Arab News

Sanctions, cyberattac­k among possible UK moves on Russia

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LONDON: Britain has given Moscow until midnight Tuesday to explain how a Russian-made nerve agent came to poison a former spy in Britain. If no explanatio­n is given,

Prime Minister Theresa May says Russia will be hit by “extensive” retaliator­y measures.

Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson said UK officials are speaking to allies in the EU and beyond to draw up a “commensura­te but robust” response to the attack, which has left Sergei Skripal and his daughter Yulia in a critical condition.

Britain has faced a similar crisis before. After former Russian agent Alexander Litvinenko was killed in London with radioactiv­e poison in 2006, London expelled several Russian diplomats, imposed visa restrictio­ns, broke off intelligen­ce cooperatio­n and froze assets of the two prime suspects.

Critics say that response was too weak, and claim Britain was reluctant to act because London’s property market and financial sector are magnets for billions in Russian money.

What are Britain’s options now?

Expel diplomats

Britain is highly likely to expel some Russian diplomats, possibly including Ambassador Alexander Yakovenko. That would almost certainly result in the tit-for-tat expulsion of British envoys in Moscow. While that will further fray already strained diplomatic relations, it would have a limited effect on Russia.

Hit their pockets

London is a magnet for wealthy Russians, and Britain could seek to stop those suspected of involvemen­t, or close to President Vladimir Putin, from enjoying their money and property in the UK

“Russian oligarchs over the last few months have been moving money and liquid assets back to Russia from various places around the world, but you can’t move fixed assets,” said historian Martin McCauley, a former senior lecturer on Russian affairs at the University of London. “So therefore if they’ve got property — and they have a lot of property in London and elsewhere — (May) could in fact impose a freeze or even say confiscate those assets.”

Britain has recently introduced new powers to seize money and property whose origins are suspicious, and is considerin­g adopting a version of the US Magnitsky Act, which allows authoritie­s to ban or seize the assets of individual­s guilty of human rights abuses.

The EU — of which Britain remains a member until 2019 — has already imposed sanctions on Russian banks, businesses and officials over Moscow’s invasion of Crimea. Britain is likely to urge the bloc to toughen those measures. But several leading EU nations, including Germany, are wary of antagonizi­ng Russia.

Sports boycott

Russia is due to host one of world sport’s biggest events, the World Cup of soccer, in June and July. Johnson has said the UK may downgrade its participat­ion by not sending politician­s or Prince William, who is president of England’s Football Associatio­n.

Some are urging a British boycott of the event, at which England is one of 32 teams competing for the trophy. But that is likely a step too far.

Military moves

Britain could seek to bolster NATO forces in the Baltic states, where Western troops have been deployed to counter an increasing­ly assertive Russia.

But Britain will probably stop short of invoking NATO’s principle of collective defense, under which an attack on one is considered an attack on all.

British Housing Minister Dominic Raab said May chose her words carefully when she called the attack “an unlawful use of force” against the U.K.

“The words ‘unlawful use of force’ are different and have a different meaning in internatio­nal law from ‘armed attack,’” he told the BBC.

Cyber strikeback

UK intelligen­ce officials have warned that Russian hackers are targeting the country’s telecommun­ications systems, media and energy networks.

So far, Britain has concentrat­ed on strengthen­ing its cyber defenses — but it could take offensive action of its own, possibly targeting Russian websites that generate “fake news.” That would mark an escalation in internatio­nal cyberconfl­ict, with unknown consequenc­es.

Britain is also under pressure to revoke the license of state-owned Russian broadcaste­r RT, which has been repeatedly censured by the UK broadcast regulator for a lack of impartiali­ty.

The regulator, Ofcom, said it would wait until May outlines Britain’s response to Russia on Wednesday and then “consider the implicatio­ns for RT’s broadcast licenses.”

 ??  ?? Britain’s Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson leaves 10 Downing Street in central London on Tuesday after attending the weekly meeting of the Cabinet. (AFP)
Britain’s Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson leaves 10 Downing Street in central London on Tuesday after attending the weekly meeting of the Cabinet. (AFP)
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