Advertisement
Supported by
The British Secretary of Defense told Parliament that the Yantar, which he described as a Russian spy ship, had approached the British coast for the time in a few months.
By Stephen Castle and Michael Schwirtz
Great Britain warned Wednesday that he faced a risk in the development of attack through Russia, saying that a shipment of Russian spies had passed through the English coast for a moment in 3 months, in the last incident he designed to verify the capabilities of the army British.
John Healey, Secretary of British Defense, told Parliament that two shipments from the Royal Navy had been deployed for two days to monitor the Yantar passage, whom he described as a Russian spy that he sends used to collect information and map The underwater infrastructure of Great Britain.
The incident is the last of a series of incursions through Russian ships and airplanes in Great Britain and intervenes amid the development of fear in Europe with respect to the threats opposed to critical infrastructure and imaginable sabotage, with the facilities of the Western intelligence by Kremlin’s warning to punish Europe to help Ukraine. Last year, when the Yantar was first detected in the British waters, a nearby British submarine monitored it, the Secretary of Defense revealed on Wednesday.
Although the Government has connected Russia’s intelligence with vandalism, torton fireplace and attack in Europe in recent years, maritime threats have generated maximum anxiety and aroused the answers. more daring. Last week, NATO announced that it was deploying warships, patrol aircraft and drones to protect the critical infrastructure of the Baltic Sea after several underwater cables were cut, through the ships dragging their anchors throughout the bottom of the bottom of the bottom of the sea.
The suspicions fell into shipments similar to Russia and China, the European Union sends to the surroundings of a Chinese flag sending for weeks and Finland grabbed an oil tanker who, according to Mavens and Managersarray, can be a component of the Russian efforts for Western sanctions for western sanctions .
The Russian naval ships have been around for years near Britain and elsewhere. But Mr. Healy gave him a number of main points in the global, generally dark of army surveillance, emphasizing the fear in development with respect to Russian activity, in the important important submarine cables that connect Britain with Continental Europe.
We have recovering the content of the article.
JavaScript turn on in the configuration of your browser.
Thanks for your patience while we review access. If you are in reading mode, leave and attach to your Times account, or subscribe to all the time.
Thanks for your patience while we review access.
Already signed? Connect.
Do you want all the time? Subscribe.
Advertisement