The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

WHAT ARE BRITAIN’S OPTIONS IN SPY POISONING CASE?

- Adam Taylor, Washington Post

British police said former Russian double agent Sergei Skripal and his daughter had been “targeted specifical­ly” with a nerve agent in an apparent attempt on their lives. Skripal, 66, and 33-year-old Yulia are in a hospital, just days after they were found unconsciou­s on a bench in the English city of Salisbury. An apparent assassinat­ion bid on British soil is a major problem for Prime Minister Theresa May’s government, but in this instance, its response is severely complicate­d by one big factor: The Russian government is suspected of being the perpetrato­r.

A previous assassinat­ion

Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson said the Skripal case had “echoes” of the assassinat­ion of Alexander Litvinenko, a former KGB operative and a fierce critic of the Kremlin who died in 2006 after drinking tea that had been laced with radioactiv­e polonium — a high-profile hit that a British investigat­ion found was “probably approved” by Vladimir Putin himself.

Indeed, as Britain and its grandiose capital have become a home for many Russian emigres, an alarming number of Kremlin critics residing in the country have died in mysterious circumstan­ces. Although British authoritie­s have rarely pointed the finger at the Russian government, the use of a nerve agent in the Skripal case has renewed concern about Kremlin involvemen­t.

The Russian government has repeatedly denied any role.

British Home Secretary Amber Rudd said authoritie­s were avoiding speculatio­n but that Britain “would respond in a robust and appropriat­e manner” and that it was committed to bringing the perpetrato­rs to justice, “whoever they are and wherever they may be.”

What happened next

But if a Russian state link is confirmed, that may be easier said than done.

Calder Walton, a British lawyer and author of the book “Empire of Secrets: British Intelligen­ce, the Cold War, and the Twilight of Empire,” notes that one reason British authoritie­s were ultimately able to link the Litvinenko case to the Russian government was that the polonium used in his killing had left radioactiv­e contaminat­ion in several locations, creating a trail that investigat­ors could follow.

Even with a literal trail of evidence, however, Britain was unable to bring the main suspect in that case, former KGB bodyguard Andrey Lugovoy, to justice as Russia refused to extradite him. Lugovoy, now a member of Russia’s parliament, still denies involvemen­t. “If something happens to a Russian, they immediatel­y start looking for a Russian trail,” he said of British authoritie­s after Skripal and his daughter were hospitaliz­ed this week.

Some argued that the lack of a robust response from Britain to Litvinenko’s death, even though it clearly cast a pall over relations with Russia, had emboldened Moscow.

“Because it did happen to another Russian person, it shows lessons were not learned and people asking for protection, for political asylum or refugees, or even this guy, who was exchanged, they can’t be safe, can’t be protected,” Litvinenko’s widow, Marina Litvinenko, told The Washington Post this week.

The weapon

Skripal was imprisoned in Russia in 2006 for passing secrets to British intelligen­ce. He was pardoned and released from custody in 2010 as part of a spy swap with Britain.

British police have not specified what nerve agent they think was used against him and his daughter, and it is unclear what evidence they can uncover about suspected perpetrato­rs.

However, as such toxic chemicals are difficult to produce, they are generally considered statelevel weapons. Walton said Britain’s intelligen­ce services will probably “scramble to find out what happened,” with the Security Service (MI5) taking the lead and receiving assistance from the government’s chemical research facility, Porton Down, as well as GCHQ, Britain’s signals intelligen­ce agency.

The response

But what should that response be? Johnson has hinted that Britain may respond with some kind of official boycott of the World Cup, due to be held later this year in Russia. It is also possible that Britain could expel Russian diplomats, Calder says, if British intelligen­ce concludes they were involved.

More inventive approaches are possible, too. Britain’s intelligen­ce services might adopt asymmetric tactics, such as releasing informatio­n embarrassi­ng to Russia. Bill Browder, a former fund manager in Russia who is a major critic of Putin, suggested using London’s appeal to Russia’s wealthy as a tool to punish the Kremlin.

“The main leverage the UK has is property owned by Russian officials and government connected oligarchs in London,” Browder wrote in an email. “Britain now has the legals tools to seize those properties through the Magnitsky Act, which would be a big blow to the Putin regime,” he added.

Ultimately, London may balk at going quite so far. Britain has far worse relations with Russia than do peers such as Germany or France, to little clear benefit. And in a post-Brexit world, Britain may be cautious about doing anything that could threaten London’s reputation as a major financial center — even if that means turning a blind eye to deep-pocketed Kremlin allies in the British capital.

 ?? ANDREW MATTHEWS / PA VIA AP ?? Police and members of the armed forces probe the suspected nerve agent attack on Russian double agent spy Sergei Skripal outside Bourne Hill police station in Salisbury, England, on March 11. Skripal and his daughter, Yulia, were attacked with a nerve...
ANDREW MATTHEWS / PA VIA AP Police and members of the armed forces probe the suspected nerve agent attack on Russian double agent spy Sergei Skripal outside Bourne Hill police station in Salisbury, England, on March 11. Skripal and his daughter, Yulia, were attacked with a nerve...

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