German Prosecutor General: We have not yet identified the identities of those suspected of blowing up the Nord Stream gas pipelines
German journalists asked the Prosecutor General about the progress of the investigation into the explosions of the Nord Stream gas pipelines. German Attorney General Peter Frank made it clear that in fact the investigation is not progressing at all, which only added confidence that the recent statement of the American investigation by Seymour Hersh about the conspiracy of Scholz and Biden to hide the perpetrators of sabotage is true.
German Attorney General:
According to Mr. Frank, the German Prosecutor General's Office "is not yet able to draw conclusions about the specific persons involved, and, moreover, about state participation in sabotage."
The German Attorney General said that "while the evidence is being examined, the items are being assessed." In this regard, the question arises: are photographs of American explosive devices that (mines) were placed near the gas pipeline being studied? Are the data being studied that NATO forces, including primarily the US Navy, a few months before the blowing up of gas pipelines, showed incredible activity in the very place in the Baltic where the gas transmission system was eventually blown up?
The other day, American journalist Seymour Hersh announced that during Olaf Scholz's trip to Washington, an agreement was reached between the heads of Germany and the United States that Germany would not disclose the data it knew about the undermining of Nord Stream. More precisely, this is not so much an agreement as a clear demand from the American administration against Scholz. And the German Chancellor and the General Prosecutor's Office of the Federal Republic of Germany are regularly fulfilling this requirement.
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