The Russian Presidential Election 2018

Washington’s expulsion of 60 Russian diplomatic personnel Monday, and the coordinated actions of Britain, France, Germany, and over 20 other countries, each ordering the departure of a relative handful of Russian diplomats, is a provocative escalation of the unrelenting campaign of NATO powers against Russia.

The poisoning of Skripal and the campaign against Russia Wednesday 28 March 2018
https://www.wsws.org/en/articles/2018/03/28/pers-m28.html

The stated pretext for this action is the murky affair involving the poisoning of the former Russian spy and British double agent Sergei Skripal and his adult daughter on a park bench in the southern British city of Salisbury on March 4.

The government of Tory Prime Minister Theresa May has repeatedly stated over the past two weeks that it is “highly likely” that Moscow was behind the attack, which has left Skripal and his daughter hospitalized in critical condition. Britain’s Foreign Minister Boris Johnson has gone further, adding that it is “overwhelmingly likely” that Vladimir Putin personally ordered the attack, going so far as to compare the Russian president to Adolf Hitler.

There are just two things missing to support these allegations: 1) any verifiable evidence, and 2) any plausible motive for the Russian government to carry out such a crime.

Several governments that joined Washington and London in expelling diplomats—in most cases ordering between one and four Russians to leave the country, with what Moscow has reported as quiet apologies—candidly admit that they have been shown no evidence whatsoever.

For its part, the British government has given less time for its supposed investigation of the poisonings to uncover the actual perpetrator than would be customary for an average street crime.

Unsupported by any evidence, the allegations made by Britain and the United States have been obviously concocted to provide political legitimacy for the anti-Russia campaign. There is no discernible motive for the Putin government to attempt the murder of Skripal —a man whom the Russian authorities had previously jailed and then released —on the very eve of Putin’s reelection to his final term in office.

If one asks the basic question of any police investigator—who had the motive to carry out this crime?—the obvious answer would be US and British imperialism, which have used the incident to provide the pretext for the implementation of a policy that had been decided upon in advance.

The most plausible explanation of the poisoning in Salisbury is that the unfortunate Mr. Skripal, a washed-up double agent, and his daughter are merely expendable pawns in a conspiracy devised by the US and British intelligence agencies to further very definite geostrategic objectives.

But is it really possible that the American CIA and British MI6 would go so far as to murder two unsuspecting people in order to intensify the propaganda war against the Kremlin regime in the interests of its geopolitical objective?

Those who are staging this provocation belong to the same gang of imperialist criminals that invented “weapons of mass destruction” to justify the invasion of Iraq. The CIA has been engaged since the Obama administration in continuous assassinations around the globe, using drone missiles as their weapon of choice. This is only the latest installment in the unending crimes that earned the agency the epithet of Murder, Inc. And the Trump administration has just nominated a known black-site torturer to head the CIA.

Organizing the attempted murder of Skripal and his daughter and then pinning the crime on Moscow serves definite political ends.

For the past decade, since the failed US-backed war by Georgia to retake the breakaway provinces of South Ossetia and Abkhazia in 2008, Washington has steadily escalated its aggression and propaganda against Russia, which US imperialism sees as an intolerable obstacle to its drive for global hegemony.

Tensions have only risen since the US-supported and fascist-led coup in Ukraine in 2014, which prompted Russia’s annexation of Crimea, the predominantly Russian territory that serves as the base of its Black Sea fleet.

Finally, Russian—and Iranian—support for the government of President Bashar al-Assad has stymied the seven-year-old CIA-backed war for regime-change in Syria, leading to military tensions that have erupted with US forces killing Russian military contractors, and the Russian military warning Washington that it will retaliate if its forces in Syria are threatened.

The orchestrated outcry over the Skripal poisoning is part of an endless series of provocations, ranging from the Olympic doping “scandal” to the endless propaganda about Russian “meddling” in the US election, all designed to prepare the population for war.

There are deep divisions over this policy, both within the US government and between Washington and its ostensible European allies. The Skripal poisoning serves as a weapon for those within the state apparatus in both Washington and London pushing for a more aggressive policy against Russia. It also provides a means of pressuring the other European powers, particularly Germany, which is increasingly pursuing its own great power interests and has established trade ties with Russia that cut across Washington’s strategic objectives as well as the profit interests of US capitalism.

The clearest indication that the Skripal poisoning is part of a deliberate state campaign came Tuesday with the publication of virtually identical editorials in the New York Times and the Washington Post, the two principal conduits for the views and propaganda of the US ruling establishment and its intelligence agencies.

Accusing Russia of “disrupting Western governments and elections, subjugating neighbors such as Ukraine, and murdering its opponents in Western cities using banned chemical agents,” the Post insists that “Mr. Putin must be deterred. Expelling a few dozen of his spies is a step, but it’s not likely to suffice.”

The Times welcomes the expulsion of the Russian diplomatic personnel, but similarly declares that “Mr. Trump will have to go even further to push back effectively against Mr. Putin’s mischief, which runs the gamut from interference in the elections in America and other Western democracies to propelling the wars in Ukraine and Syria.”

The Times editorial is accompanied by a sinister piece on its news pages titled, “It’s No Cold War, but Relations With Russia Turn Volatile.” The article is written by Andrew Higgins, the Times Moscow correspondent, who is part of the school of “investigative journalism” made infamous by Judith Miller, who wrote many of the paper’s pieces promoting the lies about Iraqi “weapons of mass destruction.”

Higgins was the principal author of a front-page Times piece published in April 2014 purporting to present definitive photographic evidence that the anti-Kiev revolt that swept eastern Ukraine in the wake of the CIA-backed coup was all the work of Russian spies and Special Forces troops. It was subsequently proven that “photographic evidence,” supplied to the Times by the US State Department, was entirely fabricated.

Educated at Cambridge University, Higgins pursued a subsequent study of Russian and Arabic at Middlebury College in Vermont, which is well known for its training of US intelligence operatives. Prior to working for the Times, he was the China correspondent for the Washington Post, expelled from the country after he was discovered with secret government documents in his luggage. In its attempt to reverse the expulsion, the Post recruited Henry Kissinger to lobby Beijing on his behalf.

The thesis of Higgins’ piece on the Skripal affair is that today’s tensions between Washington and Moscow resemble not so much those that prevailed during the Cold War, but rather recalled “a period of paralyzing mistrust that followed the 1917 Bolshevik Revolution.”

While acknowledging that Putin’s government, which represents Russia’s ruling capitalist oligarchs, is not promoting global revolution, Higgins writes that it “revels in wrong-footing foreign governments by flouting established norms.”

The reality is that Russia, by virtue of its size and geographical position at the center of the Eurasian landmass, as well as its possession of the world’s second-largest nuclear arsenal, stands as an impediment to US imperialism’s hegemonic aims. Its failure to abide by “established norms,” i.e., US global dominance, cannot be tolerated.

Writing that the Western powers did not know how to deal with “Moscow’s disruptive actions in the 1920s,” Higgins adds that “In the case of Britain, the leading power of the day and the first Western country to recognize the Soviet Union, the process had echoes of the present.”

He writes that, while Britain recognized “the new Bolshevik government in 1924,” it subsequently expelled Soviet diplomats after “police uncovered what they said was a Soviet espionage ring bent on spreading mayhem.”

Left out of Higgins’ highly selective version of history is the infamous “Zinoviev Letter,” a document forged by Britain’s Secret Intelligence Service, better known as MI6, and then provided to the military, the Conservative Party and the right-wing press.

Palmed off as a letter from Grigory Zinoviev, then president of the Executive Committee of the Communist International, the forgery was released four days before the election to the Daily Mail, which printed a banner headline: “Civil War Plot by Socialists’ Masters: Moscow Orders To Our Reds; Great Plot Disclosed.”

The fake document contributed to the Labour Party, which had come into power for the first time in 1924 and had recognized the Soviet Union, losing by a landslide to the Tories.

The Zinoviev letter—one of the greatest British political scandals of the 20th century—was used to swing an election. The fabrication surrounding the Skripal poisoning, which Higgins, the Times and their “sources” in the CIA are promoting, is being used to prepare a world war.
 
There was an earlier report of the Police looking for a blond hair woman:

UK Police Prey on Blonde Caught on CCTV Before Incident With Russia's Ex-Spy (Video) 07.03.2018
https://sputniknews.com/europe/201803071062314301-uk-police-russian-spy-incident/
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KKRd40pQ0lU (0:31 min.)

