Albuquerque Journal

Russian diplomats arrive home

Britain expelled 2 dozen agents over poisoning

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MOSCOW — Nearly two dozen Russian diplomats expelled by Britain over the poisoning of an ex-spy arrived home Tuesday, while a scientist involved in the creation of the nerve agent said it could be manufactur­ed by other countries.

Former Russian double agent Sergei Skripal and his daughter, Yulia, are in critical condition in the English city of Salisbury after being poisoned on March 4. Britain said they were poisoned with a class of nerve agent known as Novichok and blamed Russia for the attack.

Russian scientist Leonid Rink told the state RIA Novosti news agency that Britain and others could easily synthesize Novichok after chemical expert Vil Mirzayanov emigrated to the U.S. and revealed its formula.

“It’s easily available to profession­als, and there is no problem for Britain, the U.S. and other developed nations to create such weapon,” he said.

Rink said Novichok had a different name when it was designed in the Soviet Union, arguing that British officials used the name Novichok to convince the public that Russia was to blame for the poisoning.

Britain has dismissed claims the nerve agent could come from the U.K. On Sunday, Russia’s ambassador to the EU suggested the nerve agent could have come from Britain’s chemical weapons research facility, Porton Down. The British government said that was “nonsense.”

On March 14, British Prime Minister Theresa May gave the 23 diplomats — whom she said were undeclared intelligen­ce agents — a week to leave Britain. Russia responded by expelling the same number of British diplomats, who are expected to leave in the coming days.

Russia has fiercely denied any involvemen­t, saying that it had no motive to kill Skripal, who was convicted of spying for Britain but released in a 2010 spy swap. It said that it had completed the destructio­n of its chemical arsenals last year under internatio­nal oversight.

White House spokeswoma­n Sarah Huckabee Sanders said the poisoning didn’t come up in President Donald Trump’s phone call Tuesday with Russian President Vladimir Putin. Sanders said the call, in which Trump congratula­ted Putin on his re-election Sunday, was meant to discuss areas of cooperatio­n between the two countriees.

Putin’s spokesman, Dmitry Peskov, dismissed demands by Britain and its allies that Russia prove its innocence.

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