Norway’s Standard Class Ships

Kongsberg proposal for Norway’s Standard class.

Norway has begun a program to replace “smaller patrol craft, minehunters, light corvettes, and other auxiliaries, spread out over twelve different classes” with two “Standard” classes for both their Navy and Coast Guard.  My guess is that five of the 18 “medium” size and five of the ten “offshore” vessels will go to the Norwegian Coast Guard which is a branch of the Norwegian Navy.

“The standardised vessels dedicated for Coastguard work will have certain modifications, but will also be capable of embarking the modular systems used by the Navy.”

We have two reports from Naval News, apparently news releases from two of the shipbuilders competing for the contract(s). The Ulstein report is much more detailed and is quoted above.

Artist impressions of ULSTEIN’ standard-class designs proposal to the Royal Norwegian Navy. Ulstein image.

Artist impressions of ULSTEIN’ standard-class design proposal to the Royal Norwegian Navy. Ulstein image.

This project is interesting as a joint navy/coast guard project, as a modular systems project, and as a exploitation of what looks to be designs based on offshore industry support ships.

If you were reading this blog back in 2012, you might remember that a Ulstein design offered by Vigor was one of the contenders for the OPC contract.

Vigor’s Ulstein OPC proposal.

Navy League’s Seapower 2026 Almanac

Got my Seapower 2026 Almanac today. This is one of the benefits of being a Navy League  member.

It includes information on ships, boats, aircraft, weapon systems, sensors, and flag officers of the Coast Guard, Maritime Administration (MARAD), and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), as well as those of the Navy and Marine Corps.

It reported the cancellation of the Offshore Patrol Cutter Contract with Eastern.

Regarding the “Fast Response Cutter” program, 61 have been delivered. #62 and 63 will go to Guam, #64 to San Juan, PR, #65 to Astoria, OR, #66 to San Pedro, CA, #67 to St. Petersburg, FL, #68-77 were included in the “Big Beautiful Bill,” and #78 and 79 are in the current budget request.

Also included are reports on the status of Coast Guard aviation programs.

Passed in 2025 was authorization for purchase of 6 HC-130J which will bring the fleet up to 25. 17 aircraft have completed miss ionization. All 18 HC-144s have been missionized including Minotaur and have been redesigned HC-144B. “In 2024, the Coast Guard made the decision to cancel the C-27J missionization program and to conclude C-27J operations by 2028.”

There are currently 48 MH-60Ts in the fleet. The Coast Guard plans to expand the H-60 fleet to 127 aircraft.

There are currently 84 H-65E in the Coast Guard fleet and some will remain in service until the late 2030s.

We May Be Headed For a Shutdown

US Capital West Side, by Martin Falbisoner

Because the Coast Guard budget is part of the DHS budget, and a lot of people are not happy with what a DHS agency has been doing, there is a good possibility the Coast Guards will not have a budget beginning in February.

This is yet another reason I believe the Coast Guard should be an independent agency. There are already more than 40 independent agencies including the postal service, NASA, and the CIA.

Six of the Coast Guard’s eleven missions, including SAR are not even considered DHS missions.

The Coast Guard has not benefited from being a part of any Secretary level organization. Our budget request was never presented to the Congress without it being balanced first against other department priorities.

Every year it seems the Coast Guard budget has been increased by bipartisan support in Congress. We don’t need a Secretary of the Coast Guard. Coast Guard leaders can represent the Coast Guard without adding another level of bureaucracy.

“U.S. Coast Guard’s cyber defenses have golden opportunity for massive overhaul” –The Watch

Army National Guardsmen and Coast Guardsmen participate in a 2022 U.S. Cyber Command drill in Arkansas. With historic funding, the Coast Guard has an opportunity to bolster its cybersecurity mission. U.S. ARMY NATIONAL GUARD

The NORTHCOM on line magazine, “The Watch” reports,

“The United States Coast Guard has a rare opportunity to make wholesale upgrades to its cybersecurity defenses, a fellow at the Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS) proposed in an October 2025 opinion article for the nonprofit think tank in Washington, D.C. Joel Coito, a CSIS defense fellow and U.S. Coast Guard commander, said the window of opportunity has been boosted by $25 billion in congressional funding, the result of rare political consensus among federal lawmakers on the importance of cybersecurity at the nation’s ports and maritime approaches. That consensus should be seized by policymakers to strengthen cyber defenses through bolstering the Coast Guard’s cybersecurity, Coito wrote.”

The post does not provide a link to the CSIS report it quotes but I believe this is it.

