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‘We regret US president’s decision on Nord Stream 2’: Polish official

26.05.2021 13:15
A spokesman for Poland’s ruling conservatives has voiced regret about the US administration's decision to waive sanctions on the company overseeing the construction of Russia's contested Nord Stream 2 gas pipeline to Germany under the Baltic Sea.
Radosław Fogiel
Radosław FogielWojciech Kusiński/Polskie Radio

Radosław Fogiel was speaking after US Secretary of State Antony Blinken announced last week that Joe Biden's administration had waived sanctions on Nord Stream 2 AG, the company behind the undersea gas pipeline, and its CEO Matthias Warnig.

“We regret the US president’s decision on Nord Stream 2,” Fogiel, who is deputy press spokesman for Poland’s governing conservative Law and Justice (PiS) party, said on Wednesday.

“We believe that it would be important to maintain these sanctions,” he added when asked about the issue by public broadcaster Polish Radio.

Polish Deputy Infrastructure Minister Marcin Horała said last week that "the US sanctions decisions are bound to cause concern, especially as the move has been presented in the media as Washington in a sense consenting to Nord Stream 2."

Republican lawmakers in the United States have slammed the Biden administration's decision to waive sanctions on the company in charge of building the disputed pipeline, news media have reported.

A US State Department report sent to Congress last Wednesday concluded that Nord Stream 2 AG and Warnig, an ally of Russian President Vladimir Putin, engaged in sanctionable activity, but Blinken immediately waived those sanctions, citing US national interests, the Reuters news agency reported.

It noted that the decision came as the Biden administration seeks to rebuild ties with Germany after those were strained under Donald Trump's presidency.

The US State Department has instead slapped sanctions on four Russian ships, including the pipe-laying vessel Akademik Cherskiy, while also imposing measures on five other Russian entities, including the Russian Marine Rescue Service, according to Reuters.

Blinken said in a statement last Wednesday: "Today's actions demonstrate the administration’s commitment to energy security in Europe, consistent with the President’s pledge to rebuild relationships with our allies and partners in Europe."

Nord Stream 2, designed to double the capacity of the existing Nord Stream undersea gas pipeline, is expected to send around 55 billion cubic metres of Russian natural gas a year directly to Germany under the Baltic Sea while bypassing the Baltic states, Poland and Ukraine.

Poland has strongly criticized the gas link amid concerns that the pipeline will make the European Union more dependent on Russian gas.

(gs)

Source: IAR, PAP