The Press

Russians ‘reaping chaos’

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A Russian military intelligen­ce squad behind the Salisbury Novichok attack is now behaving ‘‘with impunity’’ to reap chaos around the world, senior Whitehall sources warned yesterday.

Theresa May yesterday revealed that the GRU, Moscow’s shadowy spy network, had plotted the nerve agent assault on Sergei Skripal on the orders of the Kremlin to ‘‘send a message’’ to other suspected traitors.

The two senior GRU officers dispatched to carry out the attack were named as Alexander Petrov and Ruslan Boshirov – fake identities given to them by the agency, although the men’s real names are understood to be known to British authoritie­s.

Downing Street vowed to do everything in its power to ‘‘dismantle’’ the GRU and warned of further sanctions and retaliatio­n against Russia, but admitted police were powerless to extradite the men.

Whitehall sources accused the GRU of acting ‘‘with a sense of impunity’’ and of developing an appetite for brazen operations such as the attack on Col Skripal as well as cyber hacking and the shooting down of the passenger jet MH-17 over Ukraine.

The source said: ‘‘The Kremlin must be made to feel it cannot act with impunity. Russia must see that there is a price attached to what they do.’’

The source branded the GRU ‘‘aggressive and well funded’’ and with ‘‘direct support of and access to’’ Vladimir Putin, suggesting the attack was sanctioned by the Russian president. Other authoritie­s accused the GRU of funding private armies in Syria; cyber attacks on the US; assassinat­ions at home and abroad; and ‘‘deniable’’ military operations around the world.

In a dramatic day of developmen­ts, counter-terrorism police named the chief suspects as Petrov and Boshirov, both in their 40s, who had flown to Britain under false identities but were using genuine passports issued by the Russian state.

They released a series of CCTV images showing the two GRU officers in Salisbury minutes before Skripal, 66, and his daughter Yulia, 33, were poisoned with Novichok smeared on their front door handle.

Police revealed a detailed timeline of the 54 hours the men spent in Britain from the moment they touched down at Gatwick on Friday Mar 2 to their departure from the UK hours after the Skripals had collapsed in Wiltshire.

It also emerged that the men used a £49-a-night east London hotel as their base during the mission, with traces of the weapons-grade nerve agent found in the hotel room. The Novichok was smuggled into Britain in a fake Nina Ricci perfume bottle, bought in Russia, with the nozzle specially adapted to deliver the poison.

Skripal was convicted in 2006 in Moscow of spying for MI6 but released in a prisoner swap in 2010, resettling in Salisbury. A security source said: ‘‘There is a particular keenness among the GRU to get their revenge on traitors.’’

The Novichok container was discarded in a bin by the hitmen and picked up by Charlie Rowley, 45, a local resident who gave it to his girlfriend Dawn Sturgess, 44. She died after applying the nerve agent to her wrists.

Rowley, who remains in hospital, told ITV News: ‘‘It is progress to see the suspects identified in the Skripal case. But we need to make sure that these people are also held accountabl­e for Dawn’s murder.’’

The Crown Prosecutio­n Service has charged Petrov and Boshirov with a series of offences including the attempted murder of the Skripals and of Detective Sergeant Nick Bailey, who searched their home and later fell ill. But police decided not to request their extraditio­n because it would be futile. Instead, a European Arrest Warrant has been issued which officers hope to enact should the suspects ever leave their homeland and travel to another European nation.

‘‘The Kremlin must be made to feel it cannot act with impunity. Russia must see that there is a price attached to what they do.’’ Whitehall source

 ?? AP ?? This still taken from CCTV and issued by the Metropolit­an Police in London shows Ruslan Boshirov and Alexander Petrov at Salisbury train station on March 3, 2018. British prosecutor­s have charged the two Russian men with the nerve agent poisoning of ex-spy Sergei Skripal and his daughter Yulia in Salisbury.
AP This still taken from CCTV and issued by the Metropolit­an Police in London shows Ruslan Boshirov and Alexander Petrov at Salisbury train station on March 3, 2018. British prosecutor­s have charged the two Russian men with the nerve agent poisoning of ex-spy Sergei Skripal and his daughter Yulia in Salisbury.
 ?? AP ?? This photo provided by the Metropolit­an Police shows a perfume bottle and applicator recovered by police. They say Russian agents use the bottle to smuggle Novichok poison into Britain.
AP This photo provided by the Metropolit­an Police shows a perfume bottle and applicator recovered by police. They say Russian agents use the bottle to smuggle Novichok poison into Britain.

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