French Naval Officer Inadvertently Gives Up Aircraft Carrier Coordinates

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According to a report from Le Monde, a French naval officer unintentionally exposed the real-time location of France’s prized aircraft carrier, the Charles de Gaulle, simply by tracking his workout on the fitness app Strava. The officer, identified only as “Arthur,” logged a 7-kilometer run while circling the deck. Sounds harmless—until you realize his account was public.

That single decision opened a digital window straight into one of France’s most sensitive military operations.

Data from the app placed the carrier in the eastern Mediterranean, northwest of Cyprus, right in the middle of a region already boiling with tension due to the ongoing conflict involving Israel, the United States, and Iran. Anyone with access to Strava could follow not just Arthur’s run, but the precise movements of the carrier strike group itself.

And it didn’t stop there.

Arthur’s activity history showed a breadcrumb trail of deployments—off the Cotentin Peninsula near Cherbourg in mid-February, then Copenhagen later that month, and finally near Cyprus in March. Investigators matched his jogging routes with satellite imagery, confirming the ship’s location with alarming accuracy. The looping patterns of his run, traced over open water, essentially mapped the movement of a multi-billion-dollar warship in near real time.

The Charles de Gaulle isn’t sailing alone. It’s part of a full strike group that includes multiple frigates and a supply ship, deployed under direct orders from President Emmanuel Macron following the outbreak of conflict in the Middle East. With tensions escalating and recent attacks already costing French lives, operational secrecy isn’t optional—it’s critical.

French military leadership moved quickly after the breach was exposed. Officials confirmed the post violated strict operational protocols and made clear that consequences are coming. Discipline, retraining, or worse could be on the table.

But here’s the bigger problem: this isn’t a one-off mistake.

Le Monde uncovered multiple sailors using public Strava accounts, some even posting photos from aboard the ship. That means this wasn’t just one careless jog—it’s part of a broader pattern of digital vulnerability.

And it gets worse. Similar incidents have already plagued elite security teams. In 2024, Strava data exposed movements of bodyguards protecting world leaders, including those from France, the U.S., and Russia. By early 2025, even French submariners had leaked sensitive patrol data through the same app.

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