by TOM STANFORD
March
24, 2018, 11:55
British
accusations against Russia not only unproven, but absurd!
The
British government claims to have overwhelming evidence of Russia’s
responsibility in the Salisbury poison attack on Sergei Skripal and his
daughter. In his Washington Post article of March 14, Foreign Secretary Boris
Johnson went so far as to claim that there was “only [one] plausible
conclusion: that the Russian state attempted murder in a British city,
employing a lethal nerve agent banned under the Chemical Weapons Convention”.
He even connected this with Russia “covering up” the alleged use of “the nerve
agent sarin against the town of Khan Sheikhoun in April 2017” by Syrian forces.
In a separate statement, the Foreign Secretary tells us it is “overwhelmingly
likely” that Vladimir Putin personally ordered the attack. What evidence is
there to support such serious accusations?
According
to the British government (see e.g. Boris
Johnson’s article) and the mainstream media, the following elements are
sufficient to incriminate the Russian state with near certainty: the weapon
used, the motive, Russia’s past record, the lack of another explanation.
Use
of novichok is no proof of
Russian involvement
The
nerve agent reportedly used in the attack, named novichok, was
developed by the Soviet Union in the 1970s and 1980s. The fact that Russian
stockpiles of novichok were destroyed under supervision of UN
bodies after the collapse of the Soviet Union and that the OPCW (Organisation
for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons) has seen no reason for suspecting any
country of continuing to store this deadly agent does not seem to bother the
incriminators. Of course, it can be speculated that Russia may have kept the
weapon secretly, as does Vil Mirzayanov, the Russian scientist who revealed the
existence of the project in 1992 and has lived in the US since 1995.
Boris
Johnson has announced that over the last ten year Britain has gathered evidence
of Russia creating and storing novichok. We are given no detail of what kind of
evidence this may be. It could turn out to be nothing more than isolated,
unsubstantiated claims made by Mirzayanov and other opponents of the Russian
government.
Not
only Russia, but other former members of the Soviet Union, or the US, could
have secretly stored or recreated the poison. In
1999 US defence officials helped Uzbekistan dismantle a former Soviet
facility which had tested chemical weapons such as novichok.
Samples, as well as the knowledge required to produce the nerve agent, are
highly likely to have become available to countries other than Russia.
Did
Russia have a motive?
Russia
supposedly had an obvious motive. The argument goes as follows: Sergei Skripal,
while still officially working for the Russian military intelligence service,
the GRU, had been secretly recruited by the British MI6, and handed over to his
new paymasters the names of all Russian agents he knew to be working in the
West. Even after serving a few years in a Russian prison and being allowed to
emigrate to the UK as part of a spy swap, he would have remained on an official
Russian hit list for his act of treason. His murder would serve as a deterrent
towards any other Russian agent who may consider switching sides. And to make
things even clearer to would-be defectors, the attack would leave some kind of
signature pointing to the Russian state as the perpetrator.
On
the face of it, the argument sounds reasonable. However, it makes no sense to
consider motives as evidence for doing something if we
ignore counter-motives, i.e. reasons for refraining from doing it.
Suppose you are in your doctor’s waiting room and have been sitting there for
quite some time when suddenly an elderly lady, who arrived there just before
you, collapses and is rushed to hospital. You had never seen her before. Now
imagine the police later suspect some foul play and discover that the incident
allowed you to have your own waiting time shortened by ten or fifteen minutes.
You had a clear motive for harming the poor lady. Luckily for you, it then
occurs to the investigators that your motive for doing so (saving a few minutes
of your time) pales into insignificance compared with the reasons that would
have held you back, such as the idea of spending years in jail, not to mention
your moral conscience or feelings of human compassion.
In
other words, motivation is the result of weighing out costs and benefits.
In
the case of the Salisbury attack, the foreseeable costs to Russia, and more
specifically to President Putin, are enormous. The Russian government spends
considerable effort trying to convince the world that it firmly abides by the
rule of law, especially international law and agreements between states. Its
own statements, as well as the foreign-policy analyses appearing in the Russian
state-owned media, all go towards highlighting Russia’s perceived superiority
to the US in terms of respect for international law. Such efforts have greatly
intensified in the context of the renewed tensions with the West over the last
few years.
