Chattanooga Times Free Press

British PM: Russia likely behind attack on former spy

- BY JILL LAWLESS AND DANICA KIRKA

LONDON — Russia is “highly likely” to blame for poisoning a former spy and his daughter with a military-grade nerve agent, British Prime Minister Theresa May said Monday, demanding Moscow give a compelling explanatio­n or face “extensive” retaliatio­n.

May told lawmakers in a statement that without a credible response from Russia by the end of today, Britain would consider the attack on Sergei Skripal and his daughter in a quiet English city “an unlawful use of force by the Russian state against the United Kingdom.”

“There can be no question of business as usual with Russia,” she said, without saying what measures Britain might take.

Russian Foreign Ministry spokeswoma­n Maria Zakharova dismissed the allegation­s as a “circus show in the British Parliament.”

Skripal, 66, and his 33-year-old daughter, Yulia, remain in critical condition after being found unconsciou­s March 4 in Salisbury. A detective who came in contact with them is in serious but stable condition.

May said British scientists determined that Skripal and his daughter were poisoned with Novichok, a class of nerve agent developed by the Soviet Union.

She said it was “highly likely” the substance came from Russia, and there were two possible explanatio­ns.

“Either this was a direct act by the Russian state against our country, or the Russian government lost control of this potentiall­y catastroph­ically damaging nerve agent and allowed it to get into the hands of others,” she said.

May said Britain had given the Russian ambassador in London a deadline of today to explain which version is true. She said Russia also must “provide full and complete disclosure” of its Novichok program to the Organizati­on for the Prohibitio­n of Chemical Weapons, the oversight body for the internatio­nal chemical weapons convention.

May spoke in the House of Commons after she chaired a National Security Council meeting to hear the latest evidence in the case. She has been under mounting pressure to hit Russia with sanctions, diplomatic expulsions and other measures in response to the poisoning, the latest in a string of mysterious mishaps to befall Russians in Britain in recent years.

May said Britain would consider tough action if Russia’s explanatio­n is inadequate, though she didn’t give details.

She said Britain would be prepared to take “much more extensive measures” than the expulsions and limited sanctions imposed after the death of former Russian agent Alexander Litvinenko, who was poisoned by drinking tea laced with radioactiv­e polonium in London in 2006.

“We will not tolerate such a brazen attempt to murder innocent civilians on our soil,” May added.

The White House said the use of the nerve agent “is an outrage” but wasn’t ready to say Russia was responsibl­e.

Spokeswoma­n Sarah Huckabee Sanders called the poisoning “reckless, indiscrimi­nate and irresponsi­ble,” adding that the U.S. stands by its ally.

British opposition lawmakers are urging the adoption of a version of the United States’ Magnitsky Act, a law allowing authoritie­s to ban or seize the assets of individual­s guilty of human rights abuses. It is named for Sergei Magnitsky, a lawyer who died in a Russian prison after exposing a $230 million fraud involving organized crime and a Russian government official in 2008.

Critics of the British government have said the U.K.’s response to Russian wrongdoing has been muted because London’s property market and financial sector are magnets for billions in Russian money.

James Nixey, head of the Russia program at think-tank Chatham House, said Britain has for years avoided tough decisions about Russia.

“There has been a lot of tough talk over the years and almost no action to protect our national security and integrity,” he said. “We have sent mixed signals to Russia. We have talked tough by calling it names and expressing our dislike of the regime, but at the same time, we have been very much open for business with Russia, of any kind.”

He said May will have a difficult decision Wednesday, when she has to spell out how Britain will respond.

Alastair Hay, professor emeritus of environmen­tal toxicology at the University of Leeds, said May’s remarks amounted to “saying that Britain has been attacked with chemical weapons.”

Noting that Russia had announced previously it had destroyed its stocks of chemical weapons, Hay said May’s remarks raised “a whole new set of questions: Does Russia have another kind of chemical weapons program that it hasn’t declared?”

Many see echoes between the Skripal case and the killing of Litvinenko, which a British inquiry concluded was the work of the Russian state, probably on the orders of President Vladimir Putin.

The Kremlin has denied involvemen­t in Litvinenko’s death and dismissed claims it was behind the attack on the Skripals.

Putin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told reporters that Sergei Skripal worked for British intelligen­ce and was poisoned on British soil, and therefore the incident “has nothing to do with Russia, let alone the Russian leadership.”

Skripal was a Russian military intelligen­ce officer when he was recruited to spy for Britain in the 1990s. He was jailed in Russia in 2006 for revealing state secrets before being freed in a spy swap in 2010. He had settled in Salisbury, 90 miles southwest of London.

Almost 200 troops, including soldiers trained in chemical warfare and decontamin­ation, have been deployed to Salisbury to assist the police investigat­ion into where the nerve agent came from and how it was delivered.

British officials have said the risk to the public is low but urged people who visited the Zizzi restaurant or Mill pub, where the Skripals went before their collapse, to wash their clothes as a precaution. Some have questioned why it took health authoritie­s a week to issue the advice.

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Theresa May

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