NewsMystery deepens: Two years after Nord Stream blasts, no culprit named

Mystery deepens: Two years after Nord Stream blasts, no culprit named

Two years after the destruction of the Nord Stream gas pipelines from Russia to Germany, it is still unknown who blew them up.
Two years after the destruction of the Nord Stream gas pipelines from Russia to Germany, it is still unknown who blew them up.
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Katarzyna Kalus

30 September 2024 07:44

Two years after the destruction of the Baltic Nord Stream pipelines from Russia to Germany, it is still unclear who blew them up. The event has become a black box, generating sensational narratives utilized by Moscow.

In the first days after the explosions, many analysts assessed that Russia might have blown up the Baltic pipelines. They pointed to the technical capabilities for conducting such sabotages and possible motives. However, none of the key Western politicians publicly accused Russia of blowing up the Nord Streams.

Meanwhile, Moscow immediately launched a propaganda attack, while the ongoing gas leak prevented checking what happened to the pipelines.

On the third day after the suspected sabotage of the Nord Streams, Russian President Vladimir Putin accused the "Anglo-Saxons," referring to Americans and Britons:

Well, for the Anglo-Saxons sanctions are no longer enough, they switched to sabotage. Unbelievable, but it is a fact, he stated.

It was recalled that on the same day, Sergei Naryshkin, director of Russia's foreign intelligence service SVR, formulated another Kremlin propaganda thesis: In my opinion, the West is doing everything to hide the true perpetrators and organizers of this act of international terrorism.

Since then, Putin has repeatedly accused the USA of blowing up the pipelines. He never presented even a shred of evidence to support the allegations.

At the end of August, the Russian authorities filed a complaint with the German government. It concerns the conduct of the investigation regarding the 2022 Nord Stream pipeline explosions following the main suspect's escape from arrest in Poland.

"WSJ": Ukrainian authorities are behind the attacks on Nord Stream

The American newspaper Wall Street Journal reported that Ukrainian authorities are responsible for the attacks on the Nord Stream 1 and 2 pipelines. Mykhailo Podolyak, advisor to President Volodymyr Zelensky, denied this.

At the same time, the former head of the German Foreign Intelligence Service (BND), August Hanning, expressed his belief in an interview with "Die Welt" that the attack on the Nord Stream pipelines must have been carried out with Polish support and approval at the highest level from Ukrainian President Zelensky and Polish President Andrzej Duda.

Prime Minister Donald Tusk addressed "all patrons and initiators (of the Nord Stream 1 and 2 investments)" on platform X regarding these reports: "You should do only one thing today: apologize and stay quiet," he wrote.

Nord Stream under fire

On September 26, 2022, three of the four Nord Stream 1 and Nord Stream 2 pipelines were destroyed at about 80 metres at the bottom of the Baltic Sea. Much of the Russian natural gas for Germany was delivered directly through Nord Stream 1. Many Eastern and Western European countries have repeatedly criticized the project, warning of the geopolitical consequences of bypassing Eastern Europe in resource transit.

Many Eastern and Western European countries have repeatedly criticized this project, warning of the geopolitical consequences of bypassing Eastern Europe in the transit of the resource. During Russia's aggression against Ukraine, Moscow suspended gas supplies even before the destruction of Nord Stream 1. Meanwhile, the Nord Stream 2 pipeline was ultimately not launched due to the Russian invasion and the resulting political disputes.