You have been saying that resistance is futile since 2/22. We will see. — Paine
but only observing that Ukraine cannot afford to just wait out the present situation if it is to have a chance of stopping the Russians. — Paine
(Financial Times) Several Russian military ships were observed close to the Nord Stream pipelines in the days before the gas links between Russia and Europe were blown up last year.
A Russian tugboat SB-123 capable of launching and rescuing mini-submarines was seen near the pipelines on September 21 and 22, shortly before the explosions on September 26, according to an investigation by four Nordic state broadcasters based on intercepted radio messages.
Denmark’s overall military command authority confirmed to the Financial Times that it had taken 26 pictures of the special Russian ship SS-750, which had a rescue mini-submarine on board, on September 22 to the east of the Danish island of Bornholm, close to where the sabotage of the twin pipelines took place.
Investigators in Denmark, Sweden and Germany as well as western intelligence agencies are still trying to establish who was behind the pipeline attacks.
Several Russian military ships were observed close to the Nord Stream pipelines in the days before the gas links between Russia and Europe were blown up last year.
This was reported by a collaboration between top investigative journalists in Denmark, Norway, Sweden, and Finland. It was rigorously verified using a former Navy operative in England and through advanced satellite tracking. With confirmation from navy intelligence officers going over the material, simply concluding "With this evidence it is much more clear who was responsible". — Christoffer
With this, any claim that someone else than Russia committed the act requires a much better foundation of evidence than what has been delivered by these investigative journalists. — Christoffer
We will bring an end to it. I promise you. We will be able to do it. — the president of America
This is not very good evidence at all, considering Russian ships regularly go through the Baltic and you have to go through the Danish straits (basically where the explosions happened) to get to and from the Atlantic. — boethius
Sure, doesn't prove who did it, but declaring you'll "end" something and then that very thing you promised you'd end does get ended, results in two possibilities:
1. You did it, just like you said you would.
2. You're a fucking moron.
Feel free to go with 2, but don't pretend that what people say they're going to do doesn't matter and is not strong evidence. — boethius
Half a year on they suddenly find a box of photographs of the Russians caught in the act?
Color me skeptical. — Tzeentch
And you really think that if they had footage supposedly depicting Russian ships conducting the sabotage, that the US would be so eagerly throwing its ally under the bus?
Get real. — Tzeentch
To reiterate, the US story about a Ukrainian 'group' was full-blown panic in reaction to Hersh's story. There's no way they would have made such a move if they knew the official investigation was on the Russians' tail. — Tzeentch
Return with something more tangible after you've looked into the evidence in detail, [...] — Christoffer
This is a bit cute, considering there's no evidence whatsoever presented in any of these reports. — Tzeentch
Alrighty, then. — Tzeentch
Where's this evidence? — Tzeentch
I've already watched it, and no actual evidence is presented.
I'm talking about Nord Stream, in case that wasn't clear.
That the Russians are floating around scanning the seabed with civilian vessels is nothing new. Hell, I don't even doubt they could have conducted the Nord Stream sabotage if they had wanted to. — Tzeentch
If you've actually watched it through and especially the third episode, then you are just ignoring the fact that the ship in question, the one with underwater operation capabilities was at the location of the explosions, turning off their commercial trackers, stopped, went back to Kaliningrad, turned off normal communication, went back and turned off their trackers again and held positions for a long period of time right at the site just days around the explosions occurred. Verified by both satellite and the former Navy operator separately. — Christoffer
Warship Automatic Identification System (WAIS) enables the operator to adjust the own ship’s visibility, vary the information the own ship transmits (including its identity, size, and type), and create and place simulated vessels.
On top of this, it's clear that Russian civilian ships are almost all involved with surveillance everywhere around the Nordic region, spying on everything based on their deviant movement from their commercial purpose, right at times when something else is in the area that would be of interest as intel to Russia. — Christoffer
But you don't think any of this is significant because of what a half-demented president, vaguely said and you interpreted as an admission of guilt. — Christoffer
But then again, I don't think you watched it at all. I just think you try to bullshit your way through this. — Christoffer
Try that in court against the other evidence :rofl: — Christoffer
All we see are blips on a map and the vaguest of satellite imagery. — Tzeentch
Military ships aren't required to use AIS. The US navy sails around without AIS 24/7. Moreover, navies use a special version of AIS that allows them to manipulate the ship ID data. — Tzeentch
Supposed 'retired UK intelligence officers' aren't the only one's listening in around the Baltic. — Tzeentch
The idea that the CIA and other intelligence agencies can't produce more than a few blips on a map and the grainiest of satellite imagery is just the type of naivety that would make this theory plausible. Had the Russians been this obvious about it, there wouldn't have been a mystery in the first place. — Tzeentch
Moreover, the Russians own the pipeline. They know where it is located and have the capacity to carry out the operation via submarine, completely covertly. — Tzeentch
The story doesn't really provide evidence, nor does it add up. — Tzeentch
That much has been clear since the Cold War. — Tzeentch
An overt threat by the US president and Under Secretary of State Victoria Nuland, both basically outright saying they will blow up the pipeline, is a very strong indication of guilt - yes. — Tzeentch
I think it requires an ungodly amount of confirmation bias not to interpret that as such. — Tzeentch
Yes I did. I'm just a little less naive. — Tzeentch
Saying you're going to do something ... then that thing happening would definitely be used against you in court. — boethius
Mafia bosses who say they will whack a guy — boethius
In itself, is it enough to convict? No. But it's pretty strong evidence. — boethius
NATO has access to the crime scene ... so why don't we see pictures of the crime scene, reconstruction of the explosive devices, any basic investigatory work at all? — boethius
For these claims to be something other than propaganda, the material evidence should be presented. — boethius
Of course, people could still say it was a setup, doesn't necessarily resolve anything, but the material evidence should be consistent with this story that the explosives were laid a few days before (or then a pretty good explanation of how the Russians faked how long the explosives were there). — boethius
making zero effort to make their story consistent with the material evidence of the crime scene — boethius
NATO has not made a case — boethius
Now, if we had seen pictures of the crime scene, catalogue of the materials used, reconstruction of the devices, would it prove conclusively who did it? No. But it would at least be a plausibly good faith investigatory process where we could argue based on actual facts of the actual crime scene. — boethius
Actual tracking of Russian operatives connected to the time of the explosion is stronger evidence. What you are doing is conjecture. Get some basic justice knowledge if you want to conclude what is "strong evidence". — Christoffer
You are completely delusional.