The U.S. Coast Guard and the Future of Maritime Cybersecurity

There is a lot of good information on the state of Coast Guard Cyber and the future path it might take including career opportunities.

“Regulatory, legislative, and policy developments have provided the U.S. Coast Guard (USCG) with new cybersecurity tools and expanded authorities to secure the marine transportation system (MTS) from cyber threats. At the same time, budgetary headwinds that historically plagued the service have shifted. With nearly $25 billion of funding in the One Big Beautiful Bill Act, the USCG finds itself in the favorable—if unfamiliar—position of having resource winds at its back. The result? A chance for generational change in safeguarding the maritime cyber domain and bolstering the USCG cyber workforce. This commentary prescribes a path to capitalize on these legislative, policy, and funding wins: confirmation of key USCG senior leaders, enhanced cyber talent management, passage of pending USCG cyber legislation, broader interagency integration of USCG cyber capabilities, and rapid integration of private sector tools.”

Polar Star spends 50th Birthday rescuing a Cruise Ship in Antarctica

USCGC Polar Star (WAGB 10) responds to a request for assistance from an Australian-owned cruise ship, Scenic Eclipse II, stuck in the Ross Sea amid Operation Deep Freeze 2026 on the cutter’s 50th birthday, Jan. 17, 2026. Operation Deep Freeze is one of the more challenging U.S. military peacetime missions due to the harsh environment in which it is conducted and this year also commemorates the Polar Star’s 50th year of service. (U.S. Coast Guard video by Petty Officer 2nd Class Christopher Bokum)

Seems likely this sort of thing will become more common.

“THE ARCTIC IS A STRATEGIC DISTRACTION” –CIMSEC

Map of the Arctic region showing shipping routes Northeast Passage, Northern Sea Route, and Northwest Passage, and bathymetry, Arctic Council, by Susie Harder

CIMSEC has an interesting article that argues against much we have heard lately. It also may represent a view that may prevail in the next administration.

“Over the past five years, numerous articles have called for increased U.S. defense resources focused on the Arctic. This is a strategic mistake, a distraction.

“This article will outline the reasons proponents feel the high north has increased value, examine the actual strategic value of each, and show that none is sufficient to divert scarce resources from higher value theaters.”

Personally I disagree with this,

“…the United States should…also reduce its icebreaker contract to the maximum of six suggested by the Coast Guard. While the current two icebreakers may be insufficient, the proposed buy is much too large. It will take shipbuilding resources away from the Navy at a time when the fleet is understrength and has no path to sufficient numbers of ships.

In the first place the number the Coast Guard had been using was nine not six.

The additional ship building resources used to build the Arctic Security Cutters, other than perhaps the labor, might not exist if it were not for this program and these yards may develop into assets that will build ships for the Navy.

We may not need eleven Arctic Security Cutters, and it may not be the best use of the funds, but we can definitely use eleven. I cannot see more than that.

These are not as capable as the medium icebreakers originally planned. They do not have the horsepower, so we probably need more than the four or five previously planned.

They can do things we had not previously planned for the Arctic Security Cutters. They can break ice on the Great Lakes. They can keep ports in Alaska open.

While these ships may provide an excess of icebreaking capability, they can be used for other Coast Guard missions as well. Like the Canadian AOPS, they can be used as patrol cutters when not used as icebreakers. They are not ideal, but they are useable.

I see the possibility of future conflict over Antarctica. If that should happen, we may be very glad we have them.

“New Gulfstream 700 VIP Jet For U.S. Coast Guard Emerges” –The War Zone

Gulfstream 700 Long Range Command and Control Aircraft.

The War Zone reports,

“We have what appears to be the first look at one of two new Gulfstream 700 (G700) VIP jets for the U.S. Coast Guard. The jet notably has a livery almost identical to that of a 737 Boeing Business Jet (BBJ) with a luxurious VVIP interior and clear ties to the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) rather than a more typical Coast Guard paint scheme.”

“China Coast Guard presence near Japan-controlled islands reaches record high in 2025” –Indo-Pacific Defense Forum

A Japan Coast Guard patrol vessel monitors a China Coast Guard vessel off the Senkaku Islands in the East China Sea in April 2024. KYODO/REUTERS

The Japan Coast Guard is responding to Chinese Coast Guard gray zone provocations in the contiguous zone around the Japan-controlled Senkaku Islands, leading to increased tensions and prompting the Japan Coast Guard to increase the armament on their cutters.

