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AFP/Getty Images

Spy poisoning in Britain: Who stands to gain?

Sergei Skripal, 66 moved to Britain in a 2010 spy swap.

WHO COULD BE behind the suspected poisoning of former Russian spy Sergei Skripal and his daughter?

Some experts and opposition voices have pointed the finger at Russia. Others dismiss the notion as ridiculous.

“Attacking the family, and someone involved in a swap, is a first,” Bruce Jones, a Russia expert with British defence publication Jane’s Defence Weekly, told AFP.

Jones said there could be multiple “dividends” for Russia from such an attack as it could be “a warning to anybody who might consider being a traitor”.

Skripal, a former colonel in Russian military intelligence, was jailed in his country for betraying agents to Britain’s MI6 secret service.

He moved to Britain in a 2010 spy swap and is now hospitalised in critical condition along with his daughter Yulia after they collapsed in the English city of Salisbury.

For Kremlin opponents, the who and the why are obvious.

“Poisoning is the method of choice for the FSB,” Russia’s security service, said Yuri Felshtinksy, a friend of Alexander Litvinenko, the former FSB agent who was poisoned with a radioactive agent in London in 2006.

‘Hunted down’

A British inquiry into Litvinenko’s killing by tea laced with polonium concluded that it was “probably” approved by Russian President Vladimir Putin — himself a former KGB officer.

Felshtinsky said the Salisbury incident should be viewed in the context of Russia’s presidential election on March 18, in which Putin is running virtually unchallenged.

“This has all the hallmarks of a Putin assassination. He is warning anyone in the FSB never to defect, as they’ll be hunted down and killed,” Felshtinsky said in a statement published in the British media.

Bill Browder, a former investor in Russia who fell out with the authorities and is now a leading Putin critic, said: “Putin does this for demonstration effect.”

Browder has led a campaign in memory of his former employee Sergei Magnitsky, who went public with details of massive fraud by Russian officials before dying in detention after spending 11 months in prison in 2009.

Putin “needs to keep everybody absolutely terrified of him,” Browder said.

“He doesn’t have to kill everybody, he just has to kill a few people and make it so clear that terrible things will come to you if you cross Putin.”

Britain ‘vulnerable’ 

Britain’s Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson warned on Tuesday the government would respond “robustly” if the poisoning turned out to be the work of a foreign state.

That may have been just the kind of reaction Moscow wanted.

“If there is criticism or sanctions against Russia, that can be leveraged and manipulated by the Kremlin,” said Jones.

“If they can provoke a reaction in the UK, it can be used and capitalised upon to prove that Russia is a tragic victim of fate.”

Asked why Britain should be chosen as the scene for such a killing, Jones said the country was in “a vulnerable position” because of doubts about Prime Minister Theresa May’s leadership and the delicate Brexit negotiations.

Browder said the lack of a strong British reaction to Litvinenko’s killing was also a factor.

“In 2016, when it was determined that this was an organised hit from Russia and it was determined by a High Court judge, the government did absolutely nothing,” he said.

“That inaction invites Putin to kill people in this country.”

Punishing traitors 

In Russia too, experts such as Pavel Felgenhauer, an analyst for the Novaya Gazeta newspaper, see Moscow’s hand in the poisoning.

“I have no doubt that this was carried out on the orders of Moscow since there are no other parties who could have an interest,” he told AFP.

“It is in the traditions of the FSB. They have always thought and they still think that you have to punish traitors to keep discipline in the security services.”

But others, like former Soviet spy and writer Mikhail Lyubimov, have dismissed this theory.

“It is just a comedy,” he said.

“Who is Skripal? Who cares about him? He was already swapped, meaning he was amnestied. If we wanted to kill him, we would have killed him here, but we freed him”.

Alexander Golts, a Russian military analyst, told AFP: “We should not forget that people like Skripal have an adventurous character and nobody knows what kind of adventure he could have got himself into in Britain.”

- © AFP 2018.

Read: Nerve agent used to poison ex Russian spy leaves policeman fighting for his life>

Read: Russian ex-spy and daughter were victims of attempted murder with nerve agent>

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    Mute Teresa Ryan
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    Aug 4th 2019, 9:21 AM

    If Balour was Lú’s grandfather, who was his father?

    Love my Sunday morning Irish lesson with my weekly cup of cuppachino.

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    Mute Paul Cumiskey
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    Aug 4th 2019, 9:36 AM

    An Lu Abu

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    Mute Fachtna Roe
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    Aug 4th 2019, 4:01 PM

    Suimiúil, mar is gnáth. Buíochas, Darach.

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    Mute Deirdre Frances
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    Aug 4th 2019, 8:49 AM

    Thought Baylor was killed by his son in law Cian

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    Mute John Mc Donagh
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    Aug 4th 2019, 10:39 AM

    @Deirdre Frances: I thought that he succumbed to an unstoppable dose of diarrhoea which he acquired from listening to too much bullshite

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    Mute Hawm Quinzy
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    Aug 4th 2019, 11:02 AM

    @Deirdre Frances: You might have it a little backwards. Cian was killed by Balor because he got a little frisky with Balor’s young wan, Eithnu. The child of that coupling was Lú, who Balor then pegged into the sea only for Manandán the sea-God to raise him. He became king and lead an army against Balor where to hoofed a slingstone (or spear in other versions) through his head. When Balor fell dead his laser-eye opened and carved a hole through the earth which filled with water and became Loch na Súl in Sligo.

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    Mute Hawm Quinzy
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    Aug 4th 2019, 11:05 AM

    @John Mc Donagh: do you only get your above demonstrated type of verbal diarrhoea by thinking people still believe in this mythology as fact?

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    Mute Joseph O Doherty
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    Aug 5th 2019, 1:09 AM

    @Hawm Quinzy: thanks for the article and sound response …

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    Mute DERMOT
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    Aug 5th 2019, 8:10 PM

    The All Irelands go on all summer..but the finals are in September ..sorry if I doybd pedantic.

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    Mute Michael Leyden
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    Aug 5th 2019, 6:54 PM

    It may be Mythology… but isnt it fascinating reading even for the PBP, who are not really fior Gaels,….but Ton le Gaoithe…

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