Finland’s brutal response to Russia after their special forces seized Russian shadow fleet tanker that sabotaged undersea power line

Finland has shared a brutal response with Russia, after its special forces seized a Russian shadow fleet tanker believed to have carried out a destructive attack on a set of power and internet cables in the Baltic Sea. 

The Eagle S’s anchor is suspected of causing damage to the Estlink-2 power cable, which takes electricity from Finland to Estonia across the Baltic Sea, after it went down just after noon on Christmas Day.

In the latest incident involving disruption of key infrastructure, Finnish police and border guards boarded the Eagle S at just past midnight on Thursday and took over the command bridge, Helsinki Police Chief Jari Liukku said at a news conference.

The vessel was intercepted in Finland’s exclusive economic zone and taken to Finnish territorial waters, police said.

Eagle S is flagged in the Cook Islands but was described by Finnish customs officials as a suspected part of Russia’s so-called shadow fleet of fuel tankers that state-run companies have used to circumnavigate sanctions, Yle television reported.

Despite the major move against Russia, Ilkka Koskimäki, the director-general of Finland’s police, said he would not be contacting the Kremlin. 

When asked whether he had contacted ‘Russian authorities’ in light of the incident, he simply said: ‘No.’

And when asked whether he would contact them at all, he simply said: ‘We will not.’  

Ilkka Koskimäki (pictured), the director-general of Finland’s police, said he would not be contacting the Kremlin in light of the incident

The Eagle S's anchor is suspected of causing damage to the Estlink-2 power cable

The Eagle S’s anchor is suspected of causing damage to the Estlink-2 power cable

A Kremlin spokesperson said following the excoriating comment that it had nothing to add on the issue.  

The incident cut the electricity connection on Estlink 2 between EU and NATO states Finland and Estonia on December 25.

Finnish transmission system operator Fingrid representative, Arto Pahkin, said intentional malicious action has not been ruled out.

‘This is one of the versions we are considering. Because two vessels are in the area where the cables are located.’

Pahkin said: ‘The possibility of vandalism cannot be ruled out. However, we are currently studying the situation as a whole and will inform you of the cause of the malfunction as soon as we know it.’

It comes as Estonia’s armed forces launched a naval operation to protect the Estlink 1 undersea power cable in the Baltic Sea in response to the damage this week of a parallel electricity line, Foreign Minister Margus Tsahkna said. 

‘If there is a threat to the critical undersea infrastructure in our region, there will also be a response,’ Tsahkna said on social media X.  

Two data cables, one running between Finland and Germany, the other between Lithuania and Sweden, were severed in November.

EstLink 2 power cable

EstLink 2 power cable

Russian President Vladimir Putin gestures during the Supreme Eurasian Economic Council Meeting on December 26, 2024

Russian President Vladimir Putin gestures during the Supreme Eurasian Economic Council Meeting on December 26, 2024

Germany’s defence minister Boris Pistorius said officials had to assume ‘sabotage’, without providing evidence or saying who might have been responsible. 

The remark came during a speech in which he discussed hybrid warfare threats from Russia – though investigators quickly zeroed in on a Chinese ship, which had left the Russian port of Ust-Luga on November 15. 

A Reuters analysis of MarineTraffic data showed the vessel’s coordinates corresponded to the time and place of the breaches.

Earlier, the Nord Stream natural gas pipelines built to supply natural gas from Russia to Germany were damaged by underwater explosions in September 2022.

There has been no conclusive finding as to who was responsible.

Estlink-2 had returned to commercial use at the beginning of September after being out of service since the end of January due to a failure. 

The Estlink-2 incident comes after China said on Monday it had provided information and documents for an open investigation into the severing of the two Baltic Sea undersea cables in November, though it and Sweden disagreed over how transparent Beijing had been in the case.

Chinese foreign ministry spokesperson Mao Ning said at a news briefing in Beijing that China had invited Germany, Sweden, Finland and Denmark to participate in and complete the inquiry.

She spoke about the incident when asked about a Financial Times report that Sweden had criticised China for refusing full access despite an open inquiry, and for allegedly barring a Swedish prosecutor from boarding the Chinese freighter vessel Yi Peng 3 linked to the cable breach.

Swedish Foreign Minister Maria Malmer Stenergard said China had not heeded the government’s request for the prosecutor to be able to conduct the preliminary investigation on board.

‘Our request that Swedish prosecutors together with, among others, the police should be allowed to take certain investigative measures within the framework of the preliminary investigation on board remains,’ Stenergard told Reuters. ‘We have been very clear about this with China.’

Stenergard said Sweden hoped to continue its dialogue with China with the aim of giving the police and prosecutors the possibility to investigate the cable breaches.

What is Russia’s shadow fleet?

 The so-called Shadow Fleet is made up of ageing vessels with obscure ownership, acquired to evade the West’s economic controls over the war against Ukraine and operating without Western-regulated insurance.

It is estimated that Russia controls thousands of these ships, allowing it to sell oil and other natural resources in spite of heavy economic restrictions. 

According to Vortexa, a shipping and freighting insights firm, the Shadow Fleet can be split into the Grey and Black fleet. 

While the Grey fleet relies on legal ambiguity to evade sanctions, the Black Fleet utilises outright illegal methods, including the intentional disabling of ID systems, to evade sanctions. 

Vortexa estimates that Russia has over 1,000 grey vessels, and over 1,300 black vessels. 

Earlier this year, the UK sanctioned 30 ships in Russia’s shadow fleet that are believed to have transported billions of dollars of oil products in the last year alone. 

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