九一星空无限

ZB ZB
Opinion
Live now
Start time
Playing for
End time
Listen live
Up next
ZB

Russian sabotage not cause of undersea cable damage, officials say

Author
Washington Post,
Publish Date
Mon, 20 Jan 2025, 1:22pm
Oil tanker Eagle S is seen anchored near the Kilpilahti port in Porvoo on the Gulf of Finland on January 13, 2025. Photo / AFP
Oil tanker Eagle S is seen anchored near the Kilpilahti port in Porvoo on the Gulf of Finland on January 13, 2025. Photo / AFP

Russian sabotage not cause of undersea cable damage, officials say

Author
Washington Post,
Publish Date
Mon, 20 Jan 2025, 1:22pm
  •  were likely caused by maritime accidents, not sabotage, say and officials.
  • Investigations found no evidence of intentional acts perpetrated by ships suspected of dragging anchors across seabed systems.
  • Despite initial suspicions, evidence points to accidents by inexperienced crews on poorly maintained vessels.

Ruptures of undersea cables that have rattled European security officials in recent months were likely the result of maritime accidents rather than Russian sabotage, according to several US and European intelligence officials.

The determination reflects an emerging consensus among US and European security services, according to senior officials from three countries involved in ongoing investigations of a string of incidents in which critical seabed energy and communications lines have been severed.

The cases raised suspicions Russia was targeting undersea infrastructure as part of a broader campaign of hybrid attacks across Europe and prompted stepped-up security measures, including an announcement last week that Nato would launch new patrol and surveillance operations in the Baltic Sea.

But so far, officials said, investigations involving the United States and a half-dozen European security services have turned up no indication commercial ships suspected of dragging anchors across seabed systems did so intentionally or at the direction of Moscow.

Instead, US and European officials said the evidence gathered to date 鈥 including intercepted communications and other classified intelligence 鈥 points to accidents caused by inexperienced crews serving aboard poorly maintained vessels.

US officials cited 鈥渃lear explanations鈥 that have come to light in each case indicating a likelihood the damage was accidental, and a lack of evidence suggesting Russian culpability. Officials with two European intelligence services said they concurred with US assessments.

Oil tanker Eagle S is seen anchored near the Kilpilahti port in Porvoo on the Gulf of Finland on January 13, 2025. Photo / AFP
Oil tanker Eagle S is seen anchored near the Kilpilahti port in Porvoo on the Gulf of Finland on January 13, 2025. Photo / AFP

Despite initial suspicions Russia was involved, one European official said there is 鈥渃ounter-evidence鈥 suggesting otherwise. The US and European officials declined to elaborate and spoke on the condition of anonymity, citing the sensitivity of ongoing investigations.

The probes centre on three incidents over the past 18 months in which ships travelling to or from Russian ports were suspected of severing key links in a vast underwater network of conduits that carry gas, electricity and internet traffic to millions of people across northern Europe.

In the most recent case, Finland seized an oil tanker suspected of dragging its anchor across an undersea power line connecting Finland and Estonia. Finnish authorities said the vessel, Eagle S, is part of a 鈥渟hadow fleet鈥 of tanker ships helping Moscow sell oil on global markets in violation of international sanctions.

Previous cases involved a Hong Kong-registered container ship, the NewnewPolar Bear, that ruptured a natural gas pipeline in the Gulf of Finland in October 2023, and a Chinese ship, the Yi Peng 3, that cut two data cables in Swedish waters in November last year.

Russia鈥檚 denials of responsibility have been greeted with deep scepticism by European officials confronting a broader wave of hybrid attacks attributed to Moscow.

US and European security officials last year disrupted an alleged Russian plot to smuggle incendiary devices on cargo planes in an apparent trial run for later attacks targeting the US and Canada. US intelligence officials also warned German authorities Russia was planning to assassinate the chief executive of one of Europe鈥檚 largest weapons producers, a company that had announced plans to build an ammunition manufacturing facility in Ukraine.

The presumed anchor of oil tanker Eagle S displayed in Finland for forensic analysis after it was hoisted from the Gulf of Finland. Photo / Handout / Various sources / AFP
The presumed anchor of oil tanker Eagle S displayed in Finland for forensic analysis after it was hoisted from the Gulf of Finland. Photo / Handout / Various sources / AFP

At the same time, European security officials have accused Russia of using proxies to carry out hundreds of arson attacks, rail disruptions and smaller sabotage operations aimed at sowing divisions in Europe and sapping support for Ukraine.

