Thursday, March 28, 2024

Did Russia Really Blow Up the Nord Stream Undersea Gas Pipelines? Probably Not

-

ANALYSIS – In late September, three different pipes from the Nord Stream undersea gas pipelines, long criticized by former President Trump, and other conservatives in the U.S. and Europe for making NATO reliant on Russian energy, were apparently sabotaged.

Trump et al.'s warnings have proven prescient as has manipulated gas supplies and threatened total cutoffs to Europe in his energy war against NATO since the invasion of .

One of the three undersea pipes sabotaged was part of the new Nord Stream 2 pipeline that was unused but still filled with natural gas, and in the future could take copious amounts more gas from Northwestern under the Baltic Sea to Northern .

The other two pipes belonged to the older Nord Stream 1 pipeline.

Both pipelines and their three pipes pass former Soviet colonies, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania and Poland, under the waters of the Baltic.

Nord Stream 2 has been blocked from becoming fully operational by Western nations as part of our sanctions against Russia over its war in Ukraine.

Many in the West were quick to blame Russia for the likely attacks. Russia had the means (advanced undersea warfare capabilities) and the opportunity (Russian warships and submarines were spotted near the sabotage sites around the same time).

Under current circumstances, this was the easiest position to take.

However, what was always harder to show was motive.

Some argued that Vladimir Putin was somehow trying to bully or threaten NATO with this attack, perhaps as a show of what future asymmetrical escalation might look like.

But, from the beginning, critics asked why Putin would do this. The gas flowing through those pipelines is a huge point of leverage for him, and it is far better to control the spigot in Russia than ruin the conduits underwater.

It is also a far riskier move.

But, despite Moscow's repeated denials and protestations, news reports kept pointing to Russia as the culprit – usually with only circumstantial evidence.

Now, like a lot of initially flawed reporting on a host of topics, we are seeing admissions in the U.S. press that maybe Russia didn't do it after all.

Sources tell The Washington Post that they don't actually have any direct evidence Russia was involved — even as they say they're not ruling it out either.

According to an extensive investigation by the Post:

“There is no evidence at this point that Russia was behind the sabotage,” said one European official, echoing the assessment of 23 diplomatic and intelligence officials in nine countries interviewed in recent weeks.

Some went so far as to say they didn't think Russia was responsible. Others who still consider Russia a prime suspect said positively attributing the attack — to any country — may be impossible.

The Post added:

No one doubts that the damage was deliberate. An official with the German , which is conducting its own investigation, said explosives appear to have been placed on the outside of the structures.

But even those with inside knowledge of the forensic details don't conclusively tie Russia to the attack, officials said, speaking on the condition of anonymity to share information about the progress of the investigation, some of which is based on classified intelligence.

So, it is clear that the sabotage was deliberate. It is also clear that only highly capable and sophisticated state actors could have done it.

That rules out Ukraine, which is far too busy right now and doesn't have the ability.

And while Germany has the capability, it is highly unlikely to have destroyed its own access to this gas. is likely in the same boat as Germany.

The Scandinavian countries could have the means, and ample reason to cut off the Russian gas to favor their own energy supplies, but it is very unlikely any of them would risk taking such actions in the midst of a major shooting war, and with Sweden and Finland rushing to join NATO.

The three former Soviet colonies in Baltics (Latvia, Lithuania and Estonia) have direct access and would love to see Europe less dependent on Russian energy, as they believe they could be sacrificed next to preserve the Russian gas flow, but lack the advanced capabilities.

This leaves Poland, which definitely has access, similar motive and maybe some means. 

The Baltic Pipe project started pumping gas to Poland, four days after sabotage attacks damaged the Nord Stream network and terminated Russia's biggest supply route to Europe.

This 560-mile (900km) pipeline pumps gas from Norway to Denmark and via the Baltic Sea to Poland. It also enables gas to flow to Denmark from Poland.

But Poland probably could never do it alone, nor do it without the cover of a major power.

