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The Nord Stream Conspiracy: The Inside Story of the Explosion that Shook the World

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THE EXPLOSIVE INSIDE STORY OF THE MOST DARING ACT OF SABOTAGE IN MODERN HISTORY

'A spectacular feat of investigative journalism' NEW YORK TIMES

'Gripping' FINANCIAL TIMES

'Fascinating' CHRISTIANE AMANPOUR

'Like London Falling… an absolute thriller' ALASTAIR CAMPBELL (The Rest is Politics)

'As compelling as a spy thriller' SIMON SEBAG MONTEFIORE

In September 2022, Scandinavian seismologists detected what seemed to be a huge undersea earthquake or volcanic eruption. These signals were caused by several devastating explosions that destroyed Nord Stream, the $20 billion pipeline carrying cheap Russian gas to Europe under the Baltic Sea. The mysterious blasts shifted global geopolitics, disrupted European economies and triggered a manhunt that strained relations within the NATO alliance.

Despite capturing the imagination of millions, the mystery of who blew up the pipeline has so far gone unsolved – was it the CIA? Was it part of the shadow war between Russia and the West? Could Putin himself have been behind it? Drawing on years of first-hand reporting and exclusive access to key players – including the saboteurs, the investigators and high-level intelligence – this deeply reported non-fiction thriller by an award-winning Wall Street Journal correspondent reveals the true story behind one of the most remarkable geopolitical mysteries of our time.

NEW YORK TIMES EDITORS' CHOICE

FINANCIAL TIMES BOOK TO LOOK OUT FOR IN 2026

Author: Pancevski Bojan
Publisher: HUTCHINSON HEINEMANN
Pages: 336
ISBN: 9781529155464
Cover: Paperback
Edition Number: 1
Release Year: 2026

Bojan Pancevski is the award-winning Chief European Political Correspondent of the Wall Street Journal, covering European and global affairs. He produces major investigations, agenda-setting scoops, analyses of politics and diplomacy, and deeply reported features. Before joining the WSJ, he covered Europe for The Times and the Sunday Times. He has won journalism awards in Britain, the U.S. and Germany, and was part of the Journal’s team of Pulitzer Prize finalists for International Reporting in 2025. He is fluent in several European languages, including German and Russian.

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