On August 14, German public broadcaster ARD, the daily Sueddeutsche Zeitung and the weekly Die Zeit claimed in a joint report that federal prosecutors obtained an arrest warrant in June against a Ukrainian diving instructor believed to have resided until recently in Poland. The reports identified the alleged saboteur as Volodymyr Z.
The Polish prosecutor’s office confirmed it had received a
German arrest warrant for a Ukrainian man. It said it received the warrant in
June, but the suspect left for Ukraine a month before. The prosecutor’s office
offered a lame
excuse that the authorities failed to prevent him from leaving because the
relevant information had not percolated down to the country’s border guard.
Clearly, there was a collusion between German and American
establishment media, because the very next day, on August 15, The Wall Street
Journal published a bizarre
scoop, claiming the Nord Stream gas pipelines, providing Russian natural
gas to European countries before the war, were blown up by a six-member
Ukrainian sabotage team of skilled deep-sea divers in an operation that was
initially approved by Vladimir Zelensky and then called off, but which went
ahead anyway.
German reports, published only a day before the WSJ scoop, were
evidently meant to create a media hype and lend credence to an otherwise
asinine report, clearly meant to tarnish the reputation of Ukraine’s former top
military commander, who was sacked in February for defying Washington’s diktats
of committing more cannon fodder for Ukraine’s much-touted albeit easily foiled
counteroffensive last year, while simultaneously attempting to exonerate
Ukrainian President Vladimir Zelensky.
The WSJ report claims the subversive operation was allegedly
directed by a serving army general, who reported to Ukraine’s then commander in
chief, Valery Zaluzhny. Zelensky initially approved the plan, but later
backtracked after the CIA found out about it and asked Kyiv to call it off.
Nonetheless, Zaluzhny pressed ahead with the mission, claiming once dispatched,
a sabotage team goes incommunicado and cannot be withdrawn.
Nord Stream pipelines were ruptured by blasts under the
Baltic Sea in September 2022. Early the following year, Pulitzer Prize-winning
journalist Seymour Hersh conclusively
proved with irrefutable facts and incontrovertible evidence that explosives
were planted on the Nord Stream pipelines by US Navy divers under the cover of
a NATO exercise, and detonated on orders from Washington in order to wean
Germany off Russian energy amidst the Ukraine War.
Seymour Hersh, however, elided over the obvious fact that the
sabotage operation was tacitly approved by the German government. For a heavily
industrialized nation like Germany, energy security is the lifeline of economy
dependent on industrial production. Hence, how is it possible that a six-member
team of amateur divers, as claimed by WSJ, or professional US Navy divers, as
stated by Hersh, blew up one of the world’s largest natural gas pipeline
network without the knowledge of German maritime security forces?
Following Russia’s intervention in Ukraine in February 2022,
German political establishment, under tremendous pressure from Washington, was
itself looking for a pretext to stop importing natural gas from Russia. But
violating the international contract was a controversial issue because East
Germany, which until the fall of the Berlin Wall in 1989 was in the Soviet
sphere of influence, has a significant political constituency that shares
historical and cultural ties with Russia, and favored cordial relations and
energy reliance on Russia despite the war.
The US security establishment, however, persuaded the Scholz
government behind the scenes that its notorious saboteurs would do the dirty
work and Germany would simply have to acquiesce or maybe point fingers at
banana republics like Poland and Ukraine for orchestrating the Nord Stream
sabotage.
Despite being an industrial powerhouse of Europe, Germany
might have been a sovereign state at liberty to pursue independent foreign
policy during the reign of the Third Reich, but since the defeat of the Nazis
in the Second World War, it has become a virtual colony of the imperial United
States, where 50,000 US troops are currently
deployed in sprawling Ramstein Air Base and several other military bases.
After the United States, Germany is one of the largest
contributors of military assistance to Ukraine, and has provided billions of
dollars economic aid during the course of two years. During Ukraine’s Kursk
incursion inside Russia, besides British Challenger battle tanks, German Marder
infantry vehicles, donated by Berlin to Kyiv, took the lead in mounting the
assault.
