MIOC INTELLIGENCE

French Polynesia: The Emerging Pacific Drug Highway

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    This analysis was produced by Windward’s Maritime Intelligence Operations Center (MIOC) — a mission-critical operations center powered by Windward’s maritime intelligence experts, operating as a seamless extension of your team. This is a sample of what we deliver. For intelligence tailored to your operational theater, visit the MIOC page.


    The maritime security landscape in the South Pacific underwent a structural transformation in early 2026, as transnational criminal organizations (TCOs) established a high-volume “Pacific Drug Highway.” Within the first 17 days of 2026, multilateral forces intercepted over 9 metric tons of cocaine in French Polynesian waters, a record volume for the territory. This surge is driven by the “balloon effect” resulting from intensified U.S.-led pressure on traditional routes in the Caribbean and Atlantic, prompting TCOs to revert to the French Polynesian Exclusive Economic Zone (EEZ), where they utilize identity changes, prolonged dormancy, and unusual routing to evade detection.

    What Happened

    The RAIDER interdiction provides a clear reference case, showcasing some of the deceptive shipping practices employed: Dormant utility vessels “reactivated” for long-haul moves, identity changes ahead of route shifts, and non-cooperative AIS behavior around likely handoff zones. Pattern matching suggests the signature is replicating.

    Windward has identified another suspicious vessel exhibiting a similar trafficking signature. This 47-year-old offshore supply ship recently engaged in regulatory evasion by changing its IMO, flag, and MMSI before departing its longtime operating base in Central America for a trans-Pacific route. Crucially, the vessel reported Ecuador as its destination, lost AIS transmission during its transit, and resurfaced days later within the French Polynesian EEZ – where it loitered for 2 days before turning back. This behavior mirrors the non-cooperative pattern observed in the RAIDER case and suggests active engagement in the transshipment pipeline.

    The supply ship’s recent voyage to the French Polynesian EEZ, February 17, 2026.
Source: Windward Maritime AI™ Platform
    The supply ship’s recent voyage to the French Polynesian EEZ, February 17, 2026.
    Source: Windward Maritime AI™ Platform

    What It Signals

    French Polynesia is being used as a logistics platform, not a final destination. Narcotics are increasingly consolidated in coastal zones and dispatched on multi-thousand-mile transpacific legs for hand-offs in oceanic blind spots.

    Transshipment in oceanic blind spots: Remote atolls (Tuamotu/Marquesas) offer low-persistence surveillance environments suited to ship-to-ship transfers from mother ships to smaller daughter craft.

    Windward satellite imagery on 10 February 2026 detected 18 vessels operating without AIS in the Tahiti region. Two vessels displayed a “merged tail” signature consistent with close-proximity operations and subsequent separation behavior – a pattern sometimes observed following STS activity.

    Tahiti region vessel analysis (Feb 10, 2026): Non-AIS ("dark") vessels (red markings). Note enlarged "dark" vessels with connected wakes, suggesting post-STS transfer.
Source: Windward Maritime AI™ Platform
    Tahiti region vessel analysis (Feb 10, 2026): Non-AIS (“dark”) vessels (red markings). Note enlarged “dark” vessels with connected wakes, suggesting post-STS transfer.
    Source: Windward Maritime AI™ Platform

    What to Monitor

    Early 2026 indicators suggest a structural shift: TCOs are scaling a “Pacific Drug Highway” to route around tightening interdiction pressure elsewhere. French Polynesia’s ~5 million km² EEZ is being operationalized as a transshipment node because it combines vast maneuver space, dispersed islands, and enforcement constraints.

    The likely near-term implications:

    • More “resurrected” offshore utility vessels (service ships / OSVs) used as long-haul carriers due to range, endurance, and lower scrutiny relative to conventional merchant profiles.
    • Increased identity churn (flag/MMSI) clustered immediately before major route shifts.
    • Non-cooperative behavior becoming normalized in the corridor (AIS gaps timed to transit legs, approach windows, and handoff zones).

    Watch-for signature (operational):
    Dormant period → identity change → abrupt pattern-of-life deviation → declared destination mismatch / Ecuador cover → AIS suppression → resurfacing inside French Polynesia EEZ (or near remote atolls) → rapid onward movement consistent with a handoff.


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