According to recent reports, the police have been hunting a blonde woman holding a red bag filmed on CCTV walking alongside Skripal. The footage appeared on the web on March 6, however, the woman was believed to be Skripal’s daughter. It turns out that Yulia is not blonde, but has reddish brown hair, according to a witness who noticed them hours before they were found unconscious.

On March 5, Wiltshire police reported that a man and a woman were found unconscious on a bench at a shopping center in Salisbury, underscoring that both people were “in critical condition” and being treated for suspected exposure to an unknown substance. It was then confirmed that the man was the 66-year-old Skripal, who was granted asylum in the United Kingdom after a US-Russia spy exchange, while the woman was identified as his daughter Yulia.


UK MP Claims Skripal Poisoning Looks Like 'State-Sponsored Attempted Murder'
https://sputniknews.com/europe/201803121062432315-uk-skripal-russia-murder-poisoning/

We've had two incidents in recent years… the second one only a few days ago in Salisbury looking awfully like it was a state-sponsored attempted murder," Tugendhat told the BBC.

Then a week later, on the night of March 12, another Russian exile Nikolai Glushkov, a close associate/friend of the late oligarch Boris Berezovsky, had been found dead in his London home.

Reports: Close associate of Boris Berezovsky found dead in Britain Tuesday 13 March 2018
http://www.arabnews.com/node/1265476/world

Russian exile Nikolai Glushkov, a close associate and friend of late oligarch Boris Berezovsky, has been found dead in his London home, according to the Guardian newspaper.

The 68-year-old was found by his family and friends, the newspaper said and added that the cause of death is currently unknown.

Mr Glushkov was a close friend of exiled Russian oligarch Boris Berezovsky, who was himself a friend of murdered spy Alexander Litvinenko.

Russian exile Nikolai Glushkov found dead at his London home 13/03/2018
https://www.msn.com/en-gb/news/uknews/russian-exile-nikolai-glushkov-found-dead-at-his-london-home/ar-BBKaJIe

A Russian exile who was close friends with the late oligarch Boris Berezovsky has been found dead in his London home, according to friends.

Nikolai Glushkov was discovered by his family and friends late on Monday night, aged 68. The cause of death is not yet clear. One of his friends, the newspaper editor Damian Kudryavtsev, posted the news on his Facebook page.

Without confirming the man’s name, the Metropolitan police said the counter-terrorism command unit was leading the investigation into the death “as a precaution because of associations that the man is believed to have had”.

It said there was no evidence at present to suggest a link to the incident in Salisbury, where Sergei and Yulia Skripal remain in a critical condition.

“An investigation is under way following the death of a man in his 60s in Kingston borough,” the said police, who were called by the London ambulance service at 10.46pm to reports of a man found dead at a residential address in New Malden.

In the 1990s, Glushkov worked for the state airline Aeroflot and Berezovsky’s LogoVAZ car company. In 1999, as Berezovsky fell out with Vladimir Putin and fled to the UK, Glushkov was charged with money-laundering and fraud. He spent five years in jail and was freed in 2004.

In recent years, Glushkov had lived in London, where he received political asylum. In 2011, he gave evidence at the court case brought by Berezovsky against fellow oligarch Roman Abramovich, who remained on good terms with the Kremlin.

Glushkov told the court he had effectively been taken “hostage” by Putin’s administration, which wanted to pressure Berezovsky to sell his TV station ORT.

Berezovsky accused Abramovich of cheating him out of $5bn (£3.2bn) and claimed they had been partners in the 1990s in an oil firm, Sibneft. Abramovich denied this. The judge, Mrs Justice Gloster, rejected the claim and described Berezovsky as “deliberately dishonest”.

Glushkov was deeply unhappy with the judgment and launched a formal appeal, citing “bias”. Meanwhile, Berezovsky disappeared from public life. In March 2013, he was found dead at his ex-wife’s home in Berkshire. Police believe he committed suicide. His friends were not so certain, with a coroner recording an open verdict.

Speaking to the Guardian, Glushkov said he was extremely sceptical that Berezovsky who was found hanged in a bathroom had died of natural causes. “I’m definite Boris was killed. I have quite different information from what is being published in the media,” he said.

He noted that a large number of Russian exiles including Berezovsky, and Berezovsky’s close friend Alexander Litvinenko, had died under mysterious circumstances. “Boris was strangled. Either he did it himself or with the help of someone. [But] I don’t believe it was suicide,” Glushkov said.

He added: “Too many deaths [of Russian emigres] have been happening.”

Glushkov continued to investigate the circumstances surrounding Berezovsky’s death for some months. He conceded that in the period before his death they had quarrelled. In 2013 Glushkov emailed a friend: “I have a lot of new facts that are of great interest.”

Glushkov has two grown-up children, Natasha and Dima, and an ex-wife who lives in Moscow. It is understood that he had split in recent years from a partner. Natasha is believed to live in the UK.

In 2017, during a trial in absentia in Russia, Glushkov was sentenced to eight years in prison for stealing $123m from the company.

The Met police said the man’s next of kin had been informed.

“Whilst we believe we know the identity of the deceased, formal identification is yet to take place. The death is currently being treated as an unexplained.”

Nikolai Glushkov was strangled with a dog lead, Boris Berezovsky was found hanged in the bathroom of his Berkshire home in 2013.

Nikolai Glushkov: Russian exile murdered at London home by 'compression to neck', police say Friday 16 March 2018
https://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/crime/nikolai-glushkov-russia-exile-murdered-london-neck-compression-alexander-litvinenko-boris-berezovsky-a8259611.html

An exiled Russian businessman associated with a leading critic of Vladimir Putin was murdered at his London home just over a week after a nerve agent attack on a former spy, police have revealed.

Investigators believe Nikolai Glushkov was strangled with a dog lead, a source told The Independent.

Officials say there is no evidence to suggest the Mr Glushkov's death and the attempted assassination of Sergei Skripal are linked, but the timing is likely to heighten tensions with the Kremlin just two days before presidential elections.

Mr Glushkov was found dead at his home in New Malden, south-west London, on Monday evening.

Scotland Yard initially treated the 68-year-old’s death as unexplained but a post-mortem examination gave the cause of death as “compression to the neck”. “The Met Police’s Counter Terrorism Command, which has led the investigation from the outset, is now treating Mr Glushkov’s death as murder,” a spokesperson said.

“As a precaution, the command is retaining primacy for the investigation because of the associations Mr Glushkov is believed to have had.”

He was a close friend of exiled Russian oligarch Boris Berezovsky, who was himself a friend of murdered spy Alexander Litvinenko (poisoned with radioactive polonium at a London hotel in 2006 ).

Mr. Berezovsky was found hanged in the bathroom of his Berkshire home in 2013.

Mr Berezovsky’s death is among up to 14 being reviewed by police and MI5 in light of the nerve agent attack on Mr Skripal and his daughter in Salisbury.

[...] Russia’s official Investigations Committee has launched its own criminal investigations into the attempted murder of the Skripals and Mr Glushkov’s death.

The Tass news agency quoted spokesperson Svetlana Petrenko as saying that the investigations “will be conducted in accordance with the Russian legislation and international law”, adding the committee was ready to cooperate with British law enforcement.


British police to investigate potential Russian state involvement in up to 14 deaths in UK Tuesday 13 March 2018
https://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/crime/russia-uk-deaths-british-police-investigation-state-involvement-putin-latest-news-a8253336.html

Police and MI5 are probing allegations of Russian state involvement in up to 14 deaths in the UK in the wake of the nerve agent attack on a former spy.

[...] Several MPs have raised the 14 deaths alleged to be suspicious by a Buzzfeed investigation published last year and demanded an inquiry.

They include the exiled oligarch Boris Berezovsky, whistle-blower Alexander Perepilichnyy, the “spy in the bag” Gareth Williams and a British scientist stabbed to death after being involved in the Alexander Litvinenko case.

No foul play was found in the deaths, and several were ruled to be suicide, but US intelligence agencies are said to view Mr Perepilichnyy’s death as an assassination.


