NATO vigilance intensifies in Baltic amid cable sabotage crisis
"NATO is being very active at the moment on Baltic Sea," writes a Finnish blogger, presenting a map showing the locations of German, Danish, and Swedish units. Their activities are related to the severing of an underwater cable, with suspicion falling on the Chinese freighter "Yi Peng 3," currently anchored in the Kattegat Strait.
24 November 2024 14:26
Last Sunday and Monday, two underwater telecommunications cables were damaged. One connected Lithuania with Sweden, and the other Finland with Germany. Both failures occurred within the Swedish economic zone.
On Wednesday, Swedish police stated that the crew of the Chinese ship "Yi Peng 3," which departed from a Russian oil port, is the main suspect. On the same day, the Danish armed forces declared their presence near the ship in the waters of the Kattegat Strait.
Following this incident, increased NATO activity in the Baltic Sea has been observed.
"NATO is being very active at the moment on Baltic Sea. German patrol boat, Danish naval vessels & Swedish Coast Guard ship are guarding the Chinese freighter ship Yi Peng 3 anchored at Kattegat Strait. At the same time Finnish/Swedish ships are investigating the cable breaks," wrote a Finnish blogger on the X platform. They presented a map with the locations of the units.
On Saturday, the same author reported on a Russian missile corvette that stopped in the Kattegat Strait "to monitor the situation of the Chinese cargo ship Yi Peng 3 suspected of cable violations in the Baltic Sea."
Lithuanian Prime Minister: NATO countries must respond appropriately
As stated on Friday by Lithuanian Prime Minister Ingrida Šimonytė, the European Union and NATO countries must respond appropriately to incidents in the Baltic Sea if investigations prove they are hybrid attacks.
The response to these events includes considering the activation of articles of the North Atlantic Treaty. Finnish politicians point to the possibility of applying both Article 4, concerning consultations in situations of threat to a NATO member, and Article 5, concerning collective defence.
Parallel investigations are underway regarding the damage to a pipeline between Estonia and Finland, which occurred in the autumn of last year. In the context of this investigation, suspicions have fallen on the Chinese container ship "NewNew Polar Bear." The results of the current findings have not clarified whether the damage to the pipeline was a result of deliberate action or an accidental incident.