“All done”. That would be the text of the text message that Russia says former British Prime Minister Liz Truss sent to US Secretary of State Antony Blinken immediately after the Nord Stream gas pipeline blast. However, no evidence was provided to support this alleged message.
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“All done“This would be the text of the SMS that, according to Russia, the former British Prime Minister Liz Truss it would have sent Antony Blinken to the US Secretary of State immediately after the Nord Stream gas pipeline explosion on September 26.
For days Russia has been claiming that the British bombed the pipeline, and now Moscow is seizing another theory that has never been proven: the one that former Prime Minister Liz Truss – whose phone was allegedly hacked by the Russians last summer, according to the Mail on Sunday – he would have flashed this message saying “it’s done!” sent. But where do these accusations come from?
To reveal the alleged content of Truss’s message to the number one American diplomat, which Ria Novosti repeatedly reports, it would have been the German IT entrepreneur with Finnish citizenship Kim dot com, accused of fraud by the FBI and currently a resident of New Zealand. “Impossible not to miss the text message that then-British Prime Minister Liz Truss sent to US Secretary of State Antony Blinken a minute after the pipelines blew up, telling him that ‘everything is settled,'” the secretary said Security Councilor Nikolai Patrushev at a meeting of secretaries of the security councils of the CIS countries.
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The SMS would prove the British Navy’s involvement in the attack on Nord Stream, according to Dotcom. But no one knows what the sources of dotcom arewhich offers no solid evidence for the claim.
Dotcom, real name Kim Schmitz, is a German-Finnish computer scientist who previously ran the site mega upload, which allowed illegal viewing of films. Convicted in 1998 of a scam based on the sale of stolen phone card numbers, he was also arrested in 2012 on conspiracy charges related to his hacking activities.
According to London, his revelations would be about Liz Truss’ text message unfounded and in any case they would not be sufficient to prove the involvement of the British Navy in the sabotage of the Nord Stream. Maria Zakharova, a spokeswoman for the Kremlin, was also rather cautious. When asked about the case, she settled for the question, “Did Liz Truss send that message?”.
In short, one thing is certain at the moment, the Russian version lacks solid evidence.