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Date: 2025-08-24 Page is: DBtxt003.php txt00027910
FINLAND - V- RUSSIA
THE BALTIC SEA

NYT: Finland Says Vessel Suspected of Cutting Cable
May Be Part of Russia’s ‘Shadow Fleet’


Ilkka Koskimäki, right, Finland’s national police commissioner, and other Finnish officials
discussed the cutting of undersea cables on Thursday at a news conference in Helsinki.
Credit...Jussi Nukari/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

Original article: https://www.nytimes.com/2024/12/26/world/europe/finland-estonia-cables-russia.html
Peter Burgess COMMENTARY

It is very difficult for most readers of the news ... that is, media consumers ... to know what is true and what is nothing more than a fiction of a writer's imagination, dangerous propaganda or worse.

The media gatekeepers that used to exist ... like Walter Kronkite and Dan Rather of CBS in the USA ... are long gone.

The situation is not improved by the idea that success is more about 'clicks' and 'engagement' rather than the very old idea of substance, and accuracy. etc.

Meanwhile the world is changing faster than at any time in history, and the vast majority of the global population have no idea what is going on.

I probably have a more developed world view than most ... I am not a recent university graduate but someone who has been interested in learning about the world for more than 60 years of living after university. In this time I have had the opportunity to work in more than 50 countries around the world. I did not become an 'expert' in all these countries, but all of them have informed my world view to a greater or lesser extent.

With 60+ years of adult life behind me, I find it very thought provoking to think about advanced technology from my 20s and what is now advanced technology more than 60 years later.

But it bothers me that while technology has become immensely more powerful in this time ... the world's quality of life has relatively speaking 'flatlined!. Worse, there are a lot of places where quality of life has significantly declined in large part because of greed and corruption of leaders at the national level!

I wish I could talk about a modern 'Pax Brittanica' but for all practical purposes that is ancient history and cannot be replicated. But peace is important and should have a high priority in modern diplomacy ... but so also should the idea of good quality of life for all.

I do not see any signs that Trump embraces any of the 'values' that to me are essential. I hate the think what will happen to America as a whole if Trump priorities become America's priorities.

Few countries have deep friendly feelings about the USA. They have 'made nice' for decades, but that veneer of friendship will disappear very fast if Trump does not modify his 'modus operandi' very soon ... days and weeks, not months and years1

Peter Burgess
Finland Says Vessel Suspected of Cutting Cable May Be Part of Russia’s ‘Shadow Fleet’

Finland seized an oil tanker after the latest in a series of disruptions to undersea infrastructure.

Written by Johanna Lemola and Lynsey Chutel ... Johanna Lemola reported from Helsinki, Finland, and Lynsey Chutel from London.

Dec. 26, 2024

The Finnish authorities seized an oil tanker on Thursday on the suspicion that it was involved in cutting vital undersea cables and said the ship might have been part of Russia’s “shadow fleet,” aimed at evading Western sanctions.

In a statement, the police in Finland said the authorities had boarded the Eagle S tanker in Finnish waters. The ship, which is registered in the Cook Islands in the South Pacific, had been sailing from St. Petersburg, Russia, to Port Said, Egypt, when it was detained.

The police said they were investigating whether the vessel was involved in the latest suspected act of sabotage on undersea infrastructure: the cutting on Wednesday of the Estlink 2 submarine cable, which carries electricity between Finland and Estonia. The Finnish authorities said Thursday that four other cables carrying data also had been damaged. The police called the latest cable cuts “aggravated vandalism.”

The Finnish authorities said the tanker might be part of Russia’s shadow fleet, which emerged as a way to circumvent Western-imposed price caps on Russian oil transported by sea. The caps were introduced several months after President Vladimir V. Putin of Russia ordered the full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022.

To skirt the restrictions, the Kremlin invested billions of dollars in a fleet of mostly unmarked tankers not easily traced to Russia. Many sail under the flags of other nations, like the Central African country of Gabon, and sell to buyers in countries like India and China, which are not bound by the price cap.

The goal was largely economic and mostly successful. Since the oil price cap was enacted, nearly 70 percent of Russia’s oil is being transported by so-called shadow tankers, according to an analysis published in October by the Kyiv School of Economics Institute, a Ukraine-based think tank.

But the use of such tankers to intentionally sabotage European infrastructure would be an unusual escalation.