Russia’s
current leaders believe in ending the current US-dominated unipolar world and
are striving to recover some of the influence over world affairs that was lost
with the collapse of the Soviet Union. This requires having allies, not only
state allies, but also Russia-friendly organizations and individuals within
states. Any damage to Russia’s international reputation does considerable harm
to such prospects.
President
Putin himself cultivates the image of a highly principled, responsible and
law-abiding person – not that anyone would guess by reading the Western
mainstream media! Whatever Russia’s state representatives and media may argue,
the Salisbury attack has put many weapons in the hands of Putin’s detractors.
In this light, it is absolutely inconceivable that Russia’s president ordered
the attack himself. Boris Johnson’s personal accusation not only shows his
total misunderstanding of the Russian leadership, but is also utterly
irresponsible on the part of Britain’s top diplomat.
Russia
had long been hoping that the EU may gradually put to an end its sanctions
policy. It is still very dependent on trade with the block. It would be insane
for Russia to do anything that could threaten the current Nord Stream 2 gas
pipeline project, especially given that the US, with the support of a number of
EU countries mainly from Eastern Europe, has been putting pressure on the EU to
abandon the project. But Germany, determined to ensure its supply of cheap gas,
has so far resisted such calls.
Predictably,
the EU has sided with the UK and is officially demanding explanations from
Russia concerning its novichok programme – which only makes
any sense if Russia was in some way involved in the Salisbury attack,
definitely not if it genuinely ceased the production and storage of the nerve
agent in the 1990s, as documented by the OPCW!
Could
other agents of the Russian state be responsible?
It
is also entirely unrealistic to imagine that leading members of the Russian
secret service agencies may have acted autonomously and ordered the Salisbury
attack without consulting their superiors and not realizing how much damage it
would have on Russia’s and Putin’s international reputation. They live in the
world of the Russian state elite, continually exposed to its way of thinking,
and not cocooned in some fantasy world of their own – unlike many Western
politicians and journalists who apparently still live with the image of James
Bond-like characters fighting against evil Russian agents!
Any
significant agent of the Russian state would be fully aware of the displeasure
that a Salisbury-type attack would trigger among the leadership. Supposing
players within the Russian state did carry out the attack, it could only be
construed as a hostile act towards President Putin and his team.
No
sense for Russia to kill Skripal abroad rather than in Russia
This
is not a simple case of a former spy-turned-traitor being “executed”. The
attack leaves a deliberate Russian “signature” (there is no other reason for
using novichok rather than a more discreet or classical weapon) and was carried
out on the soil of a foreign country, the United Kingdom, which in spite of the
Brexit process remains a highly significant player on the international stage.
Whoever the perpetrators may be, they would have foreseen that any improvement
in relations between Russia and its Western neighbours would be seriously
jeopardized as a consequence.
But
what makes Russian involvement even more absurd is the fact that Alexander
Skripal was officially released and allowed to emigrate as part of a spy swap.
Why would the Russians have waited another eight years before killing him in
another country, with the terrible diplomatic consequences that would ensue,
when he could have been much more easily liquidated while still in Russia, in a
manner that would give would-be defectors an even clearer warning that there is
“no way out for traitors”.
Would
Russia give up the chance of other spy swaps?
Furthermore,
a spy-swap deal implies that the parties involved agree to give up all claims
pertaining to the released individuals. In other words they will not try to
recapture or kill them, which would amount to a breach of the agreement. A
country reneging on such a deal would no longer be trusted for any similar
arrangements in the future. Is it reasonable to believe that the Russian
government, or any top secret service official in Russia, would be prepared to
sacrifice Russia’s chances of making any new spy-swap deals with its Western
partners in the future? This is not just unlikely, it is the pinnacle of
absurdity! Sadly, Western political leaders and mainstream media are quite
happy to believe and propagate such nonsense.
Goal
of attack: outrage against Russia
The
attack itself does not seem to bear the mark of professional Russian agents.
The daughter of the former double agent suffered the same fate as her father.
It is only a matter of circumstances that many others were not seriously
injured. It is like using a sledgehammer to crack a nut! And the main target,
Sergei Skripal, is – weeks later – still reported to be alive! Either it was
some very sloppy attack carried out by non-professionals, or the attack was
deliberately not confined to Mr Skripal in order to provoke even greater
outrage against Russia.
