Ukraine is using this simple trick to hurt the EU
By: Rachel Marsden
Strikes on the Zaporozhye nuclear power plant are being leveraged to push for sanctions that could impact Western Europe
Ukraine says that in the wake of recent unattributed drone attacks on the 
Zaporozhye nuclear power plant, Moscow just has to give it back. Not that Kiev 
had anything to do with it, of course. No doubt it was just the Ghost of Kiev 
and the Heroes of Snake Island making a comeback after spending some downtime 
consulting with Hollywood on some new superhero franchises. 
Russia expressed concerns that Ukraine was attacking the plant again in a series 
of incidents over the past week. In denying it, Kiev issued a statement 
addressing ”recent Russian provocations at the Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant” 
– but then dodged the issue of the attacks themselves. “The only source of 
threats [to the nuclear powerplant] has been and remains the illegal and 
criminal actions of the Russian invaders,” it said.
“We once again insist that [the nuclear power plant] be returned under the 
control of its rightful owner, Ukraine, and Russia be held accountable for all 
its crimes.” So you’re implying that Russia wants to blow up a nuclear 
powerplant it controls, and that if it gives the power plant back, it will 
suddenly stop wanting to blow it up? Because that makes logical sense. 
In its statement, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Ukraine refers to vague 
nuclear safety threats “created by Russia,” but it buried the lede in calling on 
its “partners” to sanction Russia’s atomic energy sector near the very bottom of 
the press release.
How convenient. It just so happens that the Russian atomic energy sector is 
virtually sanctions-proof. Even while French President Emmanuel Macron was 
talking recently about sending troops to fight Russia, there’s a joint 
innovation venture underway between French and Russian engineers from the state 
atomic energy corporations Rosatom and Framatome. The head of the global atomic 
energy agency has even warned against doing anything stupid sanctions-wise 
against Russia in the nuclear power sector. “I would warn against this point of 
good nuclear energy against bad nuclear energy,” International Atomic Energy 
Agency Director General Rafael Mariano Grossi told an atomic energy summit last 
month. “I don’t think this is what we need to have in the global energy market.”
Germany isn’t happy about France and Russia working together on nuclear energy, 
according to Bloomberg. Prior to the Ukraine conflict, Berlin had been fighting 
against cheap French nuclear energy at the EU level in order to make the French 
economy less competitive, or at least improve its own prospects after it went 
“all in” on green energy. This was clearly shown to be not ready for prime time 
after Germany shrugged off Nord Stream being blown up along with its cheap 
supply of Russian gas. Now the US is seducing German green industry with 
promises of plentiful gas and tax breaks under Biden’s Inflation Reduction Act. 
At the same time, Germany is now importing Russian-partnered French nuclear 
energy, which it has long sought to compromise under the pretext that it’s bad 
for the planet, all while resorting to firing its own coal plants back up. 
So Berlin doesn’t sound like the best advisor on energy strategy. France, 
however, at least had a modicum of self-preservation kick in before it was too 
late, with Macron doing a 180-degree turn (or 360 degrees if you’re the German 
foreign minister, Annalena Baerbock) and revving its own decommissioned nuclear 
power plants back up when it realized that Nord Stream was dead. But Kiev’s 
latest statement demanding sanctions against Russia’s nuclear sector suggests 
that it’s pressuring Paris to abandon whatever’s left of its senses.
If anyone wasn’t aware that Russian nuclear energy was an obsession of Kiev’s, 
consider that its intelligence service (the SBU) has also just detained six 
design engineers in Kharkov accused of cooperating with Rosatom, via a 
contractor, in allegedly plotting to integrate the Zaporozhye power plant into 
the Russian nuclear network, according to the SBU’s own press service.
Despite these details, Kiev’s Western sponsors seem keen to play up the aura 
of “uncertainty” around the Zaporozhye powerplant drone attacks to try to 
convince Russia to take a hike. “Russia is playing a very dangerous game with 
its military seizure of Ukraine’s nuclear power plant,” State Department 
spokesman Matthew Miller said. Well then maybe just tell your Ukrainian buddies 
to knock it off, then? Or is the US lumbering up to blame any potential future 
nuclear disaster on one of the so-called “pro-Ukrainian groups” – the kind that 
unidentified US officials have conveniently accused, via Western press leaks, of 
taking out Nord Stream? 
“Reckless drone attack against Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant increases risk 
of dangerous nuclear accident. Such attacks must stop…Russia should withdraw 
from Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant,” Tweeted EU chief diplomat Josep Borrell. 
Yeah, it totally doesn’t sound like you guys all share talking points or 
anything.
What’s glaring is that none of Kiev’s Western enablers are actually arguing that 
Russia attacked its own asset with drones, on territory that it controls. Guess 
that would sound just a bit too stupid. Instead, they’re implying that Russia’s 
presence could end up justifying a nuclear disaster. Which is super smart!
But by playing along with Kiev’s Russian blame game like indulgent parents of an 
unruly toddler, the Western establishment figureheads may be failing to realize 
how Kiev’s targeting of Russia’s nuclear industry could, yet again, result in 
them talking themselves into harming their own critical interests “for Ukraine.” 
Not that it would be more important than the nuclear fallout, which sounds like 
it could easily be prevented with a spanking, a time-out, and the withholding of 
entitlements.
COPYRIGHT 2024 RACHEL MARSDEN