Placing someone where they would likely be (a busy shipping lane) = weak evidence. — boethius
That's not the evidence, maybe you should just shut up and watch it in detail before guessing what it's about. Thinking this is about ships in a busy shipping lane just shows how ignorant you are. — Christoffer
Spy satellites that something like CIA uses require specific targets. They are super-advanced with high-resolution resolution, but you can't go back in time and just pull out images from all around the globe and you could do it less for tracking an object if you didn't know its location in the first place. — Christoffer
Uhm... because ongoing investigations do not share such things? There are a number of investigations going on as well. Have you ever heard of investigations sharing evidence in real time? That's a good way for the perps to adjust their stories and prepare for when they're caught. Not a good strategy of justice, which is why such things aren't publically exposed.
And if you don't trust NATO you can check other people investigating. Like, for instance, what I've referred to. — Christoffer
Denmark’s overall military command authority confirmed to the Financial Times that it had taken 26 pictures of the special Russian ship SS-750, which had a rescue mini-submarine on board, on September 22 to the east of the Danish island of Bornholm, close to where the sabotage of the twin pipelines took place. — Financial Times
a good way for the perps to adjust their stories and prepare for when they're caught. Not a good strategy of justice, which is why such things aren't publically exposed. — Christoffer
No, they have verified signatures for a specific ship. — Christoffer
[... ] he used his retirement time to specifically track ships around the Nordic region and mapping behaviors using a specific tracking technique. — Christoffer
If they had used a Russian sub and torpedos it would have shown signs of that kind of attack. You're just pulling ideas out of your ass now without any regard for what the consequence of different strategies would be. — Christoffer
To use a ship that is among hundreds of thousands of other ships in the Nordic region is obviously a much more covert and intelligent strategy. — Christoffer
The evidence you are talking about is literally ships near the scene of the crime. — boethius
Literally right through Danish straights. — boethius
There are civilian satellite photography taken every day of the entire earth that you can purchase.
And you think CIA spy satellites would need a "specific target" to track something as large as a ship in critical waters in the heart of NATO ... during a war in the region? — boethius
So, if the investigation hasn't shared all it's evidence, and that's just normal, why would we come to any conclusions? — boethius
The problem here is these countries (who have material evidence) coming out with partial evidence without presenting the rest, so we can see if it even coheres with the material evidence. — boethius
Bad faith at best, fraud at worst (if we're pretending to be in court and 'normy' laws apply to the parties involved). — boethius
There's no such thing, except maybe acoustic signatures, which weren't mentioned. They mention a handful of visual characteristics which we are then to assume are present on the irrecognizable white blotches we see on the satellite imagery. — Tzeentch
To reiterate, this would have been basic stuff. Literally the first things that would have been done when trying to discover whodunnit - check positioning logs, satellite imagery, and data from the numerous listening installations that line the Baltic coasts. — Tzeentch
For this information to just 'pop up' out of nowhere — Tzeentch
We never get any real insight in the actual data that was used. — Tzeentch
A secret technique which we never get any insight into, and is somehow unknown to professional militaries who have access to every type of surveillance imaginable? — Tzeentch
If you're going to accuse me of "pulling ideas out of my ass" then maybe not display your ignorance so blatantly. — Tzeentch
Their submarines can lay mines and launch divers, underwater vessels and drones. — Tzeentch
That's begging the question, isn't it? — Tzeentch
How many ships in the Nordic region have the letters "CC-750" on their hulls, hm? — Tzeentch
Are you sure conducting underwater sabotage in broad daylight with a submarine tender would classify as "covert and intelligent"? — Tzeentch
False, the navy former officer specified the ship identity and the tracker before it was turned off was linked to the exact ship. — Christoffer
So you are clearly wrong and once again try to strawman their findings. — Christoffer
Doesn't matter if they mask themselves among the hundreds of thousands of ships in the area. — Christoffer
We never get any real insight in the actual data that was used. — Tzeentch
This shows that you just skimmed through everything. — Christoffer
The unconventional methods used are not anticipated by Russian covert ops, [...] — Christoffer
And the Swedish navy is an expert hunter for Russian subs. Do you know how many they've pushed back from our waters over the years? Do you think the presence of our navy is less after the Ukraine invasion? Do you think it's intelligent for Russians to use subs in Swedish waters when our entire sub fleet has been specifically built to counter Russian submarine designs? — Christoffer
[...] why would anyone track a ships location pre-explosions? — Christoffer
No, it's about their behavior and their function. Once again, dig into the actual findings instead of continuing this biased charade. — Christoffer
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.