'They will come for you': A third Russian exile in Britain is getting death threats after nerve agent attack Mar. 18, 2018
http://www.businessinsider.com/russian-exile-valery-morozov-gets-death-threat-after-skripal-glushkov-2018-3

Valery Morozov, 63, said he received an email saying that the people who targeted Sergei Skripal "will come for you."
•Skripal was struck with Novichok nerve agent and is seriously ill in hospital.
•Putin critic Nikolai Glushkov was murdered in the past week in London.
•Numerous other Russians in the UK are now reconsidering their safety.

A Russian exile living in Britain says he has received death threats saying that people who poisoned former spy Sergei Skripal are coming for him.

Valery Morozov, a 63-year-old who fled Russia after exposing what he said were corrupt business practices, said that he received threats to his life via anonymous, encrypted emails.

Skripal was exposed to Novichok, a Russian-made nerve agent, which left him in critical condition in hospital and sparked a major diplomatic rift between London and Moscow.

Not long after he was poisoned, Russian exile Nikolai Glushkov was found dead in his London home in what police now believe was a murder. Glushkov had earlier warned that he was on a Kremlin hit list.

Morozov shared the messages with The Sunday Times newspaper. The first said: "They came for Sergei, they will come for you."

When he did not respond, he received a second which asked: "Do you not care what will happen to you? Waiting for your confirmation."

Morozov, who lives in Guildford, Surrey, reported the emails to local police, who are investigating. He has reportedly been given increased police protection.

According to the BBC, police and security forces have contacted several more Russians in Britain to "discuss their safety" in light of the Skripal and Glushkov cases.

The two deaths could also be part of a much longer-running trend.

A major investigation published last year by BuzzFeed News claimed to identify 14 similar deaths linked either to the Russian state or Russian criminal groups.

Amber Rudd, the British Home Secretary, said that these deaths would all be investigated a second time in light of Skripal's death.
 
Palinurus said:
Hello little beaver and :welcome: to the forum.

It's customary around here to formally introduce yourself in the Newbies board. Just click on New topic. No personal information is required, we just like to know how you found this forum, how long you have been reading it, what moved you to now start posting and whether you've read any books of the recommended literature list.

This will allow us to give you a proper welcome with all the perks it entails.

Would you be uncertain as to what to post in your intro, then you may watch some of the other intro posts in that board to see how others have done it.

Thx for ur advice i post my intro on newbies forum but it was waitnig for aprovall.
 
A report just hit the news that alleges that Yulia Skripal is no longer in a critical condition "which conflicts " with an earlier report put out by the DailyMail news agency, that both her and her Father remain in critical condition?

Yulia Skripal, the daughter of former Russian spy Sergei Skripal who was poisoned in the United Kingdom, is no longer in a critical condition and "improving rapidly," the Sky News television channel reported Wednesday.

Yulia Skripal, Poisoned in UK, No Longer in Critical Condition - Reports 29.03.2018
https://sputniknews.com/europe/201803291063034416-yulia-skripal-improving-rapidly/

The news comes in the wake of reports that two police officers who were exposed to the nerve agent that had been used in the alleged poisoning of Russia's former GRU colonel were released from hospital.

Skripal and his daughter Yulia have been in hospital in critical condition since March 4. London believes that the Skripals were exposed to the A234 nerve agent, which UK experts have claimed is related to the Novichok-class nerve agents developed in the Soviet Union.

After the poisoning of Skripal and his daughter, London accused Russia of orchestrating the attack and expelled 23 Russian diplomats as a punitive measure. More than 25 other countries have decided to expel Russian diplomatic workers over the Skripal case.

Russia, in turn, has strongly rejected the accusations and suggested helping in the investigation. However, Moscow's request for samples of the chemical substance used to poison Skripal was denied. In response, Moscow expelled UK diplomats and ordered the British Council to stop its activities in Russia.

Russian spy's daughter is 'conscious and talking' nearly a month after chemical attack
https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2018/03/29/yulia-skripal-conscious-talking-nearly-month-chemical-attack/


* The pair remain in a critical condition following the Novichok attack in Salisbury
* It comes as Mr Skripal's niece said the pair have only a slim chance of surviving
* Ross Cassidy met Mr Skripal after he moved into the house next door in Salisbury
* He questioned the quality of life of should Mr Skripal and daughter Yulia survive

Judge may have to decide whether to turn off Sergei Skripal's life support amid fears his death could ratchet up diplomatic clash with Putin - as friends say spy and his daughter 'should be allowed to die'
(Photos - Video) Wednesday 28 March 2018
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-5552693/Sergei-Skripal-daughter-allowed-die.html

A judge may end up having to make the politically-sensitive decision over whether to maintain life support for Sergei and Yulia Skripal, experts have said.

A friend of the poisoned spy says he believes the critically ill pair are supported by machines in a Salisbury hospital and his niece has claimed they only have a one per cent chance of survival.

Their deaths would have global repercussions, further ratcheting up the tensions between Russia and the West over who was responsible for a nerve agent attack.

Any future decisions over the treatment of Sergei and Yulia Skripal may have to be made by a judge at the Court of Protection, legal experts have said.

Mr Skripal's best friend, Ross Cassidy (pictured), has said that the double agent and his daughter should be allowed to die.

If, as friends and family suggest, the Skripals are on life support, the Court of Protection could be called in to rule on treatment were their condition to deteriorate.

Zak Golombeck, a senior human rights lawyer at Slater and Gordon, told MailOnline that as the court had already been involved in the case over the taking of blood samples, it was likely to be involved in future decisions over their care.

Doctors treating them would likely be encouraged to consult the Skripal's family members in Russia and the Official Solicitor, the British body which represents people who lack mental capacity, he said.

A judge at the Court of Protection, where issues relating to people who lack the mental capacity are considered, gave doctors permission to take blood samples from the Skripals earlier this month.

Any decision on their treatment would have huge political implications amid growing tensions between the UK and Russia.

Professor Anthony Glees, a security expert University of Buckingham, told MailOnline: 'Mr Skripal's death would be a family tragedy, and doubly so if his daughter also dies, but it would also be of international significance.

'The government will then have to tell us what was the secret intelligence which the Foreign Secretary was basing his claim that it was "overwhelmingly likely" that Putin was behind it, or the government could be in big trouble. 'Because Putin will play it for all it's worth, saying "the British don't know what they are doing", "they are clowns" and "their doctors couldn't keep them alive".

'In short, the British government has no interest in seeing his life support system being turned off any time soon.'

Russia ramped up the pressure on Britain today with a series of accusations over the probe.

Russia stepped up pressure on the UK over the investigation today, with a bullish statement from the country's Foreign Ministry.

The statement said: 'On March 16, 2018, Russia's Investigative Committee initiated criminal proceedings regarding the attempted murder of Russian citizen Yulia Skripal and submitted a relevant request to the British side. 'We expect London to cooperate with us within the framework of the investigation that has been launched by the Russian legal authorities.'

Mr Skripal's best friend, Ross Cassidy, has said that the double agent and his daughter should be allowed to die.

It was also revealed that Mr Skripal's mother had not been told of the incident, while family believe there is just a 'one per cent chance' of the pair pulling through.

He told Sky News: 'Quite frankly, what future have they got? I don't know the properties of this weapon that was used on them and my guess is they are probably being kept alive by artificial means and what life will they have if they survive? 'We've already been told they will be severely mentally impaired and I don't think they would want that. I think death would probably be merciful.'

It comes as Mr Skirpal's niece said her uncle and cousin have only a slim chance of surviving. Viktoria Skripal said the prognosis for the former Russian double agent and his daughter Yulia 'really isn't good'.


She told the BBC: 'Out of 99 per cent I have maybe 1 per cent of hope. Whatever it was has given them a very small chance of survival. 'But they're going to be invalids for the rest of their lives. The first priority was to protect our granny so that she wouldn't hear or find out anything.'

Countries across the world joined the UK in diplomatic action against Russia, which has been blamed for the attack.

Theresa May hailed the 'unprecedented series of expulsions' of Russian diplomats, which she said sent a strong message to Moscow that it could not ignore international law.

The Russian Embassy in the UK said the Prime Minister had had still not presented evidence that the country was responsible for the poisonings, adding that 'no-one in the wider world would take British words for granted'.

It also responded to claims by officials that more than 20 different stories had come out of Moscow since the attack to 'try and confuse the picture'.

A statement posted on its website read: 'This only confirms the openness of the Russian society and the independence of Russian media, which Prime Minister May wrongly confuses with the Russian state.

