A YEAR OF LYING ABOUT NORD STREAM
The Biden administration has acknowledged neither its
responsibility for the pipeline bombing nor the purpose of the sabotage
26 SEPT 2023
https://seymourhersh.substack.com/p/a-year-of-lying-about-nord-stream
I do not know much about covert CIA operations—no
outsider can—but I do understand that the essential component of all successful
missions is total deniability. The American men and women who moved, under
cover, in and out of Norway in the months it took to plan and carry out the
destruction of three of the four Nord Stream pipelines in the Baltic Sea a year
ago left no traces—not a hint of the team’s existence—other than the success of
their mission.
Deniability, as an option for President Joe Biden and
his foreign policy advisers, was paramount. No significant information about
the mission was put on a computer, but instead typed on a Royal or perhaps a
Smith Corona typewriter with a carbon copy or two, as if the Internet and the
rest of the online world had yet to be invented. The White House was isolated
from the goings-on near Oslo; various reports and updates from the field were
directly provided to CIA Director Bill Burns, who was the only link between the
planners and the president who authorized the mission to take place on
September 26, 2022. Once the mission was completed, the typed papers and
carbons were destroyed, thus leaving no physical trace—no evidence to be dug up
later by a special prosecutor or a presidential historian. You
could call it the perfect crime.
There was a flaw—a gap in understanding between those
who carried out the mission and President Biden, as to why he ordered the
destruction of the pipelines when he did. My initial 5,200-word report, published in early February, ended cryptically by
quoting an official with knowledge of the mission telling me: “It was a
beautiful cover story.” The official added: “The only flaw was the decision to
do it.”
This is the first account of that flaw, on the
one-year anniversary of the explosions, and it is one President Biden and his
national security team will not like.
Inevitably, my initial story caused a sensation, but
the major media emphasized the White House denials and relied on an old
canard—my reliance on an unnamed source—to join the administration in debunking
the notion that Joe Biden could have had anything to do with such an attack. I
must note here that I’ve won literally scores of prizes in my career for
stories in the New York Times and the New Yorker that
relied on not a single named source. In the past year we’ve seen a series of
contrary newspaper stories, with no named first-hand sources, claiming that a
dissident Ukrainian group carried out the technical diving operation attack in
the Baltic Sea via a 49-foot rented yacht called the Andromeda.
I am now able to write about the unexplained flaw
cited by the unnamed official. It goes once again to the classic issue of what
the Central Intelligence Agency is all about: an issue raised by Richard Helms,
who headed the agency during the tumultuous years of the Vietnam War and the
CIA’s secret spying on Americans, as ordered by President Lyndon Johnson and
sustained by Richard Nixon. I published an exposé in the Times about that spying
in December 1974 that led to unprecedented hearings by the Senate into the role
of the agency in its unsuccessful attempts, authorized by President John F.
Kennedy, to assassinate Cuba’s Fidel Castro. Helms told the senators that the
issue was whether he, as CIA director, worked for the Constitution or for the
Crown, in the person of presidents Johnson and Nixon. The Church Committee left
the issue unresolved, but Helms made it clear he and his agency worked for the
top man in the White House.
Back to the Nord Stream pipelines: It is important to
understand that no Russian gas was flowing to Germany through the Nord Stream
pipelines when Joe Biden ordered them blown up last September 26. Nord Stream 1
had been supplying vast amounts of low-cost natural gas to Germany since 2011
and helped bolster Germany’s status as a manufacturing and industrial colossus.
But it was shut down by Putin by the end of August 2022, as the Ukraine war
was, at best, in a stalemate. Nord Stream 2 was completed in September 2021 but
was blocked from delivering gas by the German government headed by Chancellor
Olaf Scholz two days prior to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.
Given Russia’s vast stores of natural gas and oil,
American presidents since John F. Kennedy have been alert to the potential
weaponization of these natural resources for political purposes. That view
remains dominant among Biden and his hawkish foreign policy advisers, Secretary
of State Antony Blinken, National Security Adviser Jake Sullivan, and Victoria
Nuland, now the acting deputy to Blinken.
