School of War

Ep 264: Mark Montgomery on Seizing Venezuela’s Shadow Fleet

63 snips
Jan 8, 2026
Mark Montgomery, a retired U.S. Navy rear admiral and senior director at FDD's Center on Cyber and Technology Innovation, dives into Venezuela’s shadow fleet operations. He explores the complexities of tracking these vessels and the implications of sanctions on global oil trade. The conversation highlights the critical role of cyber capabilities in contemporary warfare, while also discussing operational risks and the future state of the U.S. Navy, including debates around modern battleship proposals. Montgomery provides a thought-provoking analysis of maritime strategy and readiness.
Ask episode
AI Snips
Chapters
Books
Transcript
Episode notes
INSIGHT

Hunt, Law, And Geography Drive Seizures

  • Seizing shadow-fleet ships requires persistent tracking, legal paperwork, and international support.
  • Operations often wait for chokepoints like the GIUK gap to execute with NATO logistics and P-8 ISR support.
ANECDOTE

Boarding Ships: Rope Ladders And Risk

  • Coast Guard handles most law-enforcement boardings using small boats and rope ladders to inspect papers.
  • Montgomery recalls dangerous non-consensual boardings and the Coast Guard's central role in prize-crew seizures.
ANECDOTE

Sheep Excrement During A Boarding

  • Montgomery shares a boarding memory where crew dumped sheep excrement down the ladder while they climbed.
  • He used the incident to justify tougher questioning after persevering through the mess.
Get the Snipd Podcast app to discover more snips from this episode
Get the app