Du ser en henvisning til HI Sutton i artikkelen. Han er særdeles etterrettelig og seriøs og har interessante observasjoner, og ikke minst bøker om ubåter som oppdateres hele tiden med hans flotte illustrasjoner. De er brukt her på bloggen mange ganger. Det har vært vektlagt tråleren som passerte en amerikansk atomubåt som lå til kai nord for Tromsø. Jeg tror denne passeringen var uten betydning fordi det neppe kom noen lyd fra fartøyet. Lydsignatur under fart er det interessante i denne saken. Amerikanske ubåter hadde i "min tid" veldig lite lyd i motsetning til noen russiske skramlekasser. Men, de forbedret seg vesentlig og er per i dag veldig stillegående. (Red.)
Ukraine war: The Russian ships accused of North Sea sabotage
Related Topics
Sjekk artikkelen her og få med deg videoen i innledningen; den er viktig: https://tinyurl.com/yu8unf4z
Watch: Danish reporters film armed
men on guard as they approach the Admiral Vladimirsky
By
Gordon Corera
Security
correspondent, BBC News
Russia
has a programme to sabotage wind farms and communication cables in the North
Sea, according to new allegations.
The details come from a joint
investigation by public broadcasters in Denmark, Norway, Sweden and Finland.
It says Russia has a fleet of
vessels disguised as fishing trawlers and research vessels in the North Sea.
They carry underwater surveillance
equipment and are mapping key sites for possible sabotage.
The BBC understands that UK
officials are aware of Russian vessels moving around UK waters as part of the
programme.
The first of a series of reports is due
to be broadcast on Wednesday by DR in Denmark, NRK in
Norway, SVT in Sweden and Yle in Finland.
IMAGE SOURCE,MORTEN KRÜGER, DR
The report focuses on a Russian vessel called the Admiral Vladimirsky
A Danish counter-intelligence
officer says the sabotage plans are being prepared in case of a full conflict
with the West while the head of Norwegian intelligence told the broadcasters
the programme was considered highly important for Russia and controlled
directly from Moscow.
The broadcasters say they have
analysed intercepted Russian communications which indicate so-called ghost
ships sailing in Nordic waters which have turned off the transmitters so as not
to reveal their locations.
Typical Russian reasearcher with automatic gun
The report focuses on a Russian
vessel called the Admiral Vladimirsky. Officially, this is an Expeditionary
Oceanographic Ship, or underwater research vessel. But the report alleges that
it is in fact a Russian spy ship.
The documentary uses an anonymous
former UK Royal Navy expert to track the movements of the vessel in the
vicinity of seven wind farms off the coast of the UK and the Netherlands on one
mission.
When a reporter approached the ship
on a small boat, he was confronted by a masked individual carrying what
appeared to be a military assault rifle.
The same ship was reportedly sighted
off the Scottish coast last year. It was spotted entering the
Moray Firth on 10 November and seen about 30 nautical miles
east of Lossiemouth, home to the RAF's Maritime Patrol Aircraft fleet before
heading slowly west.
The BBC understands that UK
officials are aware of Russian intent to conduct what is known as undersea
mapping, including using boats that move around in UK waters.
If there are specific threats
against the UK these would be investigated, but sources declined to say what
activity might have been looked at so far.
Allow
Twitter content?
This
article contains content provided by Twitter. We ask for your permission before
anything is loaded, as they may be using cookies and other technologies. You
may want to read Twitter’s cookie
policy, external and privacy policy, external before
accepting. To view this content choose ‘accept and continue’.
Accept and continue
The
BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.
End of twitter post by H I Sutton
In February, Dutch intelligence issued
an unusual official warning about activity that could
indicate preparation for disruption or sabotage of marine infrastructure. The
head of the country's military intelligence said a Russian ship had been
detected near a wind farm in the North Sea and was mapping out sites.
"We saw in recent months
Russian actors tried to uncover how the energy system works in the North Sea.
It is the first time we have seen this," General Jan Swillens said.
Reconnaissance of sensitive sites is
not unusual and Western countries will likely be carrying out similar activity
against Russia. The intention is likely to have a series of options available
should a conflict escalate.
One option might be to damage communications
or take down countries' power systems to cause chaos.
So far the evidence of actual
sabotage rather than just intelligence gathering for the possibility is more
limited.
On Wednesday, Russian officials
dismissed the claims in the documentary as baseless, AFP news agency reported.
The filmmakers approached Russian
ambassadors in four Nordic countries for comment - but only Norway's
responded.
Teimuraz Ramishvili told them that
Norwegian authorities had made a habit of accusing Russia of espionage, hacker
attacks and other undercover operations without providing any evidence.
He insisted that Russian vessels
were following Norwegian rules and had the right to sail in Norwegian waters.
The report raises the possibility
that such vessels were linked to an incident south of Svalbard last year when
an underwater data cable was cut.
The cable served the world largest
commercial ground station for satellite communications. Norwegian police have said
they believe "human activity" was behind the sabotage but
have not officially accused anyone.
On 13 April this year, Norway
expelled 15 Russian officials, accusing them of spying. It was the latest in a
wave of expulsions across Europe since the February 2022 invasion of Ukraine.
In October last year police declared
a major incident in the Shetland Islands after a cable was cut.
The incident severely hampered
communications with the mainland and was blamed at the time as having been
probably caused by "fishing vessels". Cables are regularly cut by
accident and so far the BBC understands this is not thought to have been the
result of hostile activity.
There had been one clear and
significant act of sabotage and that was the destruction last September of
parts of the Nord Stream pipeline designed to carry gas from Russia to Europe.
·
A journey to the site of
the Nord Stream explosions
At the time, many accused Russia of
being responsible but since then other reports have suggested other
possibilities, including pro-Ukrainian actors, and investigations are ongoing.
Russian military intelligence, the
GRU, has also been linked to both sabotage and poisonings. A GRU team linked to
the poisoning of Sergei Skripal in Salisbury in 2018 with Novichok nerve agent
was also linked to the blowing up of an arms
depot in a Czech forest.
Ingen kommentarer:
Legg inn en kommentar
Merk: Bare medlemmer av denne bloggen kan legge inn en kommentar.