awareness in the North Atlantic, Schmid specified.
This is necessary since the Russian Navy maintains one of the most formidable and varied submarine fleets in the world, of around 64 vessels – strategic ballistic missile submarines (SSBNs), nuclear-powered attack submarines (SSNs), and diesel-electric attack submarines (SSKs).
In a testament to Russia’s tendency to disrupt underwater cables and target critical national infrastructure, reports indicate that the forthcoming Arktur Class SSBNs will carry fewer ballistic missiles, making space for a multirole capability, potentially incorporating other weapon systems and possibly uncrewed underwater vehicles.
This speaks the the versatile range of effects that Nato allies must be equipped to encounter against the Russian Navy in the future maritime space.
Plans for a balanced fleet
The German Navy do have plans to replace their three ageing Sachsen Class (F-124) air defence frigates with advanced F-127 frigates, and the Bundeswehr are eager to expedite their construction as a matter of urgency, although these are not expected to enter service until the 2030s.
The MEKO A400 hull will provide more space for the installation of missiles and a higher cruising speed for multinational task forces.
Germany’s aerial coverage will be further limited by how many ships can be deployed at any given time. A German Navy spokesperson told Naval Technology that, at the ideal level of operational deployment, the service will have two-thirds of the fleet in high or full readiness.
“Deployment of specific capabilities is always carried out in close coordination with allied navies and tailored to each operation’s conditions,” the Navy spokesperson added.
However; Germany may need to increase convergence with the UK Royal Navy, for example, to compensate for the limited air defence role at sea. Britain is similarly occupied with its persistent situational awareness and underwater threats, espoused in its recent ‘Atlantic Bastion’ policy, while also facing a limited air defence role at sea with Type 45 destroyers in and out of maintenance.
When fully implemented, the project aims to bolster the Royal Navy’s capacity to detect, track, and deter submarines across the North Atlantic, particularly around the vital GIUK gap.
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