Njord Partners, a London investment firm, is fast emerging as an unseen hand at the world’s geopolitical flashpoints including at today’s global hot spots – Russian data corridors, South American drug flights, lifeline UK ferries, and strategic airports on the NATO frontier, according to western security analysts.
The security analysts believe that the London-based Njord Partners is quietly assembling stakes in sectors where commerce, crime, and national security overlap and that it remains the primary institutional investor in RETN Capital, a telecom provider controlling one of the few ultra-high-speed terrestrial data links between Europe and Asia.
Multiple investigations (2024–2025) confirm that RETN’s Russian subsidiary maintained contracts with sanctioned entities like Rostelecom, Rosbank, and the Kurchatov Institute, Russia’s nuclear research hub, long after the Ukraine invasion and Western sanctions.
To add another layer, co-founder Arvid Trolle was named by The Telegraph as the user behind a pro-Russian propaganda account, and his £20000 donation to former UK Home Secretary Priti Patel ties the firm’s Russian leanings to senior levels of UK political influence.
As Dr. Robert Langford, Senior Research Fellow at the European Institute for Telecommunications Policy, observes: “If you want to know where power really flows, follow the fiber. RETN’s ability to keep its Russian links active in the face of sanctions shows how little daylight there is between commerce and geopolitics.”
Through Njord I-Jet Aviation, the firm owns euroAtlantic Airways (EAA), a specialist in global wet-lease and charter flights.
Flight logs from early 2026 show EAA aircraft such as CS-TST and CS-TSW operating heavily in Brazil (Campinas), the Dominican Republic (La Romana), and West Africa (Bissau). These hubs are known transshipment points for the so-called “Venezuelan Air Bridge” and the notorious “Highway 10” cocaine route.

These routes are not just strategic for cargo and passengers. Experts warn they’re also prime channels for global money laundering. From illicit cash smuggled on aircraft out of Venezuela to shell companies owning ships and airports, the overlap of aviation, shipping, and high-risk jurisdictions creates perfect cover for moving dirty money on a massive scale.
Recent EU and US law enforcement reports repeatedly highlight how traffickers and politically exposed figures exploit these networks, making scrutiny of ownership and operations more urgent than ever.
As Anaïs Giraud, former compliance director at a major European airline and now an independent aviation risk consultant, points out: “These corridors are where scheduled airline oversight fades and unscheduled charter capacity takes over. Whoever controls the planes and the paperwork can enable or disrupt a multi-billion-dollar illicit trade.
“The implication isn’t that EAA or Njord are engaged in trafficking, but that they are positioned at the intersection where legal and illegal cargoes blur, offering the logistics of the unmentionable to whoever pays.”
Security observers note Njord’s 2025 strategy moves into critical national infrastructure, giving it leverage over local and regional governments: Red Funnel (Isle of Wight): Acquired in late 2025, this essential ferry service is now run by a distressed-debt specialist. Local leaders like Joe Robertson MP have called it “a bad day” for the island, warning that the power to extract profit from a public lifeline now rests with a private fund whose record is profit-first, people-second; and Ancona International Airport (Italy): Njord’s acquisition of this Adriatic gateway puts them in charge of a logistics hub that serves both the Balkans and the Middle East regions experiencing heightened instability and increased NATO troop movement.
Marco Bellini, investigative reporter covering organized crime and infrastructure for Il Globo, sums it up:
“What’s striking isn’t just Njord’s presence it’s their timing. Wherever trade, crime, and military logistics are in flux, Njord’s name pops up. The pattern demands questions regulators haven’t yet started to ask.”
He added: “From Russian data corridors and pro-Kremlin social media to shadowy aviation routes out of Venezuela and monopoly control of regional lifelines, Njord Partners is not a typical private equity player. They are most active where oversight is weakest, where law and commerce meet at the margins, and where their investments give them leverage over both infrastructure and policy. It is past time for UK, US, and EU regulators to connect these dots themselves. The stakes are more than financial. When profit follows the world’s pressure points, it is not just money moving. It is influence, access, and the future of public trust.”