NewsZelenskyy, Nord Stream II, and the hidden sabotage operation

Zelenskyy, Nord Stream II, and the hidden sabotage operation

Volodymyr Zelensky was supposed to make decisions regarding Nord Stream II, according to an American daily.
Volodymyr Zelensky was supposed to make decisions regarding Nord Stream II, according to an American daily.
Images source: © PAP | AA/ABACA

15 August 2024 18:01

"The Wall Street Journal" reports sensational details about the destruction of Nord Stream II. Americans claim that Volodymyr Zelenskyy initially signed the decision to destroy the pipeline, only to attempt to annul it later.

According to the "WSJ," in May 2022, a handful of high-ranking Ukrainian army officers and businesspeople gathered to celebrate their country's success in halting the Russian invasion. Under the influence of alcohol, in patriotic fervour, someone suggested the next radical step: destroying the Nord Stream pipelines.

A little over four months later, on September 26, in the morning hours, Scandinavian seismologists received signals indicative of an underwater earthquake or volcanic eruption hundreds of kilometres away, near the Danish island of Bornholm. Three powerful explosions caused the most significant release of natural gas in history, equivalent to Denmark's annual CO2 emissions.

Zelenskyy tried to withdraw the decision

According to the "WSJ," the Ukrainian operation cost about $300,000 (CAD 410,000). It involved a small rented yacht with a six-person crew, including trained civilian divers. One of them was a woman whose presence helped create the illusion that they were friends on a pleasant cruise.

President Zelenskyy initially approved the plan - according to one of the officers involved and three individuals familiar with it. Later, however, when the CIA learned about it and asked the Ukrainian president to halt the operation, he ordered a stop to the activities.

Zelenskyy's commander, General Valerii Zaluzhnyi, who led the operation, continued the efforts despite this. The newspaper spoke with four senior Ukrainian defence and security officials who either participated in the plan's execution or had direct knowledge of it. They all stated that the pipelines were a legitimate target in Ukraine's defensive war against Russia.

The "WSJ" notes that parts of their accounts were confirmed by nearly two years of German police investigation into the attack, during which evidence was obtained, including emails, cell phone and satellite data, as well as fingerprints and DNA samples from the alleged sabotage team members. The German investigation did not directly link President Zelenskyy to the covert operation.

Zaluzhnyi, currently the Ukrainian ambassador to the United Kingdom, told the newspaper that he knows nothing about any such operation and any suggestions otherwise are mere "provocation." He added that the Ukrainian armed forces were not authorized to conduct foreign missions and could not have been involved.

Rented equipment

In September 2022, the perpetrators rented a 50-metre recreational yacht named Andromeda in the German Baltic port of Rostock. According to Ukrainian officers and individuals familiar with the German investigation, the boat was rented with the help of a Polish travel agency, which had been established almost 10 years earlier by Ukrainian intelligence as a cover for financial transactions.

The crew set off armed only with diving equipment, satellite navigation, a portable sonar, and open sea floor maps marking the pipeline's location. According to those familiar with the German investigation, four divers worked in pairs. Operating in pitch-black, icy waters, they used octogen, a powerful explosive also known as HMX, connected to time-controlled detonators. A small amount of the lightweight explosive was sufficient to burst the high-pressure pipes.

Wanting to leave Germany quickly, the sabotage group neglected to clean the Andromeda, which allowed German detectives to find traces of explosives, fingerprints, and DNA samples from the crew.

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