NAC News – Edition K670/312 HMCS Fort Erie
Your weekly national and international naval news for the week of May 29, 2026
Edition K670/312 HMCS Fort Erie (River/Prestonian Class Frigate) Quote: “Federal and provincial governments must formally recognize the marine sector as a national priority and leverage the legislative, policy, and funding tools under their authority to support awareness, recruitment, training, and workforce mobility. Concurrently, employers across the commercial marine industry, the Royal Canadian Navy, and the Canadian Coast Guard must work collaboratively with training institutions to expand capacity, modernize training delivery, and ensure greater alignment between civilian education, industry certification, and naval qualifications. Canada’s marine workforce must be developed as an integrated national system in which skills are portable, credentials are recognized across sectors, and maritime careers are visible, accessible, and adaptable to changing individual circumstances. By embedding naval service, commercial shipping, shipbuilding, and marine research within a shared workforce ecosystem, Canada can build the resilient and highly skilled marine workforce required to sustain its economic prosperity, safeguard its sovereignty, and remain a strong maritime nation. Only through a strategic and collaborative investment, through public and private engagement, can Canada begin to build and sustain a skilled marine workforce capable of securing our sovereignty and economic potential for decades to come.” CDAI: National Marine Workforce Development Strategy. This report was written in co-ordination between the Conference of Defence Associations Institute, the Royal Canadian Navy, and the Canadian Coast Guard. May 2026.
Editor NAC News: Rod Hughes (Comments welcome to help improve this service.) The content of this bulletin includes articles from entities not subject to the Official Languages Act. Consequently, these articles may be provided by the institution in only one official language, including the links, and we do not have the copyright to modify or translate them. Links to keep in touch with the NAC and RCN can be found at the bottom of this email.
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NOTICES
20 June 2026 12:00 (Ottawa time) The NAC National 2026 AGM will be held virtually using GoToMeeting. Details on how to join, the agenda and meeting reports (as available), procedures and other information can be found here. https://nac-o.wildapricot.org/sys/website/?pageId=18286 (please note you must be logged in as this is a member event). Registration is encouraged to help assess participation and monitor quorum requirements. Contact Nora Kennedy at NACcoordinator@navalassoc.ca as needed.
25 – 27 June 2026 RCN Historical Conference – CFB Esquimalt, venue possibly HMCS Venture. Details TBP.
13 – 16 July, 2026, Monday-Tuesday, Maritime & Arctic Security & Safety Conference (MASS) St. John’s Convention Centre, St. John’s, Newfoundland and Labrador.
19 October 2026 ABCDMI Seaspan Industry Engagement Day Vancouver Convention Centre, Vancouver, BC
20 – 21 October 2026 ABCDMI Business Opportunities Conference & Trade Show, Vancouver Convention Centre, Vancouver, BC
THIS WEEK’S SIGNIFICANT ARTICLE
‘Became First Non-European Country…’: Carney Surprises Trump With Massive Defense Announcement (Editor – worth listening to the PM in a 19:18 min video from CANSEC)
and a look GlobalEye walk-around tour with Saab (Editor – 5:15 video)
Strait of Hormuz Delays Are Translating into Downstream Production Losses
CANADA
Military Procurement (Editor – interview with Rob Huebert in a 4:11 min video that’s a good intro for the next articles)
Korean sub, ship set to begin 2-week visit and South Korean KSS-III Submarine Arrives in Canada (Editor – video pics followed by excellent comments by RAdm David Patchell, the Commander of Maritime Forces Pacific in a 9:44 min Go Bold video) plus CFB Esquimalt visit a sales pitch for Korean submarine
