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US, UK might be behind Nord Streams incident, says Ex-advisor to Pentagon chief

epa10218682 A Coast Guard ship patrols around the Sleipner A platform during Norway's Prime Minister's visit in Stavanger, Norway, 01 October 2022. Norway's Prime Minister Jonas Gahr Store said on 30 September allies will help his country patrolling oil and gas platforms at sea following leaks in Nord Stream pipelines earlier this week in the Baltic Sea. EPA-EFE/OLE BERG-RUSTEN NORWAY OUT

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New Delhi: The US and the UK may be behind the explosions at Nord Stream 1 and Nord Stream 2 pipelines, former advisor to US Defense Secretary in the administration of ex-president of the United States Donald Trump, Douglas Macgregor, said in a conversation with Andrew Napolitano, the presenter of the Judging Freedom podcast.

“You have to look at who are the state actors that have the capability to do this. And that means the UK’s Royal Navy and the United States’ Navy, I think that’s pretty clear,” Macgregor said. He also noted the publication by Poland’s former foreign minister (2007-2014), European parliament member Radoslaw Sikorski, who thanked the United States for damaging the Nord Stream 1 and Nord Stream 2 gas pipelines on his Twitter page.

Ex-advisor to the Pentagon chief called the notion that Moscow was behind the incident at the pipelines absurd. “The Russians did not do this,” he said, adding that Germany’s involvement in the incident was “extremely unlikely” either.

Four Nord Stream gas pipeline leaks have been uncovered, with the most recent one being pinpointed by Sweden’s coast guard. Earlier, the Nord Stream AG company reported that three threads of the Nord Stream 1 and 2 offshore gas pipelines had suffered unprecedented damage on Monday. Kremlin Spokesman Dmitry Peskov stated that Moscow was “deeply concerned about the news” and did not rule out that the pipelines’ operation could have been disrupted by an act of sabotage.

Swedish seismologists later reported that two explosions had been recorded along the Nord Stream pipelines on Monday. The Danish Energy Agency reported that a large amount of gas had spilled into the sea. Aircraft and ships are barred from approaching the site any closer than five nautical miles.

(Vinayak)