“Chinese government vessels’ approaches to the Senkakus have increased sharply since 2012 when Tokyo bought three of the islands from a private owner. The CCG initially deployed one vessel at a time but now routinely dispatches four at a time, the JCG reported. Since mid-2024, all four vessels have been equipped with deck-mounted autocannons such as 76 mm guns.”

But I wanted to highlight one particular paragraph.

“..the CCG has been rapidly increasing its fleet size and capabilities, including weapons. According to the JCG, the CCG operated 161 vessels with full-load displacement of 1,000 tons or more as of December 2024 compared with the JCG’s 78 vessels in that category.”

Now, how many do we have?

  • 4 Icebreakers
  • 16 WLB (ocean going buoy tenders
  • 10 National Security Cutters
  • 13 WMEC270
  • 8 WMEC 210
  • USCGC Alex Haley
  • USCGC Eagle

53 ships (I think that is right) for a nation with the second largest EEZ on earth (France’s EEZ is slightly larger).

The US EEZ is about two and a half times the size of that of Japan and about five time the sized of China’s claimed EEZ more than half of which is disputed.

Seventh Oil Tanker Seized

Below is a SOUTHCOM news release.

Jan. 20, 2026

Maritime Interdiction Operation, Jan. 20, 2026

Through Operation SOUTHERN SPEAR, the Department of War is unwavering in its mission to crush illicit activity in the Western Hemisphere in partnership with U.S. Coast Guard through the Department of Homeland Security and The Justice Department.

This morning, U.S. military forces, in support of the Department of Homeland Security, apprehended Motor Vessel Sagitta without incident. The apprehension of another tanker operating in defiance of President Trump’s established quarantine of sanctioned vessels in the Caribbean demonstrates our resolve to ensure that the only oil leaving Venezuela will be oil that is coordinated properly and lawfully. As the joint force operates in the Western Hemisphere, we reaffirm that the security of the American people is paramount, demonstrating our commitment to safety and stability.

These operations are backed by the full power our elite joint force team deployed in the Caribbean.

“Coast Guard cutter returns to Florida after escorting recently seized motor tanker” –SE District

U.S. Coast Guard crewmembers transfer from the Coast Guard Cutter Vigilant (WMEC 617) to a motor tanker by a helicopter crew assigned to U.S. Navy Helicopter Sea Combat Squadron 9 in the Atlantic Ocean, Jan. 7, 2026. Vigilant escorted the tanker, which was seized by a joint Coast Guard and Department of War team for conducting illicit activities in the Caribbean Sea. (U.S. Coast Guard photo by Petty Officer 2nd Class Brandon Feehery)

Below is a press release from the Southeast District. This is a 61 year old ship, still doing the job.

Anyone know what this device, pictured below, cropped from photo above, is?

U.S. Coast Guard cutter USCGC Vigilant (WMEC-617). 2 March 2008. Photo by Workman via Wikipedia.

U.S. Coast Guard Cutter Vigilant (WMEC 617), right, sails in the Western Atlantic Ocean while escorting a motor tanker after a right of visit boarding, Jan. 7, 2026. Vigilant escorted the motor tanker, which was seized by a Coast Guard tactical boarding team with support from the Department of War, for operating as a vessel without nationality in the Caribbean Sea. (U.S. Navy Photo)


Jan. 20, 2026

Coast Guard cutter returns to Florida after escorting recently seized motor tanker

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. — The U.S. Coast Guard Cutter Vigilant (WMEC 617) returned to Cape Canaveral on Friday after a 33-day patrol in the Caribbean Sea supporting operations Pacific Viper and Southern Spear.

During the patrol, Vigilant escorted a motor tanker, which was seized by a U.S. Coast Guard tactical boarding team with support from the Department of War, for operating as a vessel without nationality in the Caribbean Sea. Vigilant’s crew coordinated with naval and law enforcement partners to transfer personnel and provisions to the tanker. A law enforcement team from Vigilant boarded the vessel to provide security during the 600-nautical-mile transit to the United States.

Cmdr. Steve Welch, commanding officer of Vigilant, said, “I am proud of the crew’s adaptability and professionalism during this mission of national importance. Their performance ensured the safe execution of the operation in partnership with the Department of War.”

Unique statutory authorities enable the Coast Guard to enforce international and domestic law in the maritime domain, deploying assets to conduct missions in U.S. waters and on the high seas. The Coast Guard’s involvement in this seizure was conducted under Title 14, U.S. Code and in accordance with customary international law. The Coast Guard exercises these authorities to protect maritime safety, security, and U.S. interests.