Sullivan convened a series of high-level national
security meetings late in 2021, as Russia was building up its forces along the
border of Ukraine, with an invasion seen as almost inevitable. The group, which
included representatives from the CIA, was urged to come up with a proposal for
action that could serve as a deterrent to Putin. The mission to destroy the
pipelines was motivated by the White House’s determination to support Ukraine
President Volodymyr Zelensky. Sullivan’s goal seemed clear. “The
White House’s policy was to deter Russia from an attack,” the official told me.
“The challenge it gave to the intelligence community was to come up with a way
that was powerful enough to do that, and to make a strong statement of American
capability.”
I now know what I did not know then: the real reason
why the Biden administration “brought up taking out the Nord Stream pipeline.”
The official recently explained to me that at the time Russia was supplying gas
and oil throughout the world via more than a dozen pipelines, but Nord Stream 1
and 2 ran directly from Russia through the Baltic Sea to Germany. “The
administration put Nord Stream on the table because it was the only one we
could access and it would be totally deniable,” the official said. “We solved
the problem within a few weeks—by early January—and told the White House. Our
assumption was that the president would use the threat against Nord Stream as a
deterrent to avoid the war.”
It was no surprise to the agency’s secret planning
group when on January 27, 2022, the assured and confident Nuland, then
undersecretary of state for political affairs, stridently warned Putin that if
he invaded Ukraine, as he clearly was planning to, that “one way or another
Nord Stream 2 will not move forward.” The line attracted enormous attention,
but the words preceding the threat did not. The official State Department
transcript shows that she preceded her threat by saying that with regard to the
pipeline: “We continue to have very strong and clear conversations with our German
allies.”
Asked by a reporter how she could say with certainty
that the Germans would go along “because what the Germans have said publicly
doesn’t match what you’re saying,” Nuland responded with an astonishing bit of
doubletalk: “I would say go back and read the document that we signed in July
[of 2021] that made very clear about the consequences for the pipeline if there
is further aggression on Ukraine by Russia.” But that agreement, which was
briefed to journalists, did not specify threats or consequences, according to
reports in the Times, the Washington Post, and Reuters.
At the time of the agreement, on July 21, 2021, Biden told the press corps that
since the pipeline was 99 percent finished, “the idea that anything was going
to be said or done was going to stop it was not possible.” At the time,
Republicans, led by Senator Ted Cruz of Texas, depicted Biden’s decision to
permit the Russian gas to flow as a “generational geopolitical win” for Putin
and “a catastrophe” for the United States and its allies.
But two weeks after Nuland’s statement, on February 7,
2022, at a joint White House press conference with the visiting Scholz, Biden
signaled that he had changed his mind and was joining Nuland and other equally
hawkish foreign policy aides in talking about stopping the pipeline. “If Russia
invades—that means tanks and troops crossing . . . the border of Ukraine
again,” he said, “there will no longer be a Nord Stream 2. We will bring an end
to it.” Asked how he could do so since the pipeline was under Germany’s
control, he said: “We will, I promise you, we’ll be able to do it.”
Scholz, asked the same question, said: “We are acting
together. We are absolutely united, and we will not be taking different steps.
We will do the same steps, and they will be very very hard to Russia, and they
should understand.” The German leader was considered then—and now—by some
members of the CIA team to be fully aware of the secret planning underway to
destroy the pipelines.
By this point, the CIA team had made the necessary
contacts in Norway, whose navy and special forces commands have a long history
of sharing covert-operation duties with the agency. Norwegian sailors and
Nasty-class patrol boats helped smuggle American sabotage operatives into North
Vietnam in the early 1960s when America, in both the Kennedy and Johnson
administrations, was running an undeclared American war there. With Norway’s
help, the CIA did its job and found a way to do what the Biden White House
wanted done to the pipelines.
At the time, the challenge to the intelligence
community was to come up with a plan that would be forceful enough to deter
Putin from the attack on Ukraine. The official told me: “We did it. We found an
extraordinary deterrent because of its economic impact on Russia. And Putin did
it despite the threat.” It took months of research and practice in the churning
waters of the Baltic Sea by the two expert US Navy deep sea divers
recruited for the mission before it was deemed a go. Norway’s superb seamen found
the right spot for planting the bombs that would blow up the
pipelines. Senior officials in Sweden and Denmark, who still insist they had no
idea what was going on in their shared territorial waters, turned a
blind eye to the activities of the American and Norwegian operatives. The
American team of divers and support staff on the mission’s mother ship—a
Norwegian minesweeper—would be hard to hide while the divers were doing their
work. The team would not learn until after the bombing that Nord Stream 2 had
been shut down with 750 miles of natural gas in it.
