In
an article on 3rd May, the Guardian
journalist, Luke Harding, made the following rather amusing observation:
“Since
the Skripals were found stricken on a park bench, Downing Street has stuck to
one version of events. Theresa May says it is ‘highly likely’ Moscow carried
out the attack using a Soviet-made nerve agent. Only the Kremlin had
the motive to kill its former officer, she argues.”
The
funny part, in case you didn’t spot it, was his claim that Downing Street has
stuck to one version of events. He is of course correct, but what he doesn’t
tell his readers is that this one version of events has had a plethora of
sub-narratives attached to it, none of which have been able to remotely support
the main thesis. Sticking to one version of events is reasonable only inasmuch
as that version can be supported by facts. On the other hand, if the version of
events being stuck to is not supported by the facts, or if the “facts”
constantly change, or if the “facts” are contradictory, then sticking to it is
a measure not of reasonableness, as Mr Harding implies, but rather of
absurdity, folly and irrationality.
G.
K. Chesterton once cautioned us against the propensity towards indefinite
scepticism:
“Merely
having an open mind is nothing. The object of opening the mind, as of opening
the mouth, is to shut it again on something solid.”
This
is very true. But there is another, equally insidious, ditch which must be
avoided. Let’s put it like this:
“Closing
your mind too quickly can be worse than nothing. The object of closing the
mind, as of closing the mouth, is to make sure that when you do, you have
something solid inside.”
So
is the narrative that Downing Street closed on so quickly after the incident
solid? Does it stand up to scrutiny? Let’s see.
The Claim
The
basic claim of the UK Government is as follows:
On
4th March 2018, Sergei and Yulia Skripal were poisoned by a
military-grade nerve agent, which had been put on the handle of Mr Skripal’s
front door in Christie Miller Road, Salisbury. The substance used was A-234 (a
Novichok agent), which is said to be around 5-8 times more lethal than VX (just
10 milligrams of VX on the skin can be lethal). It had been placed there by
a person or persons either working on behalf of the Government of the Russian
Federation, or who had somehow managed to come into possession of the substance
from stocks controlled by the Russian Government.
As
Mr Harding implies, it’s all very straightforward. So let’s test it.
What would you have expected to happen?
The
basic question one must ask is as follows: Given the scenario outlined in the
Government claim, what would you have expected to happen? Here are four basic
things one would reasonably have expected:
3. A
massive manhunt, both in Salisbury and in the rest of the country, especially
in respect of the couple who appeared on a CCTV camera in Market Walk, of whom it was originally
claimed were the Skripals, but who were clearly not the Skripals.
4. Mr
Skripal’s house entirely closed off, with surrounding streets immediately
evacuated, and the parts of Salisbury City Centre where the pair were known to
have visited also evacuated.
What actually happened?
So
much for what we would have expected to see. Now, more than
two months after the incident, we can ask the question: What actually happened?
1. After
they allegedly came into contact with the very lethal A-234 nerve agent, far
from dying on the spot, Sergei and Yulia Skripal spent the next four hours
driving into the City Centre, having a drink, and then going for a meal. They
then sat on a bench, and at some point thereafter exhibited what appeared to be
hallucinations, suggestive of poisoning by an opioid or non-lethal chemical
weapon, rather than a nerve agent.
2. Rather
than being hospitalised for months and suffering irreparable damage to their
central nervous systems, just over four weeks later, Yulia
Skripal telephoned her cousin, Viktoria, and assured her several times that
“Everything is okay”. Crucially, she stated that “Everyone’s health is fine,
there are no irreparable things.”
3. There
has been no manhunt, and the couple who appeared on the CCTV camera in Market
Walk have not been identified publicly, nor have there been any appeals for information
about them.
4. Far
from the streets around the house being evacuated, many photographs show police
officers without any protective clothing standing just a few feet away from the
door handle, which allegedly still had A-234 of “high purity” on it. Neither
was the City Centre evacuated, but people who thought they might have come into
contact with the substance were advised by Public
Health England (PHE) to wash their clothing in a washing machine, and
wipe personal items such as phones, handbags and other electronic items with
cleansing or baby wipes.
What
Would Holmes Have Made of it?
If
you laid all that out in front of Sherlock Holmes – the claims, the
expectations, and the reality – and asked him what he made of it, he would no
doubt reply along the following lines:
“On
the assumption that the substance known as A-234 is several times more toxic
than VX, which all credible references to it claim that it is, then given that
the Skripals did not die on the spot, or having survived do not appear to have
any of the lasting and irreparable side-effects of being poisoned by this
substance, it can be stated with reasonable certainty that they were not
poisoned by it. Furthermore, given the symptoms that they displayed on the
bench, according to eye-witness testimony, in all probability, Mr Skripal and
Yulia were poisoned by a substance which can cause hallucinations, such as the
opioid, Fentanyl,
or an incapacitating, but non-lethal, chemical such as 3-Quinuclidinyl
benzilate (BZ). This theory is given credence by the fact that Salisbury
District Hospital originally believed the incident to be a case of Fentanyl poisoning.”
What
Would Holmes do Next?
Having
used the known facts to establish beyond reasonable doubt that the Skripals
were not poisoned by A-234, what would Holmes do next?
The
obvious thing would be to interview both Sergei and Yulia Skripal, since both
are apparently alive and well. He would want to gather details about their
movements on the morning of 4th March 2018, and whether they
saw anyone acting suspiciously either near the house, or at the bench. He would
want to know why Mr Skripal apparently became highly agitated in Zizzis. And he
would of course want to find out from Mr Skripal about who he had dealings with
in the weeks prior to the incident.
So
what, you might ask, would he make of it if he found out that nobody, including
him, was allowed to see Mr Skripal or Yulia? What, you might ask, would he make
of the fact that nothing has been heard of Detective Sergeant Nick Bailey since
his release from hospital more than six weeks ago? What, you might ask, would
he make of the fact that there has been not one single police or press report
looking into any of these things?
Holmes
being Holmes, he would of course want to retain an open mind for as long as
possible. But in the absence of any credible explanation for these oddities, or
for the huge disparity between the UK Government claims and what actually happened,
no doubt his great mind would soon start closing in on the suspicion that not
only were the Skripals not poisoned by A-234, but it would
appear that a cover up of what really happened has taken place.
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