South Korean submarine showcased in B.C. as Ottawa mulls multibillion-dollar contract (Editor – 1:39 min CBCNN video)
Germany’s submarine bid pledges $86B investment, jobs in Canada (Editor – 1:58 min CBC news video) with Germany pledges 4 submarines by 2036 in high-stakes pitch to Canada and Germany’s defense minister makes rare personal pitch for submarine deal in Ottawa
JUST IN: Canada’s Biggest Military Deal in Decades — South Korean Submarine Arrives in Victoria (Editor – another 13:34 min summary video)
Les responsabilités accrues de la Garde côtière canadienne en matière de sécurité & Delivering on the Canadian Coast Guard’s Expanded Security Responsibilities
CDAI: The Suspension of the Canada-U.S. Defence Board: What it Means for Trust and Defence Cooperation (Editor – 34:27n min podcast)
South Korean navy honours Korean War veterans as part of Canadian visit and South Korea and Canada begin joint naval operation in B.C. (Editor – 2:36 min CTV video)
Thales to supply towed array sonar for Royal Canadian Navy’s River-class destroyers
Babcock and COTA Push for Sovereign Submarine Manufacturing in Canada (Editor – just the Weapons Handling and Launch Systems)
AeroVision Canada Expands into Defence Sector at CANSEC 2026
Document d’information : Le Canada renforce la défense, la souveraineté et la capacité industrielle grâce à des investissements et à des partenariats & Backgrounder: Canada is strengthening defence, sovereignty, and industrial capacity through investments and partnerships
Polar progress at Seaspan: One year into the build of Canada’s most capable icebreaker (Editor – great 2:45 min Seaspan summary video)
CDAI: Can Canada Finally Fix Defence Procurement? | The Security Brief (Editor 9:56 min podcast with former Defence Minister Peter MacKay)
Ottawa Gives Coast Guard $816 Million to Watch Canada’s Waters
Free Services Provided to Veterans (Editor – The RCL is strengthening its partnership with the CAF to improve access to disability benefits, services, and programmes for Veterans, serving CAF members, and their families.)
Military to force disclosure of sexual, romantic relationships with a ‘power imbalance’
Contract awarded for removal of grounded MSC Baltic III
Biographer Brian Jeffrey Street on the Canadian hero of Dunkirk, Part 1
NAC Naval Affairs: Bibliography Maritime Surveillance (Editor – NAC Naval Affairs Papers, Briefing Notes, Niobe Papers, and much more. Please share with people you think may benefit from the knowledge, after all, that’s what your naval affairs programme is all about; enlightening Canadians about maritime affairs and the need for the RCN.
USA & AMERICAS and the Caribbean Sea
USNI News Fleet and Marine Tracker: May 26, 2026
The Hidden Economics of Icebreaker Ships (Editor – useful summary 8:34 min video)
2 Killed in Eastern Pacific Strike on Suspected Narco Boat
Sanctioned Russian Tanker Carrying Diesel to Cuba Diverts to the South
SAIC awarded $112m contract modification for MK 48 torpedo
US Coast Guard commissions newest fast response cutter USCGC Vincent Danz (Editor – effects of 9/11 still resonate)
US Navy approves $17.45 million contract extension to modernize USS Iwo Jima for F-35B operations.
Out of the 22 Navy officers just promoted to admiral, none were women
Iwo Jima ARG, 22nd MEU are Heading Home After 10 Months
Zumwalt-class upgrade: Navy Adds Extra Fuel Capacity for Pacific Hypersonic Patrols
New 10-Year Deal Aims to Accelerate Autonomous Underwater Systems for US Military
Why the US Navy’s Steel “Dies” Without Warning (Editor – 15:38 min video)
Jones Act Waiver Reshapes U.S. Oil Trade as Foreign Tankers Flood Domestic Routes
Chile Approves $4.45 Billion ‘Outer Port’ Expansion at San Antonio
INDO-PACIFIC
Pacific Ocean and 22+ marginal seas:
USNI News Western Pacific Pulse: May 22, 2026 (Editor – a new summary from USNI)
Chinese Use Electronic Warfare Attacks on Dutch Warship in South China Sea, Says PLA
Australia Secures First Vessel for National Strategic Fleet