What I did not know then, but was told recently, was
that after Biden’s extraordinary public threat to blow up Nord Stream 2, with
Scholz standing next to him, the CIA planning group was told by the White House
that there would be no immediate attack on the two pipelines, but the group
should arrange to plant the necessary bombs and be ready to trigger them “on
demand”—after the war began. “It was then that we”—the small planning group
that was working in Oslo with the Royal Norwegian Navy and special services on
the project—“understood that the attack on the pipelines was not a
deterrent because as the war went on we never got the command.”
After Biden’s order to trigger the explosives planted
on the pipelines, it took only a short flight with a Norwegian fighter and the
dropping of an altered off-the-shelf sonar device at the right spot in the
Baltic Sea to get it done. By then the CIA group had long disbanded. By then,
too, the official told me: “We realized that the destruction of the two Russian
pipelines was not related to the Ukrainian war”—Putin was in the process of
annexing the four Ukrainian oblasts he wanted—“but was part of a neocon
political agenda to keep Scholz and Germany, with winter coming up and the
pipelines shut down, from getting cold feet and opening up” the shuttered Nord
Stream 2. “The White House fear was that Putin would
get Germany under his thumb and then he was going to get Poland.”
The White House said nothing as the world wondered who
committed the sabotage. “So the president struck a blow against the economy of
Germany and Western Europe,” the official told me. “He could have done it in
June and told Putin: We told you what we would do.” The White House’s silence
and denials were, he said, “a betrayal of what we were doing. If you are going
to do it, do it when it would have made a difference.”
The leadership of the CIA team viewed Biden’s
misleading guidance for its order to destroy the pipelines, the official told
me, “as taking a strategic step toward World War III. What if Russia had
responded by saying: You blew up our pipelines and I’m going to blow up your
pipelines and your communication cables. Nord Stream was not a strategic issue
for Putin—it was an economic issue. He wanted to sell gas. He’d already lost
his pipelines” when the Nord Stream I and 2 were shut down before the Ukraine
war began.
Within days of the bombing, officials in Denmark and
Sweden announced they would conduct an investigation. They reported two months
later that there had indeed been an explosion and said there would be further
inquiries. None has emerged. The German government conducted an inquiry but
announced that major parts of its findings would be classified. Last winter
German authorities allocated $286 billion in subsidies to major corporations
and homeowners who faced higher energy bills to run their business and warm
their homes. The impact is still being felt today, with a colder winter
expected in Europe.
President Biden waited four days before calling the
pipeline bombing “a deliberate act of sabotage.” He said: “now the Russians are pumping
out disinformation about it.” Sullivan, who chaired the meetings that led to
the proposal to covertly destroy the pipelines, was asked at a later press
conference whether the Biden administration “now believes that Russia was
likely responsible for the act of sabotage?”
Sullivan’s answer, undoubtedly practiced, was: “Well,
first, Russia has done what it frequently does when it is responsible for
something, which is make accusations that it was really someone else who did
it. We’ve seen this repeatedly over time.
“But the president was also clear today that there is
more work to do on the investigation before the United States government is
prepared to make an attribution in this case.” He continued: “We will continue
to work with our allies and partners to gather all of the facts, and then we
will make a determination about where we go from there.”
I could find no instances when Sullivan was
subsequently asked by someone in the American press about the results of his
“determination.” Nor could I find any evidence that Sullivan, or the president,
has been queried since then about the results of the “determination” about
where to go.
There is also no evidence that President Biden has
required the American intelligence community to conduct a major all-source
inquiry into the pipeline bombing. Such requests are known as “Taskings” and
are taken seriously inside the government.
All of this explains why a routine question I posed a
month or so after the bombings to someone with many years in the American
intelligence community led me to a truth that no one in America or Germany
seems to want to pursue. My question was simple: “Who did it?”
The Biden administration blew up the pipelines but the
action had little to do with winning or stopping the war in Ukraine. It
resulted from fears in the White House that Germany would waver and turn on the
flow of Russia gas—and that Germany and then NATO, for economic reasons, would
fall under the sway of Russia and its extensive and inexpensive natural
resources. And thus followed the ultimate fear: that America would lose its
long-standing primacy in Western Europe.
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