German defence minister says damage to Baltic data cables appears to be sabotage

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German Defence Minister Says Damage To Baltic Data Cables Appears To Be Sabotage
German defence minister Boris Pistorius
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By Associated Press Reporter

Germany’s defence minister said officials had to assume damage to two data cables under the Baltic Sea, one of which ends in Germany, was caused by sabotage — although he said they had no proof at present.

Damage was detected on Monday to the C-Lion1 cable that runs nearly 750 miles (1,200km) from the Finnish capital, Helsinki, to the
German port city of Rostock. Another cable between Lithuania and Sweden was also damaged.

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Speaking in Brussels, German defence minister Boris Pistorius said that Russia posed not just a military but also a hybrid threat, and that Europe needed to take a broad approach to defence. He said the damage to the two cables was “a very clear sign that something is afoot”.


 

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“No-one believes these cables were severed by mistake, and I also don’t want to believe versions that it was anchors that by chance caused damage to these cables,” he said at a regular meeting of European Union defence ministers.

“So we have to state — without knowing in concrete terms who it came from — that this is a hybrid action. And we also have to assume — without already knowing it, obviously — that this is sabotage.”

The foreign ministries of Finland and Germany had already said on Monday evening that the damage raised suspicion of sabotage.

They said in a joint statement that the damage came at a time when “our European security is not only under threat from Russia’s war of aggression against Ukraine, but also from hybrid warfare by malicious actors”.

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The statement said the countries were investigating the incident, and that it was crucial that such “critical infrastructure” be safeguarded.

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