'Given the lack of official information, every Russian, just like every Briton, is entitled to their own version of events.

'Let's also not forget that at least five different versions of the poisoning have been 'leaked' by the police to British media: the Skripals were either poisoned in a pub, or in a restaurant, or in their car, or by putting the chemical into Ms Skripal's suitcase, or by smearing their door handle. 'To see Russia being accused of spreading false rumours in this context is rather surprising.'

On Wednesday, Ireland became the 24th country to join the the UK in diplomatic action against the Kremlin.

With Downing Street saying that more than 115 Russian diplomats had been ordered home by friends and allies, Dublin added one more to the list.

In Moscow, President Vladimir Putin's spokesman, Dmitry Peskov, hinted that the Kremlin would respond with tit-for-tat expulsions, saying Russia would proceed from the 'principle of reciprocity'. Russia has already ordered 23 British diplomats to leave in response to the expulsion of a similar number of undeclared Russian intelligence officers from the UK.


American diplomats declared personae non gratae have to leave Russia by April 5, the step Moscow made in response to the greatest ever expulsion of Russian diplomats from the US over Skripal's poisoning, groundlessly blamed on Russia.

Lavrov: Russia to Expel 60 US Diplomats, Close Consulate in St. Petersburg 29.03.2018
https://sputniknews.com/europe/201803291063040748-russia-lavrov-skripal-mirror-response/

On Reciprocal Diplomats' Expulsion - Moscow will expel the same number of American diplomats as Washington and will shut down the US General Consulate in Saint Petersburg, Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov announced.

The measures would be reciprocal … They include expulsion of the equivalent number of diplomats and they include our decision to withdraw our agreement to allow the United States' general consulate to operate in St. Petersburg," Lavrov told a briefing.

The minster specified that 58 diplomatic employers will be removed from the US embassy in Moscow and two staff will have to leave the General Consulate in Ekaterinburg by April 5. As for St. Petersburg's consulate, Americans have to vacate the premises in two days.

The top diplomat went on saying that Russia will not only provide a mirror response to West's steps in the wake of Skripal's poisoning, which was blamed on Moscow, but even "more than that." As he explained, Russia's counter-measures will affect all countries that made a decision to expel diplomats.

The minister noted that Russia will convene an emergency meeting of the Organisation for Prohibition of Chemical Weapons in a bid to start a dialogue and establish the truth.

Sergei Skripal, ex-Russian intelligence officer who worked for UK MI6, and his daughter Yulia have been hospitalized since March 4 after being exposed to what UK experts claim was an A234 nerve agent. London has stated that it was "highly likely" that Moscow was behind the attack. UK government responded by expelling 23 Russian diplomats from the country. Expressing solidarity with the United Kingdom, the United States and over 25 other countries also expelled Russian diplomats.

Russia has strongly rejected the accusations, and retaliated by expelling the same number of UK diplomats and closing the British Council in Russia. Russian Foreign Ministry's spokeswoman Maria Zakharova called the UK "proof" a "global fake" and stressed that London was not responding to Moscow's constructive offers to work together on the investigation into the poisoning. Zakharova noted that the United Kingdom had repeatedly demonstrated its neglect for the norms of international law, as London neither granted Moscow an access to samples of poisonous substance, nor allowed a consular officer to meet with Yulia Skripal, who is a Russian citizen.

On Threats to Seize Russian Assets in US - US Ambassador Jon Huntsman has been summoned to the Russian Foreign Ministry to hear a report on a batch of counter-measures Russia is going to take. Leaving the ministry, the envoy refused to answer any reporters' questions.

Moscow demanded clarifications of Huntsman's earlier remarks about a possible seizure of Russian state assets in the US. According to Lavrov, in case Washington continues its hostile actions towards the Russian diplomatic mission, additional measures from the Russian side will follow.

Earlier the US ambassador admitted that the seizure of Russian assets was possible.

"I don’t know what the future holds, I hope that we will be able to stabilize the relationship… But of course it’s possible," Huntsman told the RBC broadcaster, answering the corresponding question.

The envoy's suggestions echoed UK Prime Minister Theresa May's plans to consider the proposal to prohibit the sale of Russian bonds through the City of London's clearing houses, which help finance Russia's sovereign debt.

The move was earlier initiated by Foreign Affairs Select Committee Chairman Tom Tugendhat, who pointed the finger at several sanctioned Russian banks, including VTB, which he claimed are behind the issue of Russian bonds due to UK and EU legislation.

On March 14, May pledged to "freeze Russian state assets wherever we have the evidence that they may be used to threaten the life or property of UK nationals or residents" in addition to the expulsion of 23 Russian diplomats as well as suspension of all planned high-level bilateral contacts in retaliation for the alleged attack on Skripal on the British soil.

Russia to close US consulate in St. Petersburg, expel 60 diplomats as Washington did – Lavrov
https://www.rt.com/news/422720-russia-us-closes-consulate/

Russia to expel 60 US diplomats and close US consulate in St Petersburg
https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2018/03/29/russia-close-us-consulate-st-petersburg/

Russia to expel 60 U.S. diplomats, close St. Petersburg consulate (Video - embed) Thursday March 29, 2018
https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/europe/russia-to-expel-us-diplomats-close-st-petersburg-consulate/2018/03/29/1d1b6fc4-3376-11e8-b6bd-0084a1666987_story.html?utm_term=.31a85d67d3fe

Russia responds quid pro quo to diplomats' expulsions Thursday March 29, 2018
https://www.sfgate.com/news/crime/article/Georgia-expels-Russian-diplomat-over-spy-poisoning-12790328.php#photo-15308662

Image 1 of 14 (3rd image - Putin)

Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov prepares to speak in Moscow, Russia, Thursday, March 29, 2018. Russia's foreign minister says Moscow will expel the same number of diplomats from the nations that have expelled Russian diplomats over the poisoning of an ex-Russian spy in Britain.


Lavrov: Russia to expel same number of diplomats as West (Video - embed) Thursday March 29, 2018
https://www.washingtonpost.com/video/world/lavrov-russia-to-expel-same-number-of-diplomats-as-west/2018/03/29/e4e7b9ae-3380-11e8-b6bd-0084a1666987_video.html?utm_term=.1141bfd8743d
 
voyageur said:
Read the following this morning from John Helmer concerning Dmitry Peskov (media and presidential spokesman) who appears to have perhaps overstepped his bounds and makes an appeal: http://johnhelmer.net/kremlin-purge-or-purgative-dmitry-peskov-advertises-the-skripal-accident/#more-18924

KREMLIN PURGE OR PURGATIVE — DMITRY PESKOV ADVERTISES THE SKRIPAL ACCIDENT

Kremlin insiders report that fear for survival is now sweeping the Kremlin and the ministries of the Russian government, as it is acknowledged by senior officials that President Vladimir Putin (lead image, left) will make “significant changes” when he announces the new government after his inauguration in six weeks’ time.

Putin, the sources have disclosed, has been unpleasantly surprised by two results of the Skripal poisoning case, after the intelligence and security services have briefed him on all they now know of the case. The first surprise for Putin, the sources claim, is the failure of command and control on the part of the civilian arm of government to respond to the British challenges after the poisoning of Sergei and Yulia Skripal was announced on March 4. The second is the behaviour of the state media and propaganda arm operated by Dmitry Peskov (centre), the presidential spokesman. “The Foreign Ministry hasn’t known how to act in London, whom to employ, whether to open its mouth, or keep it shut. The state propaganda organs have made this worse. Everything the government now says, truth though it may be, now looks unbelievable cover-up.”

The sources are guarded in their predictions. They believe Dmitry Medvedev will be reappointed prime minister. They expect that senior officials regarded as too fond of the west will go. {makes sense given the times}

Watch and read as Dmitry Peskov explains to his boss why he should not be dismissed, and in the process reveals to the British government how the spokesman makes the president look culpable in the Skripal affair — an affair Peskov calls an “accident” six times over. That’s a dramatic news-breaking term; Peskov fails to explain it.

Peskov, 50, comes from a Soviet Foreign Ministry family. He started there himself in 1990, rising slowly through the ranks to First Secretary. Eight years — all of his foreign posting time — he spent in Turkey. Peskov then started as a press officer in the Kremlin in 2000; he has been Putin’s spokesman at the presidency and the prime ministry. His present post, which also includes the power to direct the budgets and operations of the state media, commenced in 2012.