Against that backdrop, the damage to seabed systems added to a European sense of being under siege. German defence minister Boris Pistorius called the anchor-dragging incident in November 鈥渟abotage鈥 and said 鈥渘obody believes that these cables were accidentally severed鈥. Weeks later, Finnish President Alexander Stubb said a Christmas Day incident was 鈥渄efinitely鈥 linked to Russia.

Experts have also said the seabed cases fit a pattern of Russian aggression.

The severing of cables 鈥渕ay very well be random accidents鈥, said Eric Ciaramella, a senior fellow at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace who previously served as the US鈥 deputy national intelligence officer for Russia. 鈥淏ut it鈥檚 hard to rule out a concerted Russian campaign when [Moscow鈥檚] intelligence services are trying to assassinate German business executives, starting fires at factories across Europe, and putting bombs on cargo planes.鈥

The emerging view among Western spy agencies that accidents 鈥 and not Russia 鈥 are likely to blame for the undersea damage was dismissed by some critics of Russia.

Pekka Toveri, who represents Finland in the European parliament and previously served as the country鈥檚 top military intelligence official, said the seabed cases are part of 鈥渁 typical hybrid operation鈥 from Moscow.

鈥淭he most important thing in any hybrid operation is deniability,鈥 Toveri said. Russia鈥檚 security services may have succeeded in not leaving 鈥渁ny proof that would hold up in court鈥, he said, but to conclude they were accidents 鈥渋s total BS鈥.

Toveri and others cited anomalies in the behaviour of the vessels involved, as well as evidence that Russia has for decades devoted extensive resources 鈥 including a dedicated military unit known as the General Staff Main Directorate for Deep Sea Research 鈥 to mapping Western seabed infrastructure and identifying its vulnerabilities.

At least two of the ships suspected of causing damage appear to have dragged their anchors 100 miles or more across the seafloor. A ship that dropped an anchor by accident, Toveri said, would immediately be dragged so noticeably off course that crews would scramble to bring the vessel to a stop and assess the damage.

Mike Plunkett, naval expert at Janes, said that 鈥渁side from a very loud splash, there will also be a lot of noise from the anchor chain paying out through the hawse hole鈥. He described the chances of three anchor-dropping incidents in the Baltic region since 2023 as 鈥渧anishingly small鈥, although not zero. But he said it was extremely difficult to prove intentional sabotage.

The timing of the incidents has heightened suspicion. The most recent cases, in November and December, damaged undersea energy lines at a time when Baltic nations are accelerating efforts to disconnect their power grids from Russia 鈥 a move that gained urgency after Russia鈥檚 2022 invasion of Ukraine.

There are also reasons to question why Russia would risk targeting undersea systems in waterways now lined by Nato-member countries. Doing so could endanger oil smuggling operations Russia has relied on to finance the war in Ukraine, and possibly provoke more aggressive efforts by Western governments to choke off Russia鈥檚 route to the North Atlantic.

At a Baltic summit in Helsinki on January 14, Nato secretary-general Mark Rutte announced plans for new patrols by frigates, aircraft, submarine satellites and a 鈥渟mall fleet of naval drones鈥 designed to detect undersea sabotage.

Despite advances in undersea surveillance capabilities, attributing attacks has proved difficult. The bombing of the Nord Stream gas pipelines between Russia and Germany in September 2022 was initially widely blamed on Russia but is now believed to have been carried out by a senior Ukrainian military officer with deep ties to the country鈥檚 intelligence services.

Finland took a more aggressive approach to the December 25 case of cable damage, forcing the Eagle S into Finnish waters before police and coastguard authorities boarded the vessel by helicopter. Members of the crew suspected of being on duty during the anchor-dragging damage are barred from leaving Finland while the investigation moves forward.

A Nordic official briefed on the investigation said conditions on the tanker were abysmal. 鈥淲e鈥檝e always gone out with the assumption that shadow fleet vessels are in bad shape,鈥 the official said. 鈥淏ut this was even worse than we thought.鈥

Herman Ljungberg, a lawyer who represents the owner of the Eagle S tanker, acknowledged in a telephone interview the vessel was carrying Russian oil but denied that it was in violation of international law or the crew had intentionally caused any damage.

European security officials said Finland鈥檚 main intelligence service is in agreement with Western counterparts that the December 25 incident appears to have been an accident, though they cautioned it may be impossible to rule out a Russian role.

A spokeswoman for Finland鈥檚 National Bureau of Investigation, which is leading the investigation of the Eagle S, said the bureau鈥檚 probe is 鈥渟till open, and it is too early to make final conclusions of the causes or combinations behind the damages鈥.

Take your Radio, Podcasts and Music with you