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World News See other World News Articles Title: Russian to Judgment: Who Poisoned Sergei Skripal? The all-purpose Russia did it explanation makes no sense The latest example of alleged Russian perfidy the poisoning of Sergei Skripal and his daughter, Yulia is yet another case of faith-based attribution. In accusing Russia of some heinous crime in this instance, the murder of a former double agent working for MI6 one neednt present any real evidence: its only necessary to point the finger at the Kremlin. And of course we havent had any real evidence proffered by the British government: Prime Minister Theresa May simply declared that Russia is the culprit and gave a midnight deadline for the Kremlin to explain how its nerve weapon as NBC reported it was used to attacked Skripal on British soil. She has since announced the expulsion of 23 Russian diplomats. The absurdity of this was inadvertently underscored by the comments of Vil Mirzayanov, the Russian-born chemist who first revealed the existence of Novichok, the nerve agent developed by the Russians. Mirzayanov came to the United States in 1995: in 2007, he published a book, State Secrets, which tells his story as a chemist working in Russias secret chemical weapons facilities. Now 83, he gives the following explanation for the attack on Skripal: Only the Russians developed this class of nerve agents, said the chemist. They kept it and are still keeping it in secrecy. The only other possibility, he said, would be that someone used the formulas in his book to make such a weapon. Oh, but what kind of a person would do that? Why, that would have to mean that they were trying to frame the Russians by making it look like the work of the FSB, the Russian intelligence agency. And we all know thats just not possible right? The evidence we are given to support the Russia-did-it scenario is that only the Russians have access to Novichok, and that it is such a sophisticated poison that only a state actor could have pulled off this attack. Yet the logic of this line of reasoning is quite shaky: Mirzayanov tells us it could be duplicated by anyone with a copy of his book! And this New York Times piece, which assumes Russia is the culprit, cites one Andrew C. Weber, a former assistant secretary of defense for nuclear, chemical and biological defense programs, who visited a secret, abandoned Soviet research facility in Nukus, Uzbekistan, which the United States was asked to helped destroy in the early 2000s. Weber describes evidence of experiments on dogs, and then goes on to claim that Its obviously tightly controlled by the Russian government. Its implausible to me possible, but not probable that this chemical weapon would have been diverted from a Russian facility. It would be well guarded. Yet an American official was wandering around the facility, described as abandoned and so how well-guarded was it? Furthermore, during the time described by Weber, Uzbekistan was no longer a part of the Soviet Union: the country declared its independence on August 31, 1991. After that, whatever happened to the Novichok production facilities in Uzbekistan was out of Moscows control and stores of the lethal poison couldve wound up anywhere. Aside from the complete lack of credible evidence, the case against the Russians rests on a misunderstanding of the procedure involved in spy swaps. When Skripal was pardoned and released by the Russians in 2010, along with three others convicted of spying for the West, ten Russian spies were handed over to the Kremlin: according to the spy etiquette informally in force during the cold war era, these people were safe from retribution, because otherwise there would be no point to swapping prisoners. So what would make the Russians break this cardinal rule of spycraft? No explanation is being given. As professor Anthony Glees, the director of the Center for Security and Intelligence Studies at the University of Buckingham, points out: if the Russians did indeed poison Skripal, no one will ever do a swap with them again. And he asks the logical question: if Russia had really wanted to kill Skripal, why didnt they execute him when they had him in custody? Of course theres a Trump connection to all this: it turns out that Skripal was close to one Pablo Miller, the MI6 agent who originally recruited him and who just happens to have worked for Orbis Business Intelligence, Christopher Steeles outfit that put together the infamous dossier on Trump. As The Telegraph reports: The consultant, who The Telegraph is declining to identify, lived close to Col Skripal and is understood to have known him for some time
The Telegraph understands that Col Skripal moved to Salisbury in 2010 in a spy swap and became close to a security consultant employed by Christopher Steele, who compiled the Trump dossier. The British security consultant, according to a LinkedIn social network account that was removed from the internet in the past few days, is also based in Salisbury. On the same LinkedIn account, the man listed consultancy work with Orbis Business Intelligence, according to reports. The consultant is identified elsewhere as Pablo Miller, a.k.a., also Antonio Alvarez de Hidalgo. The usual suspects are speculating that Skripal was targeted by the Russians because he had a hand in compiling the Trump dossier and yet the former Russian intelligence agent hadnt been in his home country since 2010, and has lived in Salisbury, Great Britain, since that time. Orbis has denied he had any role in creating the dossier. And even if he did play some role in the dossiers compilation, what would be the point of killing him especially in a way that would point to Russia? It makes no sense. But then again, war propaganda doesnt have to make sense, it has only to inspire fear and loathing. This is a replay of the Litvinenko affair, which was based on similarly dubious evidence.: even the official British government report was ambiguous about Russias alleged responsibility for poisoning the exiled anti-Putin propagandist. It says that Putin probably approved the murder. Probably. No need for exactitude in these matters: after all, were only talking about a country with enough nuclear weapons aimed at us and the Brits to wipe out the entire population of the planet. So probably is good enough. Alexander Litvinenko was involved with all sorts of dubious characters, many of them linked to the Russian Mafia: any one of a number of these fine fellows couldve killed him. As more of Skripals story comes out, one suspects that the same will prove true in his case. That wont stop the War Party from concocting yet another conspiracy theory pointing to the all-powerful Vladimir Putin as the source of all thats bad in the world. Dont fall for it: instead, ask the question thats pinned to the top of my Twitter feed: Wheres the evidence? Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread
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