US clears $4.2bn MH-60R, Apache helicopter package for South Korea
Fourteenth P-8A Poseidon aircraft arrives to complete Australia’s maritime patrol fleet
Korea to acquire U.S. SM-6 missile interceptors for deployment by 2034
Chinese Ship Leaves After Tense Standoff Near Taiwan-Controlled Islands
A great wall of underwater sensors
South Korea Announces Plan to Build Domestic Nuclear Attack Boat
China could launch world’s largest naval support ship with over 45,000-ton of displacement: Report
SYOS Unveils SU10 Underwater Drone for Mine Warfare, Maritime Security
Quad Nations Launch Fiji Port Plan, Critical Minerals Pact Amid China Tensions
Indian Ocean and 4 major marginal seas:
Indian Navy foils piracy attempt in western Indian Ocean
Indian Navy to Receive 45 Warships In 3–4 Years as Approval Granted For 195 Future Vessels
India’s project-76 submarine program to transform indigenous undersea warfare capabilities
India–Seychelles Maritime Partnership Strengthened as GRSE Completes Refit of PS Zoroaster
Turkish builder launches lead vessel of new Malaysian warship class
EUROPE
Black and Caspian Seas:
Can EU find a Russia whisperer to mediate an end to war in Ukraine? (Editor – not a maritime article but a issue of great importance)
Russian Patrol Ship Improvises Using Fencing to Protect Against Drones
Ukraine Claims Attack on Russian Frigate Admiral Essen
Ukraine Introduces Sea Drone Designed to Carry 27 FPV Interceptors
Baltic Sea:
Russia Says Magnetic Mines Found On Tanker At Ust-Lugaport
Mediterranean Sea and its 15 marginal seas:
Why Greece Is Replacing Phalanx with Sovraponte on Hydra-Class Frigates? (Editor – rational explained 7:42 min video & example of 57mm Guided Ammunition in a 2:06 min video)
RFA Lyme Bay sails from Gibraltar for mine clearance operations in the Middle East
General:
NATO vs. Russia’s Secret Undersea Fleet (Editor – 6:24 min summary video)
Russia May Have Revived the Idea of a Seabed Ballistic Missile Launcher
First Sea Lord warns Royal Navy ‘ever bigger, ever more expensive platforms’ era is over
Overview: Royal Navy minehunter capabilities
Damen launches ‘Drone Carrier’ for the Portuguese Navy
RMC floats out second Pohjanmaa-class corvette for Finnish Navy
Russian Crude Exports Increase as Strait of Hormuz Transits Remain Low
MIDDLE EAST
Iran Demands $12B Up Front for 60-Day Ceasefire Extension while Several issues on Iran’s nuclear program remain unresolved — JD Vance
US Says Its Blockade Against Iran Has Redirected 100 Vessels
Supertanker With Iraq Crude Exits Persian Gulf As Talks Continue
U.S. military strikes targets in southern Iran, citing ‘threats posed by Iranian forces’ and US launches new strikes on Iran, targeting missile sites and boats and of course Iran Says New U.S. Strikes Violate Ceasefire and then US strikes Iran targets for second time in three days
U.S. Strikes Iranian Drone Launcher After Attack on Merchant Shipping
Iran targets U.S. airbase as both sides exchange periodic strikes
Strait of Hormuz closure: Tight LNG markets, oil prices could soar to $200 while Oil price spike spurs windfall tax proposals in Brazil, EU, US, and Australia
Tanker Reports Explosion Off Oman as UKMTO Warns Ships to Use Caution
Iran’s Expanding Hormuz Control Deepens Crisis for 20,000 Stranded Seafarers
Iran destroyed 20 percent of US’s MQ-9 Reaper drone fleet: Report
Japan to Receive First Oil Tanker to Exit Hormuz Since War Began
South Korea Says Attack on Ship in Strait of Hormuz Likely Involved an Iranian Missile
U.S. Sanctions Iran’s ‘Persian Gulf Strait Authority’ as Hormuz Transit Fight Escalates
Dragon Adds More Air-Defence Firepower to French Carrier Strike Group
Israel Introduces ‘UDA’ Multi-Layered Detection Concept to Counter Subsea Threats
ARCTIC, 7 marginal seas and Canada’s archipelago (Editor – a new section)
Déclaration commune sur la sécurité dans l’Arctique des Alliés de l’Arctique : le Canada, le Royaume du Danemark, y compris le Groenland et les îles Féroé, la Finlande, l’Islande, la Norvège, la Suède et les États-Unis d’Amérique & Joint Statement on Arctic Security from the Arctic Allies: Canada, the Kingdom of Denmark including Greenland and the Faroe Islands, Finland, Iceland, Norway, Sweden, and the United States of America
