Poland suspected behind sabotage of Nord Stream gas pipelines


The twists and turns series concerning the investigation into the sabotage of Nord Stream 1 and Nord Stream 2 gas pipelines continues. If, during several months, no new and reliable information leaked out, some leads have appeared in the American and German media since January.
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Russian Vyborg Shipyard laid the Purga ice class coastguard ship of project 23550 925 001 Map of the Nord Stream 1 and Nord Stream 2 gas pipelines. (Picture source: Federal Ministry for Economic Affairs and Climate Action)


The latest information released in The Washington Post newspaper reports Polish involvement. Indeed, Poland has been against the Nord Stream 1 and Nord Stream 2 gas pipelines from the beginning, seeing Germany's dependence on Russia with suspicion.

Indeed, investigators are skeptical about the role of the 50-foot sailboat, Andromeda. Although explosives were found on board, investigators believe that this is a false lead.

They had initially focused on this sailboat and therefore on the group of people who had rented it, hence the hypothesis of a group that the newspapers had referred to as pro-Ukrainian.

Since then, a group of OSINT researchers including Oliver Alexander, have come up with a new hypothesis. They have been monitoring the movements of Russian ships in this area and therefore suspect Russia to be behind the sabotage of the two gas pipelines.

Faced with the hypothesis of their responsibility, the Polish authorities, for their part, pointed to Russia, which would be behind the rental of the sailboat in order to confuse the trail.

At present, no serious information has come to light that the United States is behind these pipelines, contrary to what the Russian and Chinese authorities say.

In any case, after the Ukrainian, Polish, or Russian hypothesis, we have more questions than answers and doubts than certainties.