So, we have the , which has means, motive and opportunity.

But, due to the high escalation risk involved, both militarily and public relations, as well as 's aversion to damaging the environment (this attack reportedly created the worst single “climate change” incident in recent history because of the large release of methane gas), direct U.S. involvement seems less likely.

More likely, the U.S. was aware, but turned a blind eye.

That only leaves one major NATO player with means, motive and opportunity to coordinate such a dramatic undertaking – Great Britain.

The U.K. could have been the major power cutout used to help Poland sabotage the pipelines and then blame Russia.

While Russia may still turn out to be the culprit for perverse reasons we can't see, for now, we may have to settle for not knowing for certain, or maybe it was Colonel Mustard in the Baltic Sea library with the lead pipe explosives all along. ALD

The opinions expressed in this article are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the positions of American Liberty News.

READ NEXT: Left Loses ‘That Loving Feeling' – Goes Ballistic Over Patriotic ‘Top Gun: Maverick' >>

Paul Crespo
Paul Crespohttps://paulcrespo.com/
Paul Crespo is the Managing Editor of American Liberty Defense News. As a Marine Corps officer, he led Marines, served aboard ships in the Pacific and jumped from helicopters and airplanes. He was also a military attaché with the Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA) at U.S. embassies worldwide. He later ran for office, taught political science, wrote for a major newspaper and had his own radio show. A graduate of Georgetown, London and Cambridge universities, he brings decades of experience and insight to the issues that most threaten our American liberty – at home and from abroad.

6 COMMENTS

  1. Who could blame Poland trying to strike some sort of blow against Russia? Poland should still harbor massive resentment against Russia… and Germany… for the agreement between those 2 barbarian states that divided Poland and started World War II. Russia has proven that they are just as barbaric as ever, and Germany as stupidly opportunistic, I mean really, shut down your nuclear power in favor of dependence on Russian gas? After banning fracking? I realize their ‘leadership’ is from Soviet-puppet East Germany, but they’re ridiculously stupid for their negligence in common sense concerning how they govern their citizens. And Russia, with the most real estate on the planet, attacking/invading a neighbor country is the greediest thing of the century. Don’t they have diplomats?

  2. If the main stream media in America says that they don’t think Russia did it the more positive I am that they did.

  3. The argument the Russians didn’t blow up their own gas pipeline because they had no motive is exactly wrong. They were the only players with a motive. In the weeks leading up to the explosion the Russians were already cutting off their gas supplies to Germany through the pipeline. They kept claiming they weren’t boycotting the supply but it was due to “technical” reasons beyond their control. But they made it clear if the Europeans would play ball and cut off support to the Ukrainians then the problems would suddenly disappear.

    As the days and weeks went by these “my dog ate my homework” excuses were wearing thin and the actual blackmail was becoming obvious to all. So they then enforced their boycott by blowing up their own line and claimed it was someone else. This is a standard practice with the Russians where they blow up their own stuff and blame it on their enemies and then use it as an excuse to attack their enemies. The famous false flag maneuver. Everyone remembers how Hitler had a special Nazi commando team attack a German radio station on his own border and blamed it on the Poles. He used this dirty trick to use as justification to start World War 2’s attack on Poland.

    The clincher is after the unknown pipeline attack Russia offered to immediately fix the pipeline and restore gas supplies to Europe IF only the Germans would stop helping the Ukrainians. How convenient. So now he can continue his gas cutoff but blame it on someone else. The best of both worlds. The genius of Russian manipulations.

  4. U.S. exports of LNG. Biden is about the money, and the environment is just a way of obtaining riches for his family and cohorts.

  5. The ONLY “evidence” presented that Russia did not blow up the pipeline is lack of evidence that they did. That doesn’t even APPROACH the necessary threshold to claim they probably didn’t.
    Note: I am not claiming they did. I am pointing out that the headline is a LIE.

Comments are closed.

Latest News