Narco-submarines—semi-submersible and fully submersible vessels purpose-built for illicit maritime transport—have evolved from improvised smuggling craft into increasingly engineered systems embedded within transnational drug trafficking networks. This article provides a comprehensive, systems-level analysis of narco-submarines, examining their historical evolution, technical characteristics, economic logic, detection challenges, and emerging future trajectories. Drawing on triangulated open-source intelligence, seizure data, legal documents, defence analyses, and interdisciplinary academic literature, the study situates narco-subs within broader patterns of asymmetric innovation and criminal systems engineering. It argues that narco-sub development is driven less by technological sophistication per se than by structural incentives created by fragmented maritime governance, surveillance asymmetries, and resilient drug markets. The article demonstrates that existing detection and interdiction approaches, while technologically advanced, remain institutionally misaligned with adversarial concealment strategies, enabling continued adaptation by trafficking organisations. Particular attention is given to the implications of automation, unmanned platforms, and networked logistics for future maritime security, as well as the legal and policy challenges posed by stateless and autonomous illicit vessels. By integrating technical, economic, legal, and strategic perspectives, this study advances understanding beyond descriptive accounts and offers a theoretically grounded framework for analysing illicit maritime innovation. It concludes that narco-submarines should be understood not as a temporary anomaly, but as a durable feature of the contemporary maritime threat environment, with implications extending beyond drug trafficking to the future of ocean governance and security.
Kim Robin Thuemler (Thu,) studied this question.