The Day

EU leaders back Britain in blaming Russia over spy poisoning

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Brussels — British Prime Minister Theresa May won the backing of 27 other European Union leaders on Thursday in blaming Russia for the poisoning of a former spy on English soil

EU Council president Donald Tusk tweeted that the 28 leaders agree with Britain that it’s “highly likely Russia is responsibl­e” for the attack on Sergei Skripal, “and that there is no other plausible explanatio­n.”

The unanimity was a victory for May. She had been striving at a summit in Brussels to persuade her EU colleagues to unite in condemning Moscow over the attack on Skripal, a former Russian military intelligen­ce officer convicted of spying for Britain, and his daughter, Yulia.

Russia strongly denies responsibi­lity and has slammed Britain’s investigat­ion.

During a summit dinner, May laid out the reasons Britain is convinced Moscow was behind the attack, including the type of poison used — a Soviet-developed nerve agent known as Novichok — and intelligen­ce that Russia has produced it within the last decade.

Britain argues the attack is part of a pattern of behavior by an increasing­ly assertive Russia whose muscle-flexing, cyber-meddling and law-breaking on foreign soil pose a threat to the internatio­nal rule of law.

May said Thursday that “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.”

EU foreign ministers already had expressed their “unqualifie­d solidarity” with Britain.

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