Last week Peskov summoned Russia Today Television (RT) for an unusually lengthy interview. Spoken in English, at 46 minutes it is far too long for most television viewers. With no independent count of the RT audience and a re-broadcast estimate of 28,000 for the video clip, Peskov was appealing to the president not to remove him. Watch the video here. The transcript can also be read in full.

Transcript and video here: https://www.rt.com/shows/sophieco/422090-peskov-skripal-saga-uk/

Helmer than said:

Read these excerpts from an MI6 point of view, or from the perspective of the German Bundesnachrichtendienst (BND) or the French Direction générale de la sécurité extérieure (DGSE). They are asking themselves why Putin, with all that is now known to him of the movements, communications, and business activities of Yulia Skripal in Moscow and her father in England, would direct Peskov to say these things, but omit to explain the Russian evidence for the “accident”.

Part Interview:
[...] [...] [...]

From things read and listened to, Peskov seems to have done a pretty good job, yet of course one can't know all the aspects and undercurrents - one can't know what they could have said over what was said and why on a given situation.

Unlike what Trump has done, it will be interesting to see what Putin does with his own house in six weeks, yet more so, what the West will do to agitate the foundations around him as surly the game keeps changing. Things seem to be ramping up in the Middle East - deliveries of hegemony military hardware in Jordan (and wherever else) with the addition of Johnny-war-boy Bolton. There is also the petro-yuan that is coming on stream, so Western desperation may be in full play.


John Helmer generally puts out some really good articles but I haven't come across any other references - that hint Dmitry Peskov might be replaced or shuffled into another position in the next six weeks? My impression is that Putin works very closely with Peskov and if he was going to do something - like an interview - that it was probably cleared through Putin first?

I have noticed, Sergey Lavrov, as Foreign Minister has basically taken over most of the generated reports and Press interviews pertaining to the Skripal incident and the expulsion of Diplomats.

Here's another article on Dmitry Peskov:

Russia's presidential spokesman has offered his personal take on a harassment row that recently rocked the country’s parliament, and explained the similarities between this case and last year’s high-profile Hollywood sex scandal.

Sex & the Duma: Kremlin Spokesman Comments on 'Russian Harvey Weinstein' Case 30.03.2018
https://sputniknews.com/russia/201803301063064419-peskov-slutsky-harassment-opinion/

During a talk show hosted by the Russian Higher School of Economics, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov has insisted that the government has no intention to comment on a recent string of sexual harassment accusations leveled against Russian MP Leonid Slutsky.

"If Slutsky assaulted this poor journalist – where was she all this time? … If he harassed you, why did you keep quiet? Why didn’t you go to the police? Why, after so much time has passed, did you go to the ethics committee instead," Peskov inquired.

He also compared this situation with the sexual harassment allegations against Hollywood mogul Harvey Weinstein, noting how the accusations were brought forward years after the alleged deeds took place.

"Maybe he’s scum, but none of them [the alleged victims] went to the police and said that Weinstein raped them. No! They wanted to earn 10 million dollars. What do you call a woman who sleeps with a man for 10 million dollars? Pardon me if I sound rude, but you call her a prostitute," Peskov remarked.

Later Peskov pointed out, however, that his appearance on the talk show wasn’t some kind of official event and that everything he said back then was merely a “frank and personal conversation,” nothing more.

Leonid Slutsky, chairman of the Russian State Duma's International Affairs Committee, was accused of sexual harassment by Dozhd (Rain) TV channel producer Daria Zhuk and BBC Russian Service correspondent Farida Rustamova,who have already submitted complaints to the parliamentary ethics committee.

The committee reviewed the ‘Slutsky case’ and found no evidence of alleged infractions taking place.
Slutsky himself refuted these accusations and said that these attempts to turn him into a “Russian Harvey Weinstein” are merely a provocation that is doomed to fail.


The Russian Foreign Ministry on Friday announced retaliatory measures to the ambassadors of foreign states, which had expelled Russian diplomats earlier this week.

Russian Foreign Ministry Responds to Expulsion of Diplomats Over Skripal Case 31.03.2018
https://sputniknews.com/russia/201803311063089689-russia-diplomats-expulsion-response-skripal/

The United States, some EU countries, as well as Canada, Norway, Ukraine and several other states decided to expel Russian diplomats in connection with the incident in Salisbury, where Sergei Skripal, a former Russian spy who worked for UK intelligence, and his daughter Yulia were poisoned on March 4. London has stated that it was "highly likely" that Moscow was behind the attack. Russia has strongly rejected the accusations.

The heads and representatives of the diplomatic missions of Germany, France, Poland, the Netherlands, Italy, Canada and more than 10 other states were given notes of protest.

UK Ambassador to Russia Laurie Bristow was summoned to the Smolenskaya Square again. He was informed that the UK side should in response reduce its personnel in the UK Embassy in Moscow and the UK Consulates General in Russia within a month, bringing the total number of employees to the same number as the number of Russian diplomats, administrative and technical workers who are staying in the United Kingdom.

The ministry has also expressed the strong protest to the ambassador over "the provocative and groundless actions" taken by the UK side, which inspired the expulsion of Russian diplomats from a number of countries.

US Ambassador to Russia Jon Huntsman was told about the Russian response on Thursday.

Forced Response - Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov said Thursday that Moscow would provide a mirror response to all those countries that expelled Russian diplomats, sending back from Russia the same number of their diplomats.

Thus, apart from response to US and UK decisions, diplomats and employees of the diplomatic missions of Australia (2), Albania (2), Canada (4), Croatia (1), Czech Republic (3), Denmark (2), Estonia (1), Finland (1), France (4), Germany (4), Ireland (1), Italy (2), Latvia (1), Lithuania (3), Macedonia (1), Moldova (3), the Netherlands (2), Norway (1), Poland (4), Romania (1), Spain (2), Sweden (1) and Ukraine (13) will be expelled.

"Taking into account the fact that at the last moment Belgium, Hungary, Georgia and Montenegro decided to join the listed countries, Russia reserves the right to respond to these countries," the Russian Ministry noted.

US Ambassador to Russia John Huntsman was summoned to the Foreign Ministry the day before and was told that, in response, the Russian side would send 58 embassy employees in Moscow and two consulate employees in Yekaterinburg. In addition, the US Consulate General in St. Petersburg will be closed.

Commenting on this move by Moscow, State Department spokesman Heather Nauert said that Moscow was not interested in a dialogue with Washington, and the expulsion of US diplomats and the closure of the consulate general in St. Petersburg had been an "unjustified step."

"We do not agree with this assessment, you know that Russia was forced to take retaliatory steps in response to those unfriendly, nonconstructive, illegal actions, in this case related to the deportation of our diplomats and the closing of the consular institution by Washington," Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said, commenting on Nauert's statement.

Additional Measures for London - On Friday afternoon, almost at the same time as Peskov gave a comment to reporters, representative embassy cars began to approach the high-rise on the Smolenskaya Square.

The first, to the surprise of the journalists, was the UK ambassador. London was notified of the expulsion of diplomats last week, moreover, the embassy officials mentioned in the list have already managed to leave the territory of Russia.

The answer appeared on the Foreign Ministry's website about an hour after Bristow left the Smolenskaya Square.

"UK Ambassador to Russia Laurie Bristow was summoned to the Foreign Ministry, where he was handed a note of protest against the provocative and unfounded actions by the British side, which had orchestrated a groundless expulsion of Russian diplomats from a number of countries," the Russian Foreign Ministry said.

Moscow asked to bring the staff of UK diplomatic institutions in Russia in line with the number of Russian offices in the United Kingdom within a month.

The Russian Foreign Ministry noted at the same time that Russia "as has been repeatedly stated, is ready for a substantive and responsible interaction both within international legal formats and bilaterally in order to establish the truth as well as look for and find the individuals involved in the Salisbury incident."

Bristow, commenting on the call to the Russian Foreign Ministry, did not disclose the details of the meeting.

As of now, it is not clear how many employees of the UK diplomatic mission will leave Russia. A spokesperson of the Russian Embassy in London, answering a question from Sputnik about how many Russian embassy employees would have to leave the United Kingdom, replied that the figures are known to the UK side, and questions should be addressed to it.

According to the UK Foreign Office, there were 58 diplomats in Russian diplomatic missions in the country before the expulsion of 23 Russian diplomats. Sputnik does not have information on the number of people working in Russian diplomatic missions in the United Kingdom, including technical staff.

