Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
On 17-18 November 2024, [1] two submarine telecommunication cables, the BCS East-West Interlink and C-Lion1 fibre-optic cables were disrupted in the Baltic Sea.The incidents involving both cables occurred in close proximity of each other and near-simultaneously which prompted accusations from European government officials and NATO member states of hybrid warfare and sabotage as the cause of ...
Undersea cables between Finland-Germany and Lithuania-Sweden were cut, potentially sabotaged. The incident is one of a number of similar incidents in recent years, highlighting the vulnerability ...
Finland, Germany, Sweden and Lithuania -- after two underwater telecommunications cables across the Baltic Sea were cut in two separate incidents in recent days, a European official told ABC News ...
Two undersea cables carrying internet data deep in the Baltic Sea were damaged, European telecommunications companies said this week, drawing warnings from European governments of possible Russian ...
European officials are looking toward Russia after two submarine internet cables in the Baltic Sea were suddenly disrupted in an apparent sabotage operation, just weeks after the United States ...
Submarine cables are internationally regulated within the framework of the United Nations Convention o the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS), in particular through the provisions of Articles 112 and 97, 112 and 115, which mandate operational freedom to lay cables in international waters and beyond the continental shelf and reward measures to protect ...
Two undersea internet cables in the Baltic Sea have been suddenly disrupted, according to local telecommunications companies, amid fresh warnings of possible Russian interference with global ...
List of the suppliers of the world's undersea communications cables — at KIDORF.com "Internet/Tel Undersea Cables of the World". Archived from the original on 2 January 2013}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown ; Map of all submarine communications cables currently in use — at KDDI.com, July 2002