Groups of Putin's saboteurs terrorize Germany and Norway?

Jan 10 2022 undersea Cable Connecting Norway With Arctic Satellite
Station Has Been Mysteriously Severed (https://bit.ly/3CGn9RK). An
undersea fiberoptic cable located between mainland Norway and the
Svalbard archipelago in the Arctic Ocean has been put out of action
in a still-mysterious incident. The outage on the subsea
communications cable - the furthest north of its kind anywhere in
the world - follows an incident last year in which different cables
linking an undersea surveillance network off the Norwegian coast
were severed. The latest disruption involves one of two fiberoptic
cables that enable communications between the Norwegian mainland
and Norwegian-administered Svalbard that lies between the mainland
and the North Pole (https://bit.ly/3Ch5uyt). The outage occurred
on the morning of January 7, but was first widely reported yesterday.
The extent of the damage is not clear from the official press release
from Space Norway, the country's space agency, which maintains
the cables primarily in support of the Svalbard Satellite Station
(SvalSat), but it is significant enough that it is expected to
require the services of an ocean-going cable-laying vessel
(https://bit.ly/3Cn3OU2).
On October 5, 2022, the Norwegian media again reported the loss
of communication between the Svolv?r and Henningsvir junction
stations, located at the two extreme points of the Lofoten
archipelago. The Internet in Norway is underwater, since we are
talking about networking hundreds of small fishing villages located
on the islands. Also on the island of Svabald, the Norwegians have
a communication station with SvalSat satellites, built on a mountain
plateau and with about forty antennas. The station is connected to
the mainland by two submarine cables, the receiving stations
of which are connected to the network of the Lofoten archipelago.
Since "research" ships sailed there the day before under the flags
of Russia, it was not difficult for Norway to establish who cut the
cable. However, since SvalSat is a commercial station, NATO did
not raise a scandal.
German rail (https://bit.ly/3fUKvtV) operator Deutsche Bahn said
on Saturday that intentional interference was the cause
of disruptions in the train network in northern Germany.
"Sabotage to cables that were vital for train traffic meant Deutsche
Bahn had to stop trains running in the north this morning for nearly
three hours," Deutsche Bahn said.
The German rail operator said security authorities had taken over
the investigation. There was no immediate information on potential
suspects. Investigators, however, said the communications cables
were cut at one location outside Berlin and another in the western
state of North Rhine-Westphalia. 
German Interior Minister Nancy Faeser said authorities "have to
assume intentional acts" were behind the rail disruption as cables
were severed at two locations.