The United States is interested in maintaining Europe's collective energy security and reserves the right to impose sanctions on those who seek to complete or certify Russia's Nord Stream 2 gas pipeline project, a State Department spokesperson has said in response to an information request from an Ukrinform correspondent.
"As President [Joe] Biden made clear, the Nord Stream 2 pipeline is a bad deal," the spokesperson said, when asked to comment on reports in Western media outlets that sanctions against Nord Stream 2 might be lifted.
According to the response, the United States will continue to work with its Allies and partners "to ensure Europe has a reliable, diversified energy supply network that does not undermine collective security."
"We will monitor activity to complete or certify the pipeline and, if such activity takes place, make a determination on the applicability of sanctions," the spokesperson said.
German-language business newspaper Handelsblatt reported on February 1 that the U.S. government had signaled its readiness to discuss the possible lifting of U.S. sanctions against Nord Stream 2. The newspaper referred to a U.S. official who said the Germans have to offer package solutions to protect Europe's energy security and Ukraine's interests.