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Undersea War

The Battle to Control the Cables and Pipelines That Connect Our World

Coming Soon

Contributors

By Elisabeth Braw

Formats and Prices

On Sale
Oct 13, 2026
Page Count
368 pages
Publisher
PublicAffairs
ISBN-13
9781541706101

Price

$19.99

Price

$25.99 CAD

How sabotage and disorder threaten the fragile network of undersea cables and pipelines that makes modern life possible—and how it may already be drawing the world into an all-out underwater war.

The world depends on a tangle of underwater tubes on the ocean floor. Every day undersea cables transmit 99 percent of the world’s data, while intercontinental pipelines convey two-thirds of the world’s oil and gas. They do their jobs so reliably that few would guess that “the cloud” is actually underwater, or that global economic stability relies on pipelines on the seafloor. But as award-winning security expert Elisabeth Braw reveals, an invisible battle over those cables and pipelines is ramping up.

Undersea War tells the story of the underwater infrastructure that supports everyday life. In 2022, after decades of undersea harmony, two pipelines in the Baltic Sea exploded mysteriously. Within months, the cutting of the data links between Taiwan’s Matsu Islands’ data links and the world along with the subsequent destruction of additional Baltic pipelines and cables signaled that peace in the ocean depths was over. Superpowers are now racing to protect themselves as the seabed itself becomes a battlefield.

Blending engrossing historical narrative with acute strategic analysis, Undersea War shows that the next major battle for global supremacy may unfold on the ocean floor.

  • “Elisabeth Braw tells one of the most important and yet mostly unknown security stories existing today. As she lays out in meticulous detail, much of modern life is dependent on a network of undersea cables and pipelines which link the globe together. While vital, as the last few years have made depressingly clear, these connections are also extremely vulnerable to damage and even outright destruction. In bringing this issue out with clarity and purpose, Braw has done a great service and told a brilliant story. A must read.”
    Phillips Payson O’Brien, author of War and Power

Elisabeth Braw

About the Author

Elisabeth Braw is a senior fellow with the Atlantic Council’s Transatlantic Security Initiative in the Scowcroft Center for Strategy and Security. A columnist with Foreign Policy and Politico Europe, she also writes regularly for the Financial Times and The Times (London). She is the author of the award-winning Goodbye, Globalization.

Learn more about this author