Russian research vessel heads to Arctic to monitor possible radiation from sunken submarine
Russia Sends Arctic LNG 2 Cargo East Along Northern Sea Route in Rare May Voyage
Chinese navy delegation meets Northern Fleet in Murmansk
Here comes the next-generation reactor for Arctic floating plants
Ship traffic is growing in the High Arctic, but very unevenly (Editor – handy map)
Shipping’s Arctic Black Carbon Problem is Growing Faster Than Regulators Can Respond (Editor – “black carbon emissions from shipping in the Polar Code area almost tripled”)
GLOBAL INTERESTS
CIMSEC: Selective Sea Denial: the rise of land-based anti-ship missiles as political instruments
Ships Are Getting Smaller Every Year, and It’s Inevitable (Editor – gamechanger analysis in a !0:01 min video)
IMO Outlines Plans for Binding Rules for Autonomous Ships
Singapore Shipping Tycoon Indicted in Global Container Price Cartel Case
SCUTTLEBUTT
Why Don’t Ships Turn Sharper Than 35 Degrees? (Editor – 10:04 min video)
A Look INSIDE an Amazing Six-storey $1 Billion Offshore Platform (Editor – 22:20 min documentary video)
How Heavy Fuel Oil Is Made? Why Ships Use It Instead of Diesel? (Editor – 10:04 min video)
Winning WW2’s Most Important Battle – Battle of the Atlantic Full Documentary (Editor – great summary for the uninitiated 28:15 min video)
THIS WEEK IN RCN/MARITIME HISTORY
30 May 1939 Presentation of the King’s Colour to the RCN in Victoria BC. The first occasion that the Colour was personally presented by the ruling sovereign to a naval force outside the British Isles. The Commanding Officer on the West Coast was Captain (later RAdm) Victor G. Brodeur, the Royal Guard was commanded by LCdr (later RAdm) E.P. Tisdall, and the Colour Officer was Lt. (later RAdm) J.C. Hibbard, DSC, RCN.
30 May 1952 While carrying out a shore bombardment near Chongin on the east coast of North Korea, both Nootka and the American destroyer USS John W. Thomason came under fire. The first shells fired by the radar-directed enemy guns fell close to both ships, which were some four kilometres from shore. These near misses inflicted only superficial damage on Nootka, as both ships quickly left the area to avoid more serious damage.
31 May 1920 The cruiser HMCS Niobe is paid off.
June 1943 (the exact date is unknown) Commander Isabel Macneill OC, OBE, WRCNS as a LCdr and one of the graduates of the first course, was appointed commanding officer of Conestoga the navy’s shore establishment in Galt (now part of Cambridge, Ontario. She was the first female to command an HMC “Ship” (a commissioned shore establishment with the HMCS designation is referred to as a “stone frigate.”) in the British Commonwealth during the war. Macneill was responsible for the training of nearly 6,000 Wrens during the war. In 1945, HMCS Conestoga was closed and Macneill was appointed a Staff Officer Wrens to the Commander Atlantic Coast. In 1954, the navy decided it would create a permanent female component of the RCN and called upon Macneill to assist. The following year Cabinet approved the motion and, for the first time in any of the Commonwealth’s navies, women were formally integrated into the regular force. In 1957, Macneill left the RCN for the last time. After the Second World War, she became a prison superintendent.
1 June 1758 Vice Admiral Edward Boscawen of the Royal Navy arrives at Gabarus Bay, 10 km west of Louisbourg, just after midnight in dense fog from Halifax, Nova Scotia; with thirty-nine warships, supply ships, and ten transports, crowded with 13,000 regular troops, Highlanders, light infantry, rangers, and colonial militia. The expedition is commanded by Maj Gan General Jeffery Amherst, with his field commander, Brig Gen James Wolfe; the British do not attempt to land troops until June 8 because of heavy surf.
