From the DW:
“NATO unveils Baltic Sentry
pipeline, cable security mission”
NATO leaders gathering in the
Finnish capital, Helsinki, on Tuesday said European countries must be prepared
to face further incidents in the Baltic Sea and announced a new mission
designed to deter them. NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte said after the
meeting that a new mission dubbed Baltic Sentry would include frigates,
maritime patrol aircraft, and a fleet of naval drones to provide "enhanced
surveillance and deterrence." "Across the alliance, we have seen
elements of a campaign to destabilize our societies through cyberattacks,
assassination attempts and sabotage, including possible sabotage of undersea
cables in the Baltic Sea," Rutte told reporters. NATO seeks to combat
hybrid warfare in Baltic region
Tuesday's meeting followed the
recent damage or disruption to a string of undersea power cables,
telcommunications links, and gas pipelines in the wake of Russia's 2022
invasion of Ukraine. Latvian President Edgars Rinkevics acknowledged that with
more than 2,000 ships crossing the busy waterway every day, full coverage would
be hard to achieve. "Let's face it,
we can't ensure 100% protection but if we are sending a bold signal then I
think that such incidents are going to decrease or even stop," he told
reporters ahead of Tuesday's meeting. As
the leaders convened, Polish public TV reported a fresh incident of a Russian
"shadow fleet" ship circling around the Baltic Pipe that delivers gas
from Norway to Poland. Polish state
broadcaster TVP World had cited an unnamed Polish Foreign Ministry source. However,
the Foreign Ministry and military later said the event reported on Tuesday
"did not happen." "Shadow
fleet" refers to vessels used by Russia to move oil, arms and grains
around in violation of international sanctions imposed on it over the Ukraine
war. The vessels are not regulated or insured by conventional Western
providers.
The leaders of Denmark, Estonia,
Finland, Germany, Latvia, Lithuania, Poland and Sweden and European
Commissioner for Technological Sovereignty and Security Henna Virkkunen and
NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte attended Tuesday's talks. Finnish police last month seized a tanker
carrying Russian oil, saying they suspected it had damaged the Estlink 2 power
line linking Finland and Estonia, as well as four telecommunications cables, by
dragging its anchor along the seabed. German Chancellor Olaf Scholz said on
Tuesday that this and other recent incidents in the Baltic Sea, including off
Germany's northern coast, must be assumed to be part of a hybrid strategy. "It is important that we come together
here now and talk about how we can work together to ensure greater security in
the Baltic Sea region," Scholz said.
^ This is needed because Countries
like Russia are trying to disrupt things in Europe. ^
https://www.dw.com/en/nato-unveils-baltic-sentry-pipeline-cable-security-mission/a-71292043
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