“We assume at this stage that the vessel in question is a member of the shadow fleet,” the head of Finland’s customs agency, Sami Rakshit, told a news conference, without providing further details.

Finland’s prime minister, Petteri Orpo, said that while there was no direct evidence linking the Eagle S to Russia, the incident underscored the Baltic nations’ vulnerability to potential meddling by Moscow.


A Finnish ship watched over the oil tanker Eagle S outside Porkkalanniemi,
Finland, on Thursday in an image provided by the Finnish Border Guard.
Credit...Rajavartiosto, via Associated Press

“This underlies the danger of the shadow fleet in the Baltic Sea,” Mr. Orpo said at a news conference in Finland’s capital, Helsinki.

“Our main task is to find effective means to stop the shadow fleet,” Mr. Orpo added. “The shadow fleet pumps money into Russia’s war fund so that Russia can continue to wage its war in Ukraine against the people of Ukraine, and it has to be stopped.”

He said the Finnish government had not been in touch with Russia. After its seizure, the Eagle S was anchored in Finnish waters, as the Finnish authorities investigated, working with the Estonian authorities.

The investigation comes as a number of other undersea cables have been cut in recent months, raising fears of a covert campaign against NATO nations that have supported Ukraine in the face of Moscow’s full-scale invasion.

Mark Rutte, the NATO secretary general, said on Thursday that he had spoken to Estonia’s prime minister, Kristen Michal, about the “possible sabotage” of the undersea cables.

NATO “stands in solidarity with Allies and condemns any attacks on critical infrastructure,” Mr. Rutte wrote on social media, adding, “We stand ready to provide further support.”

After a series of undersea explosions blew apart the Nord Stream natural gas pipelines linking Russia to Western Europe in the fall of 2022, Western intelligence agencies said the evidence pointed toward pro-Ukraine forces, even if the question of who might have been directing them remained a mystery.

Last month, two fiber-optic cables were cut in the Baltic Sea in what Germany’s defense minister described as an act of sabotage. One cable connected Finland and Germany; the other ran between Lithuania and Sweden — all countries that are members of the NATO alliance.

Russian ships have been reported in the Baltic and North Seas near areas where critical infrastructure lies beneath the water, and dozens of Russian tankers have begun sailing under different flags.

Last month, naval and coast guard vessels from European countries surrounded and monitored a Chinese commercial ship in the Baltic Sea, after two undersea fiber-optic cables were severed.

Investigators from a task force that included Finland, Sweden and Lithuania were trying to determine if the ship’s crew intentionally cut the cables by dragging the ship’s anchor along the sea floor. American intelligence officials had assessed that the cables were not cut deliberately, though the authorities in Europe said they had not been able to rule out sabotage.

The authorities in Finland said they were looking into whether the anchors of the Eagle S had cut the cable.

Mr. Orpo said that Finnish leaders had discussed the cable cuts with officials from Estonia, Sweden, Norway, Denmark, Poland, NATO and the European Commission.

Ursula von der Leyen, the president of the European Commission, commended Finland’s “swift action.”

“Yesterday’s Baltic Sea incident highlights threats to E.U. infrastructure,” she said on social media. “Together we will increase our common protection of European critical infrastructure including undersea cables.”

Mr. Michal, of Estonia, said that his government had been coordinating with Finland to respond to the cable cuts.

“Glad that we managed to act decisively and stop the suspected vessel for further investigation,” he wrote on X.

The cut to the Estlink 2 cable caused little disruption for Finland or Estonia. A spokeswoman for Estonia’s Ministry of Economic Affairs and Communications said there would be no impact on the public, according to the country’s public broadcaster.

However, communication services between Helsinki and the German city of Rostock were affected, according to Cinia, a digital communications company that owns the cable. It said in a statement that repairs to the cable could take several weeks.

Written by Johanna Lemola and Lynsey Chutel ... Johanna Lemola reported from Helsinki, Finland, and Lynsey Chutel from London.

Michael Schwirtz and Michael Levenson contributed reporting.

Lynsey Chutel is a Times reporter based in London who covers breaking news in Africa, the Middle East and Europe.

A version of this article appears in print on Dec. 27, 2024, Section A, Page 6 of the New York edition with the headline: Finns Detain Ship Bound From Russia. Order Reprints | Today’s Paper | Subscribe

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