1 June 1759 A British fleet, under Admiral Saunders, leaves Louisbourg for Quebec carrying James Wolfe and his army.
1 June 1813 HMS Shannon, Captain Philip Broke, captures USS Chesapeake, Captain James Lawrence, in a 15-minute fire fight off Boston harbour; tows her to Halifax as a prize. About 50 sailors were killed and 90 wounded aboard Chesapeake; while on board Shannon, Broke was severely wounded, with 23 killed (including Shannon’s first lieutenant) and 56 wounded. In 226 men were killed or wounded and is considered one of the bloodiest single ship actions of the age of sail, it would mark a turning point in the war for the Royal Navy. Chesapeake’s survivors were interred at Melville Island military prison for the duration of the war; several her crew were buried at nearby Deadman’s Island. Some of Shannon’s dead were buried at the Royal Naval Burying Ground, now part of Canadian Forces Base Halifax.
1 June 1831 Sir James Ross first discovers the position of the North Magnetic Pole on the west coast of Boothia Peninsula; takes possession of the North Magnetic Pole and adjoining territory in the name of King William IV and erects a cairn; spends his third Arctic winter in Victoria Harbour. Boothia, Nunavut
1 June 1840 Samuel Cunard navigates his 700-ton wooden paddlewheel steamer Unicorn to Halifax; after two-week trip from Liverpool with 27 passengers.
1 June 1876 The Royal Military College of Canada opens in Kingston, Ontario, with a class of eighteen cadets.
1 June 1941 HMCS Bytown is commissioned as a depot ‘ship’ created to allow RCN personnel in Ottawa to be paid. All uniformed personnel needed to be borne on the books of a ‘ship’ for accounting purposes, even if they were serving at a shore establishment. This is a tradition held over from the Royal Navy, and these ships are often referred to as “Stone Frigates”. Bytown served in this role for the Naval Service Headquarters (NSHQ), and the Ottawa Half-Company, the Naval Reserve Division that became HMCS Carleton on 1 November 1941. Two years after Bytown was established, the HMCS Bytown Naval Officer’s Mess would open. HMCS Bytown was paid off 7 December 1964. The HMCS Bytown mess closed 22 Mar 2024.
1 June 1943 The first German mines are swept in the approaches to Halifax harbour.
1 June 1968 Canada signs the Nuclear Non-proliferation Treaty in New York along with the US, Britain, USSR, and 57 other countries.
1 June 1989 HMCS Kootenay collided with the merchant vessel MV Nord Pol in fog approximately 28 miles off Cape Flattery. Kootenay The suffered a 3 by 16 feet gash in her bow above the waterline. To fix the damage, her bow was removed and replaced with that of sister ship Chaudière which was out of service at the time.
2 June 1891 Shipping – RMS Empress of Japan is the second of the Canadian Pacific Steamships “Empress” ships to arrive at Vancouver harbour, via the Suez Canal and Hong Kong; Canadian Pacific Steamships had signed a contract for subsidized mail service between Britain and Hong Kong via Canada.
3 June 1910 The Honourable Louis P. Brodeur is appointed the first Minister of the Naval Service.
3 June 1941 Rear-Admiral (RN) Baille-Grohman, Harold Tom, , DSO, OBE – Companion of the Order of the Bath (CB), M.I.D. Awarded DSO as per London Gazette of 3 June 1941. Born in Victoria, B.C. on 15 January 1888. Joined the Royal Navy as a Naval Cadet, RN in HMS Britannia in 1903. Awarded DSO as per London Gazette of 17 April 1918. He served in WW1 in the Grand Fleet, in Dover Patrol in destroyers and minesweepers. Awarded Chinese Order of Brilliant Jade (Red Cravat with blue & White Border) for services training Chinese navy. Commanding Officer of HMS Ramillies in 1939, part of 1st Battle Squadron, Mediterranean. He was Rear-Admiral Combined Operations, 1942 and involved in the initial plans for the Dieppe raid but left when it was cancelled the first time. On 8 May 1945, Vice-Admiral Baillie-Grohman hoisted the White Ensign over the German Naval HQ, Kiel and was Flag Officer-in-Command Schlesweig Holstein from 1945 until he retired in 1946. He died on 23 September 1978.
