"A number of countries, namely Western countries, they don't want to participate in this work (on the resolution). So they have to, they are sending experts, but these experts are just saying 'we don't any need in this kind of investigation at this part,'" Polyanskiy said in an interview with Jackson Hinkle on The Dive podcast.
The official added that the recent media reports on attacks on the Nord Stream pipelines were "really likely to be an attempt to divert attention from really what has happened."
Earlier this week, The Wall Street Journal reported, citing officials, the CIA had warned its counterparts in Germany and other European services that a group might be preparing an attack on the Nord Stream pipelines months before the incident. The Telegraph, in turn, reported that Western intelligence agencies investigating the blasts were looking into the possible involvement of a prominent Ukrainian businessman in the attack. The New York Times reported earlier this week, citing US officials, that a "pro-Ukrainian group" was behind the Nord Stream bombing.
Meanwhile, the German newspaper Die Zeit reported that the group used a boat rented from a Poland-based firm, apparently owned by two Ukrainians.
Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told Sputnik on Wednesday that media reports about the attacks on Russia's Nord Stream pipelines were a coordinated spread of disinformation and an attempt to divert attention from the real perpetrators.
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