Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk said on Wednesday that he will push for the creation of a new “navy policing” program aimed at bolstering security in the Baltic Sea amid threats from Russia.
“I will convince our partners of the need to immediately create an analogous formula when it comes to the control and security of the Baltic waters, to ‘navy policing’, a joint undertaking of the countries that lie on the Baltic Sea and that have the same sense of threat when it comes to Russia,” Tusk said.
Nine countries—Denmark, Estonia, Finland, Germany, Latvia, Lithuania, Poland, Russia, and Sweden—border the Baltic Sea.
Tusk said he would be meeting with the prime ministers of the Baltic and Nordic countries later on Wednesday and Thursday and that the discussions would cover a range of important topics, such as transatlantic relations, regional cooperation on security, and a common policy toward the war in Ukraine.
According to Finnish state-controlled data services provider Cinia, which runs the 1,200-kilometer-long high-speed fiber optic cable, a “fault” in the line was detected on Nov. 18.
As a result, services typically provided through the cable—which runs from the Finnish capital of Helsinki to the German port city of Rostock—went down.
A direct link between the ship and the incidents has not been established.
The Yi Peng 3 is currently moored in international waters, inside Denmark’s exclusive economic zone.
Meanwhile, the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) and the Russian government have both denied any involvement in the damage to the cables; with Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov telling a news briefing earlier this week that it’s “quite absurd to continue to blame Russia for everything without any reason.”
Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Lin Jian said this week that the ministry was unaware of the situation.
Accidental, unintentional damage through fishing or anchoring has so far been the cause of most subsea cable incidents, according to the agency.