The Korea Times

Russia blames UK, US for spy poisoning

- MOSCOW (AFP)

— The head of Russia’s SVR foreign intelligen­ce agency said Wednesday the poisoning of a Russian former double agent in Britain was a “grotesque provocatio­n” by the British and U.S. security services.

“Even when it comes to the grotesque provocatio­n with the Skripals that was crudely concocted by the British and American security services, a number of European countries are in no rush to unquestion­ingly follow London and Washington but prefer to look into what has happened in detail,” SVR chief Sergei Naryshkin said at a security conference.

He also warned that Moscow and the West must avoid the risk of escalating their current standoff to the dangerous levels reached at the height of the Cold War.

“It’s important to stop the irre- sponsible game of raising stakes and to stop the use of force in relations between states, not to bring matters to a new Cuban Missile Crisis,” he said, referring to the 1962 standoff between the Soviet Union and the United States that brought the world to the brink of nuclear war.

Naryshkin said that for Washington, “fighting the non-existent so-called Russian threat has become a real fixation” comparable in scale to the Cold War era.

“It has reached such proportion­s and developed such ludicrous characteri­stics, that it’s time to talk about the return of the grim times of the Cold War,” Naryshkin said.

He suggested that the West wants to shut itself off from Russia as it once did from the Soviet Union, saying that “seized by fear of changes, the West is ready to put up a new Iron Curtain around itself.”

Britain has said it is “highly likely” that Russia was responsibl­e for the attack on former double agent Sergei Skripal and his daughter Yulia in England.

Moscow has angrily denied any involvemen­t.

British authoritie­s say the Skripals were poisoned with the Soviet-designed nerve agent Novichok.

The British defense laboratory analyzing the nerve agent said Tuesday that it could not say whether it came from Russia. Moscow hailed that as a vindicatio­n of its repeated denials of involvemen­t.

The Kremlin has demanded an apology from British Prime Minister Theresa May and her government for implicatin­g Russian President Vladimir Putin in the nerve agent attack, saying this “idiocy has gone too far.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Korea, Republic