Putin told reporters in Kyrgyzstan that the notion was “complete rubbish” and said he did not even know the pipeline existed. He also suggested the damage could have been caused by an earthquake.
Putin told reporters in Kyrgyzstan that the notion was “complete rubbish” and said he did not even know the pipeline existed. He also suggested the damage could have been caused by an earthquake.
Article 5, as defined in scope by Article 6, doesn’t cover infrastructure in international waters. It does cover vessels flying the flag of member countries in the North Atlantic area, which I assume includes the Baltic Sea, but pipelines aren’t vessels.
https://www.nato.int/cps/en/natolive/official_texts_17120.htm
I actually went looking a while back and there isn’t really anything in customary international law or treaties protecting pipelines in international water. I also found some articles stating that there really isn’t law on the matter. Undersea cables have a late-1800s treaty signed in IIRC Paris that was intended to cover telecommunications cables, but I expect probably also extends to power cables; undersea power transmission cables weren’t a thing back then, but the actual wording of the treaty doesn’t limit the treaty to telecom cables, just uses the term “cable”. But there was never a corresponding treaty signed for pipelines. Companies just started building them without first building up legal support for them.
googles
Yeah, here’s the cable treaty. From 1884:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Convention_for_the_Protection_of_Submarine_Telegraph_Cables
Interesting, thanks!