Military | Europe
EUNAVFOR ASPIDES: Europe's Naval Mission Secures Red Sea Shipping
The EU's Red Sea naval operation intercepts multiple drone and missile attacks, protecting vital trade routes from Houthi threats.
Guardian of the Seas: Europe's ASPIDES Mission Proves Its Worth
Operation EUNAVFOR ASPIDES, the European Union's naval mission to protect freedom of navigation in the Red Sea region, continued to demonstrate its operational value in early 2026, successfully intercepting multiple drone and ballistic missile attacks aimed at commercial shipping passing through the strategic waterway. The mission, which operates under a defensive mandate protecting vessels from attack without engaging land-based targets, has involved warships from Germany, France, Italy, Greece, Belgium, and several other EU member states rotating through the operational area.
The Red Sea crisis, triggered by Houthi attacks on commercial shipping beginning in late 2023 and continuing with Iranian material support, has caused significant disruption to global trade routes. Many shipping companies rerouted vessels around the Cape of Good Hope to avoid the risk of attack, adding thousands of miles and significant costs to each voyage. ASPIDES has helped to partially restore confidence in the Red Sea route, though the threat has not been eliminated and shipping insurance premiums for the region remain elevated.
The new EU Force Commander for ASPIDES, appointed through Political and Security Committee Decision (CFSP) 2026/514 in early March, faces the challenge of sustaining the operation's effectiveness under growing pressure from the Iran conflict. Iranian drone and missile capabilities, which have been demonstrated in attacks on Cyprus and Israeli territory, have raised concerns about the potential for ASPIDES vessels to become direct targets if the regional conflict expands further.
The mission's political significance extends beyond its operational mandate. ASPIDES represents one of the EU's most substantial collective military operations and has been cited by proponents of EU defence integration as evidence that European militaries can coordinate effectively under a common command structure. Critics, however, note that the mission's defensive-only mandate limits its strategic impact and that a more effective response to Houthi attacks would require the kind of offensive strike capabilities that the EU has consistently been reluctant to authorise.