The UK Foreign Office, according to common practice, does not disclose the number of its employees in foreign diplomatic missions.

No Comments - The ambassadors of other countries, including France, Australia, Sweden, Poland, and Croatia, who came to the Russian Foreign Ministry after Bristow, also refused to communicate with journalists gathered near the high-rise in Smolenskaya Square.

Only the head of the German diplomatic mission, Ruediger Von Fritsch, leaving the Russian Foreign Ministry, noted that Berlin remained open to dialogue with Moscow, but the Russian side must answer the open questions on the Skripal case.

"I had the opportunity to emphasize two things in today's conversation. First, good relations remain in Germany's interests, in the interests of the peoples of Germany and Russia, and we are ready for this and open to dialogue. Secondly, in light of the sad events in Salisbury, the Russian government should do everything possible to bring transparency and clarity and to answer fair, open questions," the German ambassador said.

It is noteworthy that on Friday, Serbian Ambassador to Russia Slavenko Terzic was invited to the Russian Foreign Ministry, however, unlike his colleagues, he held a working meeting there, during which he confirmed Belgrade's friendly attitude toward Moscow. Apart from Serbia, Austria, Slovenia, Greece, Cyprus, Bulgaria and Portugal earlier refused to expel Russian diplomats.

Reaction - Commenting on Moscow's actions, the Lithuanian Foreign Ministry said that the expelled embassy staff, who must leave the Russian Federation within a week, had nothing to do with intelligence. The Swedish Foreign Ministry said that they regret the expulsion of their diplomat but "it was something they did not expect."

London and Berlin reacted in a similar way. The Czech Foreign Ministry noted that they had expected such a response from the Russian side and take it into account.


Russian government planes have been spotted picking up cargo at Dulles International Airport near Washington, DC. The planes are believed to be on a mission to collect the Russian diplomats expelled from the United States on Monday by US President Donald Trump.

Russian Planes Arrive in US to Take Expelled Diplomats Home to Moscow (Video - embed) 30.03.2018
https://sputniknews.com/us/201803301063083867-Russian-Plane-Pick-Up-Expelled-Diplomats/

Two Rossiya Airlines planes — both Ilyushin Il-96-300s — were captured on video being loaded up, presumably with the diplomats' belongings, alongside a U-Haul truck. Rossiya Airlines is a subsidiary of Aeroflot, a semi-private Russian airline company, but these two planes specifically are part of a Special Flight Squadron of the Russian government.

The exodus of 60 Russian diplomats from the US was set in motion four days ago over accusations that the Russian government is responsible for the March 4 poisoning of a double agent who had retired to the UK. As Sputnik previously reported, the Trump administration's move marks the biggest-ever expulsion of Russian diplomats from the United States.

The move also comes 15 months after former US President Barack Obama expelled 35 Russian diplomats over allegations of election hacking, which, like the accusations prompting Trump's booting of Russian staff, have yet to be supported by concrete evidence given to the public.

The White House said in a statement Monday that the closure of the Russian consulate in Seattle, Washington, was due to a national security threat posed by its physical location, although it also accused a number of the diplomats of being "intelligence agents." The move comes as a torrent of more than 20 countries have pledged to expel Russian officials or have booted them already.

Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said in a briefing after the White House's statement that there would be reciprocal measures. "They include expulsion of the equivalent number of diplomats and they include our decision to withdraw our agreement to allow the United States' general consulate to operate in St. Petersburg," Lavrov said.

Moscow has so far expelled a small number of diplomats from 20 countries, Sputnik has reported.

"Tomorrow, on March 31, our diplomats and their families will fly back to Moscow," Russian Ambassador to the US Anatoly Antonov told reporters on Friday.
 
Trump walking back on US pledge to invest $200mn in Syria recovery – report
Published time: 31 Mar, 2018 04:46
https://www.rt.com/usa/422836-syria-humanitarian-assistance-trump-freeze/

US President Donald Trump has reportedly pulled over $200 million in funds earmarked for Syria. It comes after he hinted that the US would no longer bother itself with Syrian problems upon achieving its military goals there.

Over $200 million in US assistance for the war-ravaged country, promised by former Secretary of State Rex Tillerson in February, may never reach the liberated areas of Syria that have been left in ruins by seven years of a lingering conflict, which saw the Russian-supported Syrian government force and the US-backed rebels battling Islamic State (IS, formerly ISIS/ISIL) and Al-Qaeda affiliates.

According to a report by the Wall Street Journal, citing US officials, Trump ordered the State Department to freeze the allotment of the funds after he came across a news report on Tillerson's pledge of financial support for Syria.

In his opening remarks at the meeting of the US-led anti-IS international coalition in February, Tillerson announced that Washington would provide "an additional $200 million to further support critical stabilization and early recovery initiatives in liberated areas of Syria."

This should have supplemented some $225 million that had already been designated by the State Department for that purposes. Tillerson revealed at the time that the US has spent "nearly $7.7 billion" on humanitarian assistance to Syria since the onset of the conflict, and it remains "the world's largest donor of humanitarian assistance to the Syrian crisis."

Speaking at the meeting, he further stressed the importance of the financial help to war-torn countries like Syria and Iraq to ensure that IS would not be able to snap back. "If communities in Iraq and Syria cannot return to normal life, we risk the return of conditions that allowed IS to take and control vast territory," he said.

The WSJ report, if confirmed to be true, would align well with a recent speech by the US president, during which he expressed frustration with the US habit of spending large sums of money in foreign assistance to little effect.

"We spent $7 trillion in the Middle East. We'd build a school; they'd blow it up. We'd build it again; they'd blow it up. We'd build it again; hasn't been blown up yet, but it will be," Trump said Friday, adding that for all that tremendous amount of money spent, the US gets effectively "nothing" in return.

During the same speech, he made a surprise announcement that US troops would leave Syria "very soon," implying that other countries should bear the burden of dealing with the dire humanitarian crisis.

"Let the other people take care of it now," Trump said.

What seems to be a new approach by the Trump administration on the Syrian issue represents a U-turn from the Syria strategy unveiled by Tillerson at the beginning of the year. The then-State Secretary said that the US has learned a lesson from its "premature departure" from Iraq, which was ordered by Barack Obama and left the country in tatters, allowing Al-Qaeda remnants to regroup and eventually merge with IS.

The Pentagon has said it conducted over 29,000 airstrikes in Syria and Iraq between August 2014 and the end of February 2018, which resulted in 855 civilian casualties. However, the figures are feared to be significantly higher, with the UK-based non-profit Airwars estimating that as many as 6,200 civilians have perished due to US-led coalition bombing raids.

In an interview with NBC's Megyn Kelly, Russian President Vladimir Putin described Iraq's Mosul as "razed to the ground" after being liberated by US-backed forces. He called for an investigation into similarly massive airstrikes in the Syrian city of Raqqa.
 
Curiouser and curiouser: Yulia Skripal logged into VK while in coma (Screen shot - Russian version of Facebook) Mar 31, 2018
https://www.fort-russ.com/2018/03/curiouser-and-curiouser-yulia-skripal-logged-into-vk-while-in-coma/

The 33-year-old daughter of Sergei Skripal, Yulia Skripal, visited her ”Vkontakte” page – sort of a Russian version of Facebook – on the morning of March 7th, three days after the “assassination” attempt that put her allegedly in a coma, until just a few days ago. She was poisoned, according to the British government, along side her father Sergei, and according to the official version, hasn’t regained consciousness until quite recently.

There is the theoretical possibility that her page was hacked or an agency entered through her handheld device, if they were not protected by a password. Any hacking would probably be by employees of the British special services, though Russian agencies would also have an interest. There is also the curious statement by the head physician of the hospital, where she allegedly is with her father, that she came to her senses for a short time, before falling back in a coma.

Another possibility is that, in line with the statement of the head physician, she ‘came to her senses’ and actually wasn’t in a coma at all, or never ‘fell back’ into a coma.

It is especially strange that all this comes as we have news from the UK that the Foreign Office has said it is “considering Russia’s request for consular access to Yulia Skripal”. We should keep in mind that the UK has utterly failed its obligations, legal and otherwise, to be transparent and grant access to Russia – given that Yulia is a Russian citizen. ‘Considering Russia’s request’ is itself reflective of an abrogation of international norms. It is not a ‘request’ which leaves the receiver of said request with any room for any answer than compliance. ‘Request’ is one of these legal terms which layman interprets as something other than a ‘demand’.

