Russia’s Federal Security Service announced that it had foiled what it described as a Ukrainian plot to sabotage a natural gas pipeline in the Moscow region on November 29. The agency said a 56-year-old Russian man had been recruited by Ukrainian intelligence while detained in Ukraine and was later sent back to Russia under the guise of deportation. According to the FSB, the suspect was provided with coordinates for a dead drop, instructed to buy a car and tools and supplied with four improvised explosive devices disguised as glue tubes. Officials said he was detained while attempting to drill into the ground above the pipeline. Earlier in the week, the FSB reported shooting two men it claimed were recruited for a separate sabotage attempt on a railway bridge. These developments unfolded as Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban visited Moscow to discuss energy supplies with President Vladimir Putin.
News/Videos/ 'Furious' Zelensky tried to hit Russia’s gas lifeline while a NATO partner snapped its Western line?