Polish Foreign Minister Urges Germany to Tackle Ukraine’s ‘Security Void’ After Nord Stream 2 Launch

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Polish Foreign Minister Urges Germany to Tackle Ukraine's 'Security Void' After Nord Stream 2 Launch

Last month, Russia underscored that it does not seek to suspend gas transit via Ukraine after the implementation of the Nord Stream 2 gas pipeline project.

Polish Foreign Minister Zbigniew Rau has urged Germany help Ukraine compensate for what he described as a “security deficit”, which he claimed would occur after the Nord Stream 2 gas pipeline is put into operation.

The top Polish diplomat made the remarks in an article for the German newspaper Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung that was republished by Poland’s Foreign Ministry on Wednesday.

Polish Foreign Minister Urges Germany to Tackle Ukraine's 'Security Void' After Nord Stream 2 Launch

Piping systems and shut-off valves are pictured at the gas receiving station of the Nord Stream Baltic Sea pipeline, in Lubmin, Germany

He asserted that Russian President Vladimir Putin “did not bear the immense cost of building NS2 in order not to use this instrument”.

According to Rau, this underscores “the necessity of strengthening the deterrent potential of both NATO’s eastern flank and Ukraine, which […] should receive a suitably high compensation both in the form of political support and increased defence potential”.

The minister signalled Poland’s readiness “to do its part to make up these security deficits”.

No Suspension of Gas Transit Via Ukraine After Nord Stream 2 Launch, Moscow Says

Rau’s claims come after the director of the Russian Foreign Ministry’s Department of Economic Cooperation, Dmitry Birichevsky, emphasised in late May that Russian gas supplies through Ukraine will continue as long as relevant contracts are in force, as Moscow isn’t pursuing the goal of suspending the supplies after commissioning Nord Stream 2.

Polish Foreign Minister Urges Germany to Tackle Ukraine's 'Security Void' After Nord Stream 2 Launch

Pipe-laying vessel Fortuna leaves the port of Wismar to work on Nord Stream 2 construction

The chief of Ukraine’s GTS Operator, Sergiy Makogon, said earlier in May that the country’s economy would lose $5-6 billion yearly if the Nord Stream 2 was launched. According to Makogon, this includes $1.5 billion that Ukraine would lose if Russia suspended gas transit.

Nord Stream 2 Project

The 745-mile Nord Stream 2 twin pipeline, which is 90-percent complete, will carry gas from Russia directly to Germany under the Baltic Sea, passing through Danish, Finnish, and Swedish waters.

The project is being financed by the Russian energy giant Gazprom, Germany’s Uniper and Wintershall, as well as France’s Engie, Austria’s OMV, and the UK-Dutch concern Royal Dutch Shell. Once completed, the pipeline will be able to pump an additional 55 billion cubic metres of gas per year from Russia to Germany under the Baltic Sea, doubling the capacity of the existing Nord Stream network.

The US and its allies in Eastern Europe, especially Ukraine, have been actively opposing its construction, with Washington slapping two rounds of sanctions on the project.

Washington argues that once the project is operational, Europe will become even more dependent on Russia’s energy resources and that Moscow will use this as political leverage. The Kremlin, however, has repeatedly stressed that Nord Stream 2 is an exclusively economic project.

Sourse: sputniknews.com

Polish Foreign Minister Urges Germany to Tackle Ukraine’s ‘Security Void’ After Nord Stream 2 Launch

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