Biden’s Lack of ‘Decisive Action’ Against Nord Stream 2 ‘Disappointed’ Ukrainians

In a Monday article for the U.S. news outlet Politico, the foreign ministers of Poland and Ukraine called upon U.S. President Joe Biden to do his best “to put an end” to the Russian-Western European energy project Nord Stream 2, as they warned that Russia was strengthening “its grip on Europe’s gas supply,” Sputnik News reports.

Washington’s allies in Eastern and central Europe are reportedly increasingly concerned that President Joe Biden is not displaying a willingness to fight hard to stop a Russian-Western European energy project, the Nord Stream 2 pipeline, from being completed.

On Monday, a source close to Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky was cited by Axios as saying:

“The Ukrainians are a bit disappointed that President Biden did not commit during the Munich [Security] Conference to use every tool in his power to stop Nord Stream 2.”

The source was cited as adding, however, that it is “not too late… for the U.S. to take decisive action, and the Ukrainians are hopeful the Biden administration will do so.”

The comments follow a joint public statement made earlier, on 22 February, by Polish Foreign Minister Zbigniew Rau and his Ukrainian counterpart Dmytro Kuleba.

The two officials penned an op-ed in Politico Europe to urge Joe Biden to do everything in his power to block the construction of the pipeline, warning that Russia was strengthening “its grip on Europe’s gas supply”.

Underscoring that “Poland and Ukraine have long warned against the dangers associated with the construction of Nord Stream 2”, they wrote:

“Our calls for vigilance and boldness were heard in the U.S. Congress, which pressed on with measures designed to stop this dangerous, divisive project. We call on U.S. President Joe Biden to use all means at his disposal to prevent the project from (reaching) completion.”

The two officials also asserted that Washington continues to play “a critically important” role in the project, which is “not about the energy security of Germany”.

In response, State Department spokesperson Ned Price said:

“The Biden administration is committed to using all available tools to counter Russian malign influence and to support transatlantic energy security goals. We have been clear that companies risk sanctions if they are involved in the Nord Stream 2 project. We continue to examine entities involved in potentially sanctionable activity.”

Earlier, on 19 February, the State Department submitted a mandatory report to Congress that was supposed to list all the vessels involved in Nord Stream 2 construction, as well as any insurance firms or other companies involved in the pipeline.

However, the report failed to name any new companies targeted for U.S. sanctions, according to the Wall Street Journal. Republican Senator Jim Risch of Idaho, member of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, slammed the report as incomplete.

“Maritime tracking information makes it clear that ships not covered in today’s report are currently active in supporting Nord Stream 2 construction,” he said, while demanding an “immediate explanation” from the Joe Biden administration, which earlier referred to the pipeline as a “bad deal”.

On Friday last week, the Biden Cabinet introduced another set of sanctions against the Russian-flagged vessel constructing Nord Stream 2, Fortuna, and the ship’s owner KVT-RUS under Protecting Europe’s Energy Security Act (PEESA) in addition to the Countering America’s Adversaries Through Sanctions Act (CAATSA) used against them earlier, under then-president Donald Trump.

However, no new sanctions have been rolled out by the State Department.

U.S. State Department spokesman Ned Price said on Monday that the White House “continues to examine entities involved in potentially sanctionable activity” regarding Nord Stream 2.