What changes, if any, will be made to maritime security policy in the Baltic Sea by December 31, 2025?
Increased maritime security measures • 25%
No significant changes • 25%
Collaboration on international security protocols • 25%
Other policy changes • 25%
Official policy announcements from Baltic Sea bordering nations
Washington Post: Intel Officials Say Baltic Cable Damage Was Accidental, Not Russian Sabotage
Jan 19, 2025, 02:45 PM
U.S. and European intelligence officials have concluded that the recent damages to undersea cables in the Baltic Sea were likely caused by maritime accidents rather than Russian sabotage, according to reports by the Washington Post. Investigations have found no evidence linking Russia to the incidents and suggest that the ships involved did not act intentionally or under Moscow's direction. The emerging consensus among security services indicates that unintentional actions by ships, possibly involving dragging anchors, led to the damage. The ship 'Eagle S' has been mentioned in connection with one of the cable ruptures. However, some officials and experts express skepticism over the accident explanation. Pekka Toveri, a Finnish official, described the idea that the damage was accidental as 'absolute nonsense'.
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Increased patrols • 25%
Military exercises • 25%
Diplomatic talks • 25%
No action • 25%
Sweden • 25%
Finland • 25%
Other NATO country • 25%
Estonia • 25%
Other Baltic Sea country • 25%
Finland • 25%
Sweden • 25%
Joint effort • 25%
Military readiness • 25%
Diplomatic efforts • 25%
Cybersecurity • 25%
Other • 25%
Cyber attack • 25%
Diplomatic crisis • 25%
Economic sanctions • 25%
Military confrontation • 25%
No • 50%
Yes • 50%
Yes • 50%
No • 50%
No • 50%
Yes • 50%
Undetermined cause • 25%
Accidental maritime incident • 25%
Russian sabotage • 25%
Other nation-state involvement • 25%