3 June 1944 Flight Lieutenant R.E. MacBride, flying an RCAF Canso aircraft, sinks U-477 with four depth charges.
3 June 1963 Canada declares 12 Mile Limit; (19.3 km) exclusive fisheries zone off the Canadian coast; effective May 1964. Canadian jurisdiction over sea fisheries used to be confined to waters within the traditional three-mile territorial limit. In 1964, Canada extended fisheries control nine miles beyond the territorial sea; in 1971, the three-mile territorial sea and nine-mile fishing zone were replaced by a twelve-mile territorial sea measured from straight base- lines drawn from “headland to headland”. Also in 1971, special fishing zones were established by Canada in the Gulf of St. Lawrence and Bay of Fundy on the Atlantic Coast, and in Queen Charlotte Sound, Hecate Strait, and Dixon Entrance on the Pacific coast.
3 June 1991 Letters Patent Instituting and Creating in Canada the Insignia for Mention in Dispatches, 3 June 1991. Members of the Canadian Armed Forces on active service and other individuals working with or in conjunction with the Canadian Forces on or after 1 November 1990 are eligible for the award of the Insignia. Arrange for the names of recipients to be published in the Canada Gazette.
4 June 1742 The first warship built in New France called the Le Canada is launched. She is a 6th rate built for the French Navy.
4 June 1812 US Congress votes for war against Britain; the conflict will begin 18 June 1812, when President James Madison officially proclaims the United States to be at war.
4 June 1976 Canada declares it is extending its 12-nautical-mile coastal fishing zone to 370 km (200 nautical miles) offshore fisheries jurisdiction zone, effective January 1, 1977; mature northern cod were estimated at 75 million, down from 900 million in 1962; Canada to set numbers of fish harvested and quotas for foreign fleets, because fish stocks are being depleted by new technologies such as sonar and freezing facilities which let the ships stay at sea longer.
5 June 1741 Vitus Bering, a Danish-born navigator in service to the Russian Navy, sails from Kamchatka Peninsula to explore North America.
5 June 1792 Spanish navigators Dionisio Galiano and Cayetano Valdés leave Nootka Sound and sail into the Strait of Juan de Fuca, reaching Puerto de Núñez Gaona (Neah Bay, Washington), where a Spanish post is being built by Salvador Fidalgo.
5 June 1944 Sixteen RCN Bangor Class minesweepers help clear the English Channel in preparation for the D-Day landings. In the largest minesweeping operation ever undertaken, 247 minesweepers were deployed to sweep ten approach lanes across the English Channel, clear the disembarkation and fire support sectors of the assault area, and then sweep the final paths to the beaches.
Significant RCN Dates – If you notice any omissions or errors please inform me. Pointing out any more modern significant dates is encouraged. The list draws primarily from the Directory of History and Heritage’s comprehensive “Significant Dates in Canadian Military History”, the now defunct “Canada Channel”, “Legion Magazine”, The Naval Service of Canada, Its Official History Vol 1-3, NAC member Roger Litwiller’s excellent web site, encyclopedic guidance from NAC member Fraser McKee, the Uboat.net site, and anywhere else I can find credible information. Recently “Guardians of the North” written by NAC members Rich Gimblett & Karl Gagnon. For the merchant ship history, a special thanks to NAC member Bill Dziadyk for his able assistance and detailed work. The RCN lost 1,965 men and 24 ships during the War, most of them in the Atlantic. A comprehensive list of the staggering merchant losses – sunk, damaged, or lost – Canadian Merchant Ship Losses of the Second World War, 1939-1945 by Rob Fisher {Revised June 2001}, and for the loss of individual personnel RCN Ship Histories, Convoy Escort Movements, Casualty Lists 1939-1947) Last and far from least Gary Weir’s For Prosperity’s Sake RCN historical project site.
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