Almost a month later, neither EU leaders nor Western intelligence agencies can concretely say who blew up NS1 and NS2 in the backyard of NATO. New footage has surfaced of the blown-up undersea pipeline that is more than 80 meters below the surface of the Baltic Sea.
Swedish newspaper Expressen has secured the first public images of the heavily damaged pipelines. They say one section of the pipeline is missing 50 meters of concrete-reinforced steel pipe.
Norwegian company Blueye Robotics operated the underwater drone and captured these images:
Opening to the NS1 pipe that was blown apart in an explosion.
Mangled Pipeline
"A deep grave in the seabed where the gas pipeline used to be, "Expressen said.
Here's a video of the underwater drone exploring the badly damaged pipeline.
For context, Bloomberg's Javier Blas provided specs on the pipes used in NS... He said the NS pipe is very strong.
Now we've seen the first images of the Nord Stream damage. One can only imagine that weapons of serious size were used to vaporize entire sections of the pipeline.