Ukrainian conscripts and pilots are being trained by German
and American military personnel at military bases in Germany. It’s ironic that
Germany still claims to be the torchbearer of pacifism and idealism while
simultaneously pandering to Washington’s diktats and adding fuel to the fire in
the Ukraine War.
Immediately following Russia’s intervention in Ukraine,
German Chancellor Olaf Scholz announced
plans in April 2022 to spend an additional €2 billion ($2.16 billion) on
military needs, most of which was aimed at providing weapons to Ukraine. Scholz
also pledged €100 billion ($112.7 billion) of the 2022 budget for the German
armed forces and committed to reaching the target of 2% of GDP spending on
defense that was requested by NATO.
In addition, German government announced financial support allowing
Kyiv to directly
buy tanks from German defense companies like Rheinmetall. Germany
specifically provided substantial number of Marder light tanks, armored
vehicles equipped with anti-tank missiles, to Ukraine that are now being
deployed by Ukraine’s forces in the Kursk battlefield inside Russia. Berlin
similarly provided heavy-combat Leopard tanks to Ukraine, though in smaller
number.
Despite desperate German attempts to assuage American
patrons, a diplomatic furor erupted in May 2021 after it
was revealed the U.S. National Security Agency (NSA) used a partnership
with Denmark's foreign intelligence unit to spy on senior European officials,
including then-German Chancellor Angela Merkel. European diplomats complained
that it was “grotesque and unacceptable” that friendly intelligence services were
keeping tabs on allies, even though Washington’s policy toward servile client
states has always been “trust but verify.”
The Wall Street Journal, the official mouthpiece of
establishment Republicans, owned by media mogul Rupert Murdoch, that has taken
the lead in publishing insider scoops during the four-year tenure of the Biden
admin while the Democratic shills, the New York Times and Washington Post, took
a backseat out of deference for self-styled “progressives” in the White House,
has a history of publishing fabricated reports.
In the aftermath of Russia’s intervention in Ukraine, the
Wall Street Journal published a misleading
report in April 2022 that German chancellor Olaf Scholz had offered
Volodymyr Zelensky a chance for peace days before the launch of the Russian
military offensive, but the Ukrainian president turned it down.
Then newly elected German chancellor told Zelensky in Munich
on February 19, days before the Russian invasion, “that Ukraine should renounce
its NATO aspirations and declare neutrality as part of a wider European
security deal between the West and Russia,” the Journal revealed. The newspaper
also claimed that “the pact would be signed by Mr. Putin and Mr. Biden, who
would jointly guarantee Ukraine’s security.”
However, Zelensky rejected the offer to make the concession
and avoid confrontation, saying that “Russian President Vladimir Putin couldn’t
be trusted to uphold such an agreement and that most Ukrainians wanted to join
NATO.”
While making the preposterous allegation that the intransigent
Ukrainian leadership vetoed NATO’s “flexible and conciliatory approach” to
peacefully settle the dispute in order to exonerate the transatlantic military
alliance for its confrontational approach toward Russia since the inception in
1949, the Journal report conveniently overlooked the crucial fact that in
November 2021, the US and Ukraine had already signed a Charter
on Strategic Partnership.
The agreement unequivocally confirmed “Ukraine’s aspirations
for joining NATO” and “rejected the Crimean decision to re-unify with Russia”
following the 2014 Maidan coup. Then in December 2021, Russia, in the
last-ditch effort to peacefully resolve the dispute, proposed a
peace treaty with the US and NATO.
The central Russian proposal was a written agreement assuring that Ukraine would not join the NATO military alliance and, in return, Russia would drawdown its troop buildup along Ukraine’s borders. After the proposed treaty was contemptuously rebuffed by Washington, it appeared the die was cast for Russia’s inevitable invasion of Ukraine in February 2022.
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