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US-made explosives used in plot targeting gas to Hungary – Serbian spy chief

Hungarian Prime Minister Vikor Orban has said Ukraine has the means and willingness to target the TurkStream pipeline
Published 6 Apr, 2026 09:54 | Updated 6 Apr, 2026 15:10
US-made explosives used in plot targeting gas to Hungary – Serbian spy chief

Explosives found at the weekend near the Serbian extension of the TurkStream pipeline, which delivers Russian gas to Hungary, were US-made, the head of Belgrade’s Military Security Agency (VBA), Duro Jovanic, has said.

On Sunday, Serbian President Aleksandar Vucic announced that explosives of “devastating power” had been discovered several hundred meters away from the key energy infrastructure in the municipality of Kanjiza, around 10 km from the Hungarian border. Had they been detonated, they would have caused gas outages in Hungary and northern Serbia, Vucic said, adding that he had swiftly informed Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban of the development.

RT

Later in the day, Jovanic told a press conference that the markings on the explosives make it “unequivocally clear” that they were manufactured in the US. However, he stressed that this “in no way means that the producer is also the mastermind and the executor of the sabotage.”

According to the spy chief, the plot to attack the Balkan Stream pipeline, which is part of the larger TurkStream network, was prepared by a foreign national with military training.

We are looking for that person and that person will certainly be brought in. The only question is whether it will take three days or several months,” he said.

Jovanic denied claims that the VBA has accused Ukraine of being behind the planned sabotage, insisting that “the Serbian military does not interfere in political processes in Serbia, let alone in another country.”

Ukrainian Foreign Ministry spokesman Georgy Tikhy said in a post on X that “we categorically reject attempts to falsely link Ukraine to the incident with explosives found near the TurkStream pipeline in Serbia. Ukraine has nothing to do with this.”

In a comment on Tikhy’s statement, Hungarian Foreign Minister Peter Szijjarto responded, “Yeah, like North Stream 2,” referring to the 2022 explosions in the Baltic Sea that severely damaged a pipeline bringing Russian gas to Germany. Media outlets have reported that a group of Ukrainian saboteurs were behind the attack, although Moscow has insisted it could not have been carried out without the assistance of Western intelligence agencies.

Orban announced on Sunday that he had ordered an increase in military protection for the Hungarian section of the TurkStream pipeline, while accusing Kiev of “working for years to cut Europe from Russian energy.”

The prime minister said that Ukraine has effectively imposed an “oil blockade” on Hungary by cutting Russian supplies via the Druzhba pipeline in January. Budapest rejects Kiev’s claim of the infrastructure being damaged in Russian strikes, arguing that Vladimir Zelensky’s government is deliberately trying to cause an energy crisis in order to influence the Hungarian parliamentary election on April 12.

On Tuesday, Orban visited a gas facility near the border with Serbia, telling journalists that it was not yet clear who was responsible for the sabotage attempt, and that the investigation was ongoing. However, he added that the incident “fits into a sequence of events as the Ukrainians have such capabilities and are willing and able to do such things.”

Speaking about the thwarted sabotage of the TurkStream pipeline, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov noted that “one can suggest with high probability that... this time some traces of the Kiev regime’s involvement will be discovered.” Ukraine had already targeted critical energy infrastructure, he recalled.

Russian President Vladimir Putin warned in February that Moscow possessed intelligence about Kiev planning underwater bomb attacks in the Black Sea against the TurkStream and Blue Stream pipelines.

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