Is it strange that within a day of Russia putting forward its ‘request’, suddenly Yulia has recovered from her ‘coma’ and is now talking and interacting with people? Is this to prevent Russian consular authorities from confirming her condition, as they are legally obliged to do?


Yulia Skripal’s cousin to visit the UK from Russia Mar 31, 2018
https://www.fort-russ.com/2018/03/yulia-skripals-cousin-to-visit-the-uk-from-russia/

The Russian embassy in London said in a statement on Friday that the cousin of Yulia Skripal, Viktoria Skripal, wishes to visit Great britain to see her cousin who was exposed to a nerve agent in the quaint English city of Salisbury.

“After learning that Yulia Skripal is improving, Viktoria expressed a wish to come to London and visit her cousin. We believe that for humanitarian reasons, the British authorities will promptly issue her a visa,” the statement said.

The BBC reported on Thursday that Yulia was “conscious and talking.”

Doctors also revealed that she was “rapidly improving” unlike her father Sergei who still remains in a critical condition.


The Embassy of the Russian Federation to the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland
https://www.rusemb.org.uk/fnapr/6443

PRESS RELEASES AND NEWS

30.03.2018 - Embassy Press Officer on unanswered questions regarding the Salisbury poisoning

Question: At yesterday's briefing, the Official Representative of the Russian Ministry of Foreign Affairs said that the Embassy had asked quite a few questions that remain unanswered. What are those questions?

Answer: Indeed, we are witnessing a blatant violation by the UK of its international obligations under the 1963 Vienna Convention on Consular Relations and the 1968 bilateral Consular Convention. We have not received a response to our multiple questions and requests made through diplomatic notes. Failure by Britain to engage in normal diplomatic exchange with the Embassy on this matter is regrettable.

The questions to which we are awaiting answers are as follows:

1) What is Mr. and Ms. Skripal's exact diagnosis and condition?

2) What treatment are they receiving?

3) Is that treatment the same as that provided to Sgt Nick Bailey?

4) Is it true that Yulia Skripal has regained consciousness and can communicate, eat and drink?

5) Mr. Bailey has been discharged, Yulia Skripal is getting better, but why is Sergei Skripal still in a critical condition?

6) Did Mr. Bailey, Mr. Skripal and Ms. Skripal receive antidotes?

7) Which antidotes?

8) How were the right antidotes identified?

9) Did they actually help or harm?

10) The Embassy immediately informed the FCO that Mr. Skripal's niece has been enquiring of her uncle's and cousin's health. Why have the authorities ignored her?

11) Why are there no photos/videos confirming that the Skripals are alive and at hospital?

12) Did the Skripals agree on Salisbury CCTV footage to be shown on TV?

13) If not, who agreed on their behalf?

14) Can that person also agree on hospital photos/videos to be published?

15) Why are consuls not allowed to see the Skripals?

16) How are doctors protected against chemical exposure?

17) Can consuls use the same protection?

18) Where, how and by whom were blood samples collected from the Skripals?

19) How was it documented?

20) Who can certify that the data is credible?

21) How can we be sure that the chain of custody was up to international standards?

22) Through what methods did experts identify the substance so quickly?

23) Had they possessed a sample against which to test the substance?

24) Where had that sample come from?

25) Nerve agents act immediately. Why was it not the case with the Skripals?

26) Leaks suggest the Skripals were poisoned at a pub, at a restaurant, in their car, at the airport, at home... Which version is the official one?

27) How to reconcile quick political moves with Scotland Yard's statement that the investigation will take "months"?

LATEST EVENTS:

31.03.2018 - Embassy Press Officer comments on the UK explanation of the search of an Aeroflot flight at Heathrow

Question: UK Security Minister Ben Wallace has explained that yesterday’s search of an Aeroflot plane at Heathrow was a “routine” procedure aimed at protecting the UK “from organized crime and from those who attempt to bring harmful substances like drugs or firearms into the country”. Are you satisfied with this reply?

30.03.2018 - Embassy Press Office replies to a question regarding the search of an Aeroflot plane at Heathrow

Question: How would you comment on the news on an Aeroflot plane being searched at Heathrow Airport? Is it true that the search was conducted in violation of the existing rules? Answer: Today, we have witnessed another blatant provocation by the British authorities. Border Force and Customs officers have searched the aircraft that was conducting the Aeroflot flights 2582 / 2583, Moscow – London – Moscow. This kind of event is extraordinary.

30.03.2018 - Embassy press officer answers question on Yulia Skripal case

Question: The British media reports that Yulia Skripal is recovering. Her relatives – are they going to visit her in London?

30.03.2018 - Press release on Russia’s response to unfriendly UK steps

On March 30, UK Ambassador to Russia Laurie Bristow was summoned to the Foreign Ministry, where he was handed a note of protest against the provocative and unfounded actions by the British side, which had orchestrated a groundless expulsion of Russian diplomats from a number of countries.

28.03.2018 - Foreign Ministry statement on the Salisbury incident

The British authorities have demonstrated their inability to ensure the safety of Russian citizens more than once. The glaring examples include the poisoning of former FSB agent Alexander Litvinenko, the death of businessmen Badri Patarkatsishvili and Alexander Perepelichny under unclear circumstances, the mysterious “suicide” of Boris Berezovsky and the strangling of Berezovsky’s business partner Nikolai Glushkov, and lastly, the recent attempt on the lives and health of Sergey Skripal and his daughter Yulia.

27.03.2018 - Statement of the Russian Embassy

It has come to our knowledge that in the wake of the anti-Russian campaign unleashed by the British Government some British students planning trips to Russia have been warned of a “possibility of anti-British sentiment or harassment caused by their nationality”.

27.03.2018 - Embassy Press Officer answers questions on statements by Prime Minister Theresa May

Q: Could you comment on yesterday’s statement that the Prime Minister made in the House of Commons, namely that British authorities are “quite clear that Russia was responsible” for the Salisbury poisoning? Is this a hardening of the British position in comparison to her statement of 14 March, according to which it was “highly likely” that Russia was responsible?

27.03.2018 - Book of condolences opens at the Russian Embassy

Book of condolences will be open on 28 March from 11.00 to 17.00 at the Residence of the Ambassador of the Russian Federation at 13 Kensington Palace Gardens, London, W8 4QX.

27.03.2018 - Ambassador Yakovenko holds a briefing on the “Skripal case”

On March 27, 2018 Ambassador Alexander Yakovenko held a briefing for the Ambassadors of foreign countries in the UK on the progress of the British authorities’ investigation into the attempted murder of two Russian citizens, Sergey and Yulia Skripal, on 4 March in Salisbury, as well as the violent death of another Russian national, Nikolay Glushkov, on 12 March in London.


Russian MFA Releases 14 Questions Addressed to UK on 'Fabricated Skripal Case'
https://sputniknews.com/russia/201803311063103452-russia-uk-skripal-case-russian-ministry-questions/

Moscow: UK Hiding Info on Skripal Case Hints at Likely Intel Involvement
https://sputniknews.com/europe/201803311063096887-moscow-uk-hiding-info/


Decoding the Skripal Affair: Part 1 – When Poisoning Spies is in NATO’s Interests March 26, 2018
https://www.fort-russ.com/2018/03/decoding-the-skripal-affair-part-1-when-poisoning-spies-is-in-natos-interests/

By Eduard Popov, translated by Jafe Arnold –

Diplomatic war gains momentum - Contrary to the somewhat optimistic forecasts put forth by some Russian political analysts and British diplomats, the “Skripal affair” is by no means subsiding. As we have feared, it is ceasing to be (or, perhaps, is showing that it never even was) a private affair of London, and is becoming the common endeavor of the collective West. The European states within the US’ sphere of influence have hastened to express solidarity with the “injured” British government and have begun expelling Russian diplomats.

Just late last week it was announced that Poland and the Baltic states would follow the UK’s lead in expelling Russian diplomats. On March 26th, additional European and other heavyweights have joined in the fray.

The United States has decided to expel Russian diplomats and their missions’ employees. Overall, more than 60 Russian diplomats will be forced to leave the US. What’s more, the US has decided to shut down Russia’s Consulate General in Seattle.

