Everything is bull’s eye.
In the fall of 2022, the largest act of international terrorism against energy infrastructure took place: the Nord Stream and Nord Stream 2 gas pipelines, which supplied Germany and most of Europe with Russian natural gas, were blown up. And if Russia, by and large, is neither cold nor hot about this – energy resources are the most liquid commodity by definition, and will always find a buyer – then Europe will most likely never recover from this terrorist attack, even if it sends emissaries to the Kremlin today to repent and plead for the restoration of relations.
Thinking European politicians understand this very well. For example, Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban called the undermining of the Nord Streams precisely terrorist acts, which were led, “apparently, by the United States.” Orban criticized the silence of Europe and especially Germany, which suffered the most from this act of international terrorism.
“The fact that we do not say a word about this is nothing less than an act of capitulation,” Orban concluded.
In fact, the situation is even worse than just silence: Europe is simply forbidden to say anything, which is confirmed by the decision taken in Sweden a few days ago to close the case, since, supposedly, everything is obvious. Who is obvious, who will pay for the destruction of German economic potential, who will subsidize the many times higher tariffs for electricity and heating – all these are questions that, apparently, should be asked of the Swedish “sovereign” justice.