The Guardian Australia

Ukrainian team blew up Nord Stream pipeline, claims report

- Shaun Walker Central and eastern Europe correspond­ent

The Nord Stream gas pipeline was blown up by a small Ukrainian sabotage team in an operation that was initially approved by Volodymyr Zelenskiy and then called off, but which went ahead anyway, according to claims in a report in the Wall Street Journal.

A spokespers­on for the Ukrainian president has denied the claims.

The Nord Stream 1 and 2 pipelines carried natural gas from Russia to Germany under the Baltic Sea. They were damaged by explosions in September 2022, seven months after Moscow’s fullscale invasion of Ukraine, putting them out of action and worsening an energy crisis in Europe.

Initially, many assumed Russia was to blame. Later, others suggested the CIA could have been involved. Last year, the New York Times reported that US officials had seen intelligen­ce suggesting a “pro-Ukrainian group” was behind the explosion, while last month, Hungary’s prime minister, Viktor Orbán, called the explosion “an act of terrorism carried out at the obvious direction of the Americans”.

According to the WSJ, the sabotage operation involved a small sailing boat and a team of six people, a combinatio­n of Ukrainian soldiers and civilians with relevant expertise. The operation used private funding but was directed by a serving army general, who reported to Ukraine’s then commander in chief, Valerii Zaluzhnyi. Zelenskiy approved the plan, but later backtracke­d after the CIA found out about it and asked Kyiv to call it off, according to the WSJ’s sources.

Nonetheles­s, Zaluzhnyi pressed ahead with the mission, the report claims.

Zaluzhnyi, now Ukraine’s ambassador to the UK, told the WSJ he knew nothing about the operation and called the allegation­s a “mere provocatio­n”.

Ukraine has always denied involvemen­t in the explosion and on Thursday a spokespers­on for Zelenskiy again accused Russia of carrying out the sabotage. “Such an act can only be carried out with extensive technical and financial resources … and who possessed all this at the time of the bombing? Only Russia,” Mykhailo Podolyak told Reuters.

Other Ukrainian agencies also denied government­al involvemen­t. A senior official from the SBU, Ukraine’s security service, told the WSJ that Zelenskiy “did not approve the implementa­tion of any such actions on the territory of third countries and did not issue relevant orders”.

However, German police and prosecutor­s are reportedly pressing on with an investigat­ion that is now homing in on senior Ukrainian military officials and could prove embarrassi­ng for Berlin, given it involves an ally launching an act of sabotage against key infrastruc­ture.

On Wednesday it emerged that German authoritie­s had issued a European arrest warrant for a man identified as “Volodymyr Z”, a diving instructor who lived in Poland, who is alleged to have dived down to the seabed to place the devices on the pipeline.

Polish prosecutor­s confirmed they had received a European arrest warrant for a man suspected of involvemen­t in the Nord Stream attack. “Ultimately, Volodymyr Z was not detained, as he left the territory of Poland at the beginning of July this year, crossing the Polish-Ukrainian border,” prosecutor­s said in a statement.

 ?? Photograph: AP ?? ▲ The Nord Stream 1 and 2 pipelines carried natural gas from Russia to Germany under the Baltic Sea but were damaged by explosions in September 2022.
Photograph: AP ▲ The Nord Stream 1 and 2 pipelines carried natural gas from Russia to Germany under the Baltic Sea but were damaged by explosions in September 2022.

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