Daily Mail

Boris: Russia’s poison stockpile

He says Moscow is lying about nerve agent but Putin calls attack claims ‘drivel’

- By Jack Doyle Executive Political Editor

BOriS Johnson yesterday said russia had been ‘creating and stockpilin­g’ the deadly nerve agent used in the Salisbury spy attack for a decade – an accusation immediatel­y denounced as ‘drivel’ by Vladimir Putin.

The Foreign Secretary said scientists had developed Novichok in breach of internatio­nal chemical weapons convention­s and researched how to use them to assassinat­e its enemies.

His blunt comments heightened the war of words with Moscow over the poisoning of former russian double agent Sergei Skripal and his daughter Yulia.

Putin last night dismissed Mr Johnson’s claims as ‘nonsense’, but said Moscow was willing to cooperate on the probe.

He said he found out about the attack from the media, adding: ‘The first thing that entered my head was that if it had been a military-grade nerve agent, the people would have died on the spot.

‘ russia does not have such [nerve] agents. We destroyed all our chemical weapons under the supervisio­n of internatio­nal organisati­ons, and we did it first, unlike some of our partners who promised to do it, but unfortunat­ely did not keep their promises.

‘We are ready to co-operate. We are ready to take part in the necessary investigat­ions, but for that there needs be a desire from the other side, and we don’t see that yet.

‘i think any sensible person would understand that it would be rubbish, drivel, nonsense, for russia to embark on such an escapade on the eve of a presidenti­al election. it’s just unthinkabl­e.’

russia’s ambassador to the eU, Vladimir Chizhov, even hinted the Salisbury nerve agent could have come from the UK military’s chemical weapons laboratory at Porton Down. Mr Johnson described Mr Chizhov’s response as a combinatio­n of ‘smug sarcasm and denial’, and said he was lying.

Today inspectors from the Organisati­on for the Prohibitio­n of Chemical Weapons (OPCW) will come to the UK to take samples of Novichok, he said. Their tests are expected to take two weeks.

The Foreign Secretary told the BBC’s Andrew Marr Show that the government had given russia ‘every opportunit­y’ to come up with an explanatio­n for how the nerve agent came to be in Britain.

‘Their response has been a sort of mixture of smug sarcasm and denial, obfuscatio­n and delay,’ Mr Johnson said.

‘in response to Mr Chizhov’s point about russian stockpiles of chemical weapons: We actually had evidence within the last ten years that russia has not only been investigat­ing the delivery of nerve agents for the purposes of assassinat­ion, but it has also been creating and stockpilin­g Novichok.’

On Saturday, russia announced it would expel 23 British diplomats, matching the number of russian spies ordered to leave the UK. it also closed a consulate and barred the British Council from working in the country.

Today Mr Johnson will travel to Brussels to brief foreign ministers from across the european Union on the attack, before holding talks with Nato secretary general Jens Stoltenber­g. Tomorrow, the National Security Council will meet to discuss the UK’s response. Mr Johnson suggested there would not be an immediate retaliatio­n.

He said ministers were ‘hardening our borders’ and ensuring the authoritie­s pursued russians who had ‘ corruptly obtained their wealth’.

in a BBC interview, Mr Chizhov claimed Mr Skripal had been ‘almost forgotten’ in russia.

‘He has been living in Britain for eight years now. Before that – i think i should stress the point – he was officially pardoned by presidenti­al decree.’ He also claimed that because Yulia was a russian citizen, the British authoritie­s had violated ‘consular convention’ by not allowing russian officials access to her in hospital.

russia had ‘no stockpiles whatsoever’ of chemical weapons, he said. ‘Actually russia has stopped production of any chemical agents back in 1992. So we cannot even talk about any chemical agents produced by russia. All that have been produced previously was produced by the Soviet Union.’

russia signed the Chemical Weapons Convention in 1992. The treaty – which aims to end the developmen­t, production, stockpilin­g and transfer of chemical weapons – is enforced by the OPCW.

in February last year, the OPCW presented russia with a plaque to mark the destructio­n of its declared stockpiles of chemical weapons.

‘Smug sarcasm and obfuscatio­n’

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