Daily Mail

PUTIN’S SMILING ASSASSINS

As May declares war on Russia’s spies, chilling CCTV unmasks ...

- By Jason Groves and Chris Greenwood

THERESA May last night ordered a covert war on Vladimir Putin’s spy network.

As chilling pictures were released of two smiling Russian agents carrying out the Salisbury poison attack, the Prime Minister said the security services would target the GRU, the military intelligen­ce unit the pair work for. Cyber warfare, espionage, financial sanctions and travel bans could be used, sources said. Interpol has been put on red alert to detain the two agents, who use the aliases Alexander Petrov and Ruslan Boshirov. Mrs May warned they would be brought to Britain for trial if they ever left Russia. She blamed the Kremlin for the novichok attack on former Russian spy Sergei Skripal and his daughter Yulia in Salisbury in March. And she hinted the assassinat­ion order may have come directly from Mr Putin because only he has the power in Russian law to order killings abroad.

Tom Tugendhat, chairman of the Commons foreign affairs committee,

went further by saying: ‘President Putin bears responsibi­lity for a war-like act.’

The Russian agents are also blamed for the death of mother of three Dawn Sturgess, 44, in July. She and her partner Charlie Rowley were poisoned when they picked up an abandoned perfume bottle containing the nerve agent novichok.

Yesterday’s developmen­ts follow a huge police inquiry, which tracked the movements of Petrov and Boshirov to Salisbury, where they sprayed novichok on Mr Skripal’s front door handle.

As the Kremlin faced condemnati­on from across the globe:

Britain called an emergency meeting of the UN Security Council this afternoon;

Mrs May spoke to Donald Trump and Canada’s Justin Trudeau to seek support for fresh action;

Speaking from his hospital bed, Mr Rowley, 45, said he wanted Petrov and Boshirov brought to justice;

Moscow media said the pair had travelled extensivel­y across Europe;

A senior Russian diplomat was summoned to the Foreign Office for a dressing-down;

Former attorney general Dominic Grieve urged restrictio­ns on all Russian travellers;

The Kremlin dismissed the British accusation­s out of hand;

Jeremy Corbyn came under fire after failing to condemn Russia in the House of Commons.

Mrs May acknowledg­ed yesterday that it was futile to expect Russia to hand over the two assassins, not least because Russia has a constituti­onal bar on extraditio­n. She savaged Moscow’s response to the novichok attacks, saying requests for co- operation had been met with ‘obfuscatio­n and lies’.

MPs were told new powers were in force to stop at the border anyone suspected of ‘hostile state activity’.

Russian oligarchs linked to Mr Putin face a clampdown, including searches of private flights and investigat­ions of ‘unexplaine­d wealth’ by the National Crime Agency.

Mrs May said retaliator­y action would focus specifical­ly against the GRU, the organisati­on linked to the downing of the MH17 airliner in Ukraine, attacks in Syria and election-rigging in the United States. She said it was clear the Salisbury attack was not a rogue operation and must have been approved at a senior level of the Russian state.

Bob Seely, a Tory MP and Russia expert, said the order could ‘only have come from the Russian head of state’.

The unpreceden­ted statement from the Prime Minister came after Scotland Yard set out the results of its lengthy inquiry. After months of secrecy, the force revealed that not only had it iden- tified the prime suspects but it had amassed enough evidence for prosecutor­s to bring charges.

Officers accused Petrov and and Boshirov of conspiring to murder Mr Skripal, and the attempted murder of Yulia and Det Sgt Nick Bailey.

The respected police officer was contaminat­ed with novichok when he opened the front door of the Skripal home after its owners were found collapsed on a bench.

Investigat­ors believe they know the identities of the two military intelligen­ce agents but chose instead to publicise aliases used in their Russian passports.

They are asking people worldwide to contact them if they can put a name to the faces. Police obtained domestic and European arrest warrants, and lodged Interpol red notices, effectivel­y confining the pair to their homeland.

But the Crown Prosecutio­n Service said it would not apply for their extraditio­n because the Russian State refuses to deport its citizens to face trial overseas.

Both men are believed to be agents for the GRU, for whom Mr Skripal was a

‘Approved at a senior level’ ‘Found collapsed on a bench’

colonel before being jailed for selling secrets to the West. He was brought to the UK in a spy swap.

In a bid to silence the chorus of online scepticism about the case fuelled by Russian trolls, police gave a step-bystep account of the movements of the two-man hit squad. CCTV stills showed Petrov and Boshirov arriving at Gatwick and travelling through London before visiting Salisbury twice by train.

Dressed in padded jackets, hats and carrying a rucksack the men checked the scene of their mission for reconnaiss­ance before returning the second day.

A camera caught the pair smiling and laughing within minutes of carrying out their attack. By 10.30pm that night they were boarding an Aeroflot flight to Moscow from Heathrow, just over 50 hours after first touching down.

It is understood that the 250- strong team of detectives identified the two men as suspects in May while examining more than 11,000 hours of footage.

They were able to painstakin­gly follow their steps, leading to the City Stay Hotel, in Bow, east London, where they spent both nights. Forensics experts discovered a minute trace of novichok in their room, a sample so small it was washed away by the testing swab.

Unveiling the dossier of evidence, assistant commission­er Neil Basu said the pair had travelled extensivel­y in Britain and overseas.

Mr Basu, the country’s top counter-terrorism officer, branded it a remarkably sophistica­ted attack by ‘people knowledgea­ble in this kind of tradecraft’.

Mrs May also told MPs that police had ruled out the possibilit­y that Russia was behind 14 other deaths in the UK.

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