UK’s May seeks united EU against Russia over spy poisoning
BRUSSELS — British Prime Minister Theresa May tried to rally European Union leaders into a unified stance Thursday against Russia, saying the poisoning of a former spy on English soil shows that Moscow poses a long-term threat to the West.
But as Russia denied responsibility and slammed Britain’s investigation into the nerveagent attack, some European leaders urged caution while the investigation continues.
Sergei Skripal and his daughter Yulia remain unconscious in critical but stable condition after the March 4 nerve agent attack in the English city of Salisbury, which has sparked an east-west diplomatic crisis reminiscent of the Cold War.
Health o cials said Thursday that Detective Sgt. Nick Bailey, a police o cer who became seriously ill after responding to the nerve agent attack, has been released from a Salisbury hospital.
Britain blames Moscow for the attack, which it says used a military-grade, Soviet-developed nerve agent, and has called Russia a growing threat to Western democracies. Russia has fiercely denied allegations it poisoned Sergei Skripal — a former Russian intelligence o cer convicted of spying for the U.K. — and his daughter.
On Thursday May accused Russia of staging “a brazen and reckless attack” and said “it is clear that the Russian threat doesn’t respect borders.”
She said “the incident in Salisbury was part of a pattern of Russian aggression against Europe and its near neighbors, from the western Balkans to the Middle East.”
Britain and Russia have expelled 23 of each other’s diplomats in a feud that shows no signs of cooling.
Russia’s ambassador to the U.K., Alexander Yakovenko, said Thursday that his country “can’t take British words for granted.” He accused the U.K. of having a “bad record of violating international law and misleading the international community.”
“History shows that British statements must be verified,” he told reporters in London, demanding “full transparency of the investigation and full cooperation with Russia” and the Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons.
Britain says it is complying with the international chemical-weapons watchdog. Experts from the OPCW have come to Britain to take samples of the nerve agent and examine blood from the unconscious Skripals.
May will urge the 27 other leaders over dinner at an EU summit in Brussels to make a strong statement against Russian President Vladimir Putin and to bolster European defenses against Kremlin cyber-meddling and other aggression.
EU foreign ministers have already expressed their “unqualified solidarity” with Britain. But European politicians and leaders vary in how far they are willing to go in blaming Putin’s Kremlin.
French President Emmanuel Macron and German Chancellor Angela Merkel gave May strong backing after meeting her on the sidelines of the EU summit. The British prime minister’s office said they agreed “there is no plausible explanation other than that the Russian state was responsible.”
Lithuanian President Dalia Grybauskaite, whose former Soviet state shares a border with Russia’s Kaliningrad exclave, also o ered her full backing to Britain and said she was weighing whether to expel Russian diplomats from her country over the Salisbury attack.
German politician Manfred Weber, leader of the biggest group in the European Parliament, said Putin “wants to destabilize the European idea” and Europe must be strong in its response.