Los Angeles Times

Ex-spy’s collapse under scrutiny

Incident in Britain evokes the 2006 poisoning case of another Russian.

- By Christina Boyle, Laura King and Sabra Ayres laura.king@latimes.com Twitter: @laurakingL­AT Times staff writer King reported from Washington and special correspond­ents Boyle and Ayres from London and Moscow, respective­ly.

LONDON — As clues emerged Tuesday in the case of the Russian ex-spy who was stricken in a British provincial city by a sudden life-threatenin­g ailment, one name cropped up again and again: Alexander Litvinenko.

Litvinenko was the former Russian intelligen­ce officer and outspoken Kremlin critic who died an agonizing death in London in 2006 of poisoning with radioactiv­e polonium-210. A decade later, a British inquiry blamed Russian intelligen­ce for targeting him, with President Vladimir Putin’s likely blessing.

British officials strenuousl­y cautioned against any premature casting of blame in the collapse Sunday of a man identified as Sergei Skripal, 66, who was given refuge in the United Kingdom after a spy-centric 2010 prisoner swap with Russia.

But reflecting the extraordin­ary circumstan­ces, British authoritie­s also said the investigat­ion was being led by counterint­elligence personnel, and the government of Prime Minister Theresa May warned of serious consequenc­es for any parties found responsibl­e.

Moscow denied any knowledge of what befell Skripal, who — together with a 33-year-old woman named on Tuesday in news reports as his daughter Yulia — was found semi-paralyzed and vomiting on a bench outside a shopping center in the British cathedral city of Salisbury.

Both he and his daughter, who was reported to have been visiting from Russia, remained in critical condition and under intensive care, officials said Tuesday.

A statement from London’s Metropolit­an Police said Tuesday that counterter­rorism investigat­ors had taken the lead in the case because of “unusual circumstan­ces” requiring specialize­d expertise, but said it was not yet being treated as a terrorist incident.

“This has been a fastpaced investigat­ion, and our focus has been on what caused these people to become critically ill, and whether or not criminal activity took place,” said Kier Pritchard, the chief constable of Wiltshire, the county where Salisbury is located.

Police said there was no indication of risk to the general public, although emergency personnel called to the scene had undergone medical checks.

Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson, speaking to lawmakers Tuesday, invoked the Litvinenko case, although he was careful to draw only a theoretica­l comparison, at least so far.

Citing “echoes of the death of Alexander Litvinenko,” Johnson told lawmakers: “I say to government­s around the world that no attempt to take innocent life on [British] soil will go unsanction­ed or unpunished.”

Without specifical­ly blaming the Kremlin for attacking Skripal, Johnson described Russia as a “malign and disruptive force.”

Other observers suggested it would take a long time for the full facts to come to light.

Oliver Bullough, a journalist and author who wrote extensivel­y about the Litvinenko case, noted a decade elapsed before a British inquiry came to fruition. It’s too early to determine whether Russia struck at Skripal just as British officials said it did at Litvinenko, Bullough said, but “the parallels are pretty stark.”

“Again, it’s a former Russian intelligen­ce officer living in refuge in the U.K. who has taken ill after exposure to an unknown substance,” he said.

The Kremlin, for a second day, professed puzzlement Tuesday over the events in Salisbury and offered to assist authoritie­s in the investigat­ion. Putin allies were quick to accuse Britain, and the West in general, of seeking to sabotage the Russian president in advance of an election this month that he is virtually guaranteed to win.

But Paul Goble, a former State Department analyst, said that if anything, the growing furor surroundin­g Skripal could boost the Kremlin chief’s domestic standing.

Goble told the BBC that implied accusation­s against Moscow help feed the Putin narrative that “Russia is a besieged fortress, and that people need to rally around him to resist the West.”

At the time of Litvinenko’s killing, many Western analysts said his poisoning appeared aimed at driving home a brutal message: Enemies of Putin, a onetime KGB officer, could not expect to find haven anywhere — especially not a turncoat spy. Skripal was convicted in Russia of being a double agent for Britain.

The Litvinenko case generated a wave of internatio­nal outrage. He succumbed to the effects of a fatal dose of polonium three weeks after he was believed to have ingested the poison as he sipped a cup of tea at a London hotel bar. Images of the 43-year-old defector lying bald and wan in his hospital bed, weakening daily, flashed around the world.

As they did in the Litvinenko inquiry, British authoritie­s aimed for a detailed reconstruc­tion of events leading up to the incident. They were scrutinizi­ng CCTV footage, interviewi­ng witnesses and scouring locales like a pizzeria and pub for clues as to Skripal’s and his daughter’s movements and activities before they were taken ill.

In Moscow, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov called the episode “tragic,” but professed complete ignorance of the circumstan­ces.

“We don’t possess any informatio­n about what could have been the cause, and what this could be connected to,” Peskov said in a phone call with journalist­s. Asked about parallels being drawn to the Litvinenko case by analysts and in British media reports, Peskov retorted sarcastica­lly: “Well, that didn’t take them long.”

The Russian Embassy in London, in a statement on its website, denounced “speculatio­ns which ultimately lead to a vilificati­on of Russia.”

For Litvinenko’s loved ones, though, the unsettling episode opened up old wounds.

“It’s like deja vu,” Litvinenko’s widow, Marina, told BBC Radio 4, citing Russia’s “old-style KGB system.”

“It’s still all the same,” she said. “If there is an order to kill somebody, it will happen.”

 ?? Dan Kitwood Getty Images ?? BRITISH authoritie­s said counterint­elligence investigat­ors are looking into the cause of Sergei Skripal’s illness. The Russian ex-spy was found semi-paralyzed and vomiting on a bench in Salisbury, along with his daughter. The Kremlin denounced...
Dan Kitwood Getty Images BRITISH authoritie­s said counterint­elligence investigat­ors are looking into the cause of Sergei Skripal’s illness. The Russian ex-spy was found semi-paralyzed and vomiting on a bench in Salisbury, along with his daughter. The Kremlin denounced...

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