Boris
Johnson has apparently recently adapted his interpretation of Russian
intentions to take account of these facts. He now claims it was probably
specially timed just before the presidential election, “to conjure up in the
public imagination the notion of an enemy”. So the Russian president supposedly
deliberately provoked British outrage to help him win the election! The Foreign
Secretary seems to be completely out of touch with reality. It has long been
common knowledge that Vladimir Putin would win with a landslide anyway. Would
he wish to cause himself and his country enormous trouble for absolutely no
gain at all?
What
is Russia’s past record?
We
are told there is “a pattern” of state-sponsored assassinations or deaths in
unusual circumstances of political opponents, critical journalists and secret
service defectors. Deaths attributed to President Putin have included the
journalist Politskaya, the political opponent Nemtsov, the accountant and
lawyer Magnitsky, the former agent Litvinenko and even the oligarch Berezovsky.
In all these cases, the incrimination of the Russian state is based on rather
flimsy evidence. The argumentation here is circular: in each case the belief in
the Russian government’s responsibility is strengthened by the existence of the
other stories. But if none of the stories are true, then the whole argument
collapses.
The
Litvinenko case does bare a similarity to the current one. Instead of the nerve
agent novichok, Litvinenko was poisoned by radioactive polonium, a substance
very difficult to obtain and produced only by a few countries – such as Russia
– with a nuclear weapons industry. In both cases, it is highly unlikely that
the Russian state would choose to leave a “made in Russia” signature on the
poison used, with only one major outcome – the poisoning of Britain’s
relationship with Russia.
If
not Russia, then who did it?
Russia’s
accusers claim there are no alternative explanations for the attack: nobody,
apart from the Russian state, is understood to have had a motive for the
attempted murder. This argument can only make sense to those who believe in the
world of an evil, criminal Russia whose only opponents are pure, honest,
angelic fighters for freedom and justice.
The
main consequence of the Salisbury attack – undoubtedly one that would have been
predicted by whoever planned it – is to further damage relations between Russia
and the West, or at least prevent their improvement. A long list of countries
(Ukraine, Poland, the US and many others) or organizations may believe they
have an interest in this – at least they have been doing their best to spoil
Western Europe’s relationship with Russia. Of course, the existence of a
possible motive does not constitute sufficient ground to suspect anyone in
particular. However, on the basis the motives involved, to quote British former
Member of Parliament George Galloway, “Russia must be near the bottom of the
list of suspects.”
How
to get away with murder: blame Russia!
It
can also not be excluded that the attack was the work of some rogue
“ultra-patriotic” group within Russia (whether within or outside Russia’s state
institutions) wishing to undermine Putin’s attempts to mend relations with the
West by killing a “traitor” on British soil. In this case, the Salisbury attack
would clearly be an act of aggression against the Russian government more than
against the UK. And Britain’s refusal to cooperate with Russia would make the
UK unwittingly guilty of helping the perpetrators avoid the course of justice.
Another
aspect is that we do not know what personal enemies Aleksander Skripal may have
had. There may be motives involved that nobody suspects. If, for whatever
reason a person or organization with sufficient power wished to have him
killed, there was a simple way to get away with the crime: a highly effective
cover-up the crime would involve using a weapon that points towards Russia,
with the knowledge the British authorities would be unlikely to seriously
explore other avenues, especially in the current international climate. The
same can be argued in the case of Litvinenko’s murder in 2006.
There
is something particularly disturbing about the Western international community
rushing to accuse Russia for any crime showing the slightest hint of a Russian
connection: it provides criminal organizations and terrorists with assurances
that they can avoid being held accountable. All they need to do is to leave
some kind of “Russian signature”.
UK
reckless attitude is dangerous
The
words of Theresa May and Boris Johnson, accusing Russia for crimes it did not
commit with astoundingly aggressive and hostile language, will naturally lead
the Russian population and their decision makers to believe their country is
the victim of an orchestrated attack. Hostility towards the West will increase
dramatically as a result. British, European and North-American leaders may have
convinced themselves of Russia’s guilt, but have they reflected on the possible
consequences of their reckless attitude?
It
is urgent to stop the escalation in the Russia blame game, which has taken a
momentum of its own. It may be of benefit for the media, who can publish
stories that make a good read, with an evil bogey man that everyone loves to
hate, or for politicians who, when confronted with problems at home – such as
the UK government with its current Brexit troubles – can take the opportunity
to look strong in the face of an enemy. However, it is an extremely dangerous
game which could have disastrous consequences for the entire world.
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