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Nord Stream 2 pipe-laying in Swedish waters in the Baltic Sea (Photo: nord-stream2.com)

Feature

Mustard gas and cod: Last chance to stop Nord Stream 2?

Nord Stream 2 pipe-laying in Swedish waters in the Baltic Sea (Photo: nord-stream2.com)

First, the Nazis, then, the Soviet Union - shortly after World War Two - dumped tens of thousands of tonnes of chemical weapons 70m to 120m down in the Baltic Sea, near the Danish island of Bornholm.

Navigation equipment at the time was not very good and the Soviet Union did not record the exact locations, so the precise spots are unknown.

The old munitions have also drifted from place to place over the decades, with bombs in wooden crates sometimes washing up on Danish and Swe...

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Author Bio

Andrew Rettman is EUobserver's Foreign Affairs Editor. He has been writing about foreign and security affairs for EUobserver since 2005. He is Polish but grew up in the UK. He has also written for The Guardian, The Telegraph, and The Times of London.

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