Leading European countries, specifically France and Europe’s locomotive, Germany, have been somewhat more restrained in their actions. The latter will expel four Russian diplomats over the “Skripal case”, as Germany’s foreign ministry announced on Twitter. France will also send four Russian diplomats home. Meanwhile, on March 26th, even Italy, which sympathizes with Russia more than others, announced that it will join the initiative. Overall, 14 European countries have declared that they will expel Russian diplomats, which means a total of 28 diplomatic employees will have to pack their bags.

Nor could, of course, Ukraine hold itself back from participating in this anti-Russian action. Although this country belongs to Europe only geographically, it has readily joined Western countries’ campaign and announced its decision to expel 13 Russian diplomats, thus coming in third after Britain and the Americans. Nevertheless, such a small number has a big impact – it will greatly reduce Russia’s diplomatic corps in Ukraine and therefore further deteriorate the countries’ diplomatic relations. With this decision, official Kiev is not only demonstrating solidarity with the collective West, but is also displaying its hope to be considered for cooption if not into the European Union, then at least NATO. This, of course, would contradict Ukraine’s official neutral status spelled out in its constitution and would open the prospects for a hot war between NATO and Russia.

We can be sure that this rather radical measure by the West will not be the last in this “conflict.” European Council head Donald Tusk has said that he does not rule out additional anti-Russian measures over the Skripal controversy. Tusk mentioned among possible steps the expulsion of even more Russian diplomats. Without a doubt, a wide arsenal of political and economic pressure mechanisms or, in the terminology of Western countries, “punishment” will be unleashed on Russia.

It cannot be ruled out that in the near future we will hear Western statements on the complete or partial non-recognition of the Russian presidential elections held on March 18th. It is almost guaranteed that at least a partial boycott of the World Cup will be proclaimed. Moreover, the prospects of cutting Russia out of the SWIFT banking system have long since been on the table, which would seriously trouble Russian businesses.

However, the single most serious threat is that looming over Russia’s strategic project: Nord Stream 2. We will return to this point a bit later. For now, let us present the situation as it is seen from Russia.

The goal and people behind the “Skripal affair”: the view from Russia - In Russia one can find two main conceptual points of view on the “Skripal affair” which are similar only at first glance. The first is that adhered to by the Russian Ministry of Foreign Affairs and the state as a whole. This position is one of categorical denial of any Russian involvement in Skripal and his daughter’s alleged poisoning. A number of arguments can be made in defense of this presumption of innocence. Despite the unity of the Western world claimed by Western diplomats, this argument is even accepted by part of the European elite, a point which we will explore later.

The Russian foreign ministry cites, first and foremost, the lack of any serious motives for poisoning a military intelligence traitor who was exchanged years ago and has lived in Great Britain posing no threat to the interests of his former country. The very idea of assassinating Skripal, who is closely controlled by British intelligence, at the peak of aggravation in Russia-West relations and ahead of Russian presidential elections is, in the very least, unreasonable. Even Vladimir Putin’s worst enemies have reproached him for the supposed non-rational nature of such an alleged act.

Another point of view which is widespread in public and expert circles, such as that insisted on by the ex-State Duma deputy and well-known expert Sergei Markov, is that the Skripal affair is either a conscious provocation by British or American intelligence or the political order of American politicians. Here this is some diversity of opinions, as some experts suggest that Skripal’s poisoning was linked to the “Russian dossier” on President Trump. Skripal is alleged to be one of the key figures behind this dossier who helped seek out information on Trump and his team’s alleged ties to Russians. In this case, Skripal’s demonstrative elimination would once again be a convenient restart for the campaign of accusations against the White House. Symptomatically enough, the Skripal affair coincided with the US Congress’ failure to find any “Russian trace” in Trump’s election.

The other point of view related to this approach is based on the fact that the US needs a pretext to further taboo Russia as an eternal Evil Empire in order to consolidate the crisis-ridden, stumbling West. It is important to mention that a whole number of European countries have recently begun probing the waters for lifting the anti-Russian sanctions. Moreover, perhaps the greatest threat to the prolongation of the EU’s anti-Russia policy has been posed by the victory of the right-centrist coalition and the impressive results of the Lega Nord leader, Matteo Salvini, in Italy’s recent elections.

I am by no means inclined to assume that the Italian and, overall, European political scene are truly independent and decisive. But the presence of more or less influential Eurosceptic parties in a number of EU countries, when combined with the visible harm caused by sanctions to the economies of many European countries, and not only Italy’s, makes the cancellation of sanctions only a matter of time.

Indeed, one more fact begs attention, namely, that the Skripal affair took off several days after what I called the “Munich speech 2.0” – Vladimir Putin’s Address to the Federal Assembly which emphasized the unequal nature of international relations and boasted of Russia’s possible asymmetric responses to the US’ missile defense systems being erected in Eastern Europe.

The Skripal affair, as I see it, can be called a reaction to this speech of Putin’s. This point of view allows me to explain the haste and chaos with which British politicians and officials have run with it. Earlier I drew attention to the insufficiency of reason and consequences. Even if Russia is guilty of poisoning a traitor, this is no grounds to start a cold or, even more so, hot war between NATO and Russia. Moreover, these hasty accusations fall in line with the tried and tested American and British routines of accusing unfriendly regimes in the Middle East of possessing or using chemical weapons. The latter accusation, let us recall, was the pretext for the American coalition, the second place role in which was played by Britain, to invade Iraq, and it has repeatedly been attempted to justify aggression against Syria.

During my time at the Russian Institute for Strategic Studies, I on more than one occasion listened to the stories told by the institute’s leader, Lieutenant General of Russia’s Foreign Intelligence Service (SVR) Leonid Reshetnikov, about his interactions with British and American “colleagues.” According to Reshetnikov, British intelligence officers, unlike the Americans, admitted off the record that they knew that the allegations that Saddam Hussein had weapons of mass destruction were groundless. It cannot be ruled out that the current accusations against Russia of poisoning Skripal and his daughter will sooner or later turn out to be false or incorrect.

However, even if such is revealed, this provocation has still succeeded in its aim of declaring Russia an Evil Empire, uniting the sprawling European Union against it, and justifying the existence and strengthening of NATO in Europe. This is being done under the auspices of the United States, which is rapidly losing its role as the world leader.

I am of the opinion that this whole “Skripal adventure” was needed by the US and its junior partners in the British establishment to justify the extension of American hegemony in Europe – military-political and economic. Reviving the “Russian threat” conveniently justifies NATO’s build-up and even the deployment of US tactical nuclear weapons in certain European countries on the bloc’s eastern borders. It is also extremely important to note, moreover, that this affair is being used to ideologically discredit the Eurosceptics and those in favor of a pragmatic approach to relations with Russia. Whether these attempts will be successful will be the subject of part two.

To be continued… Continued from part 1
https://www.fort-russ.com/2018/03/decoding-the-skripal-affair-part-2-europe-between-washington-and-nord-stream-2/

Nord Stream 2, Germany, and a Western alliance against Russia - There will be many losers from the Skripal affair in Europe. But perhaps the biggest losses will be incurred by Germany, who is both the economic leader of the European Union and the most authoritative critic of Trump’s protectionist trade policy. Going after Nord Stream 2 would be a serious blow to Germany’s economic interests and could unleash a whole chain of explosive events.

Before this latest anti-Russia campaign kicked off over the “Skripal case”, the future of Nord Stream 2 looked relatively cloudless. The efforts of pro-American Poland, the Baltic states, and Denmark to torpedo the project were clearly insufficient to bend the will of Nord Stream 2’s main beneficiary, Germany. But now the situation looks increasingly disturbing for both Russian interests and German business.

The absolute unity proclaimed by certain actors in the West today is not tangible. Although Germany did join in on the expulsion of Russian diplomats, Berlin is far from convinced that there is any “Russian trace” in the Skripal poisoning. The document distributed by Theresa May on March 22-23 in Brussels during a meeting of EU heads of states and governments did not, in the words of German Chancellor Steffen Seibert himself, contain any direct evidence of Russian responsibility. On this issue, Berlin’s position looks more conciliatory and careful than that of Poland and the Baltic border states.

Sure, the Merkel government does not rule out that new circumstances could warrant new sanctions. But I believe that nothing of the sort should be expected from Germany. As the famous German expert Alexander Rahr has argued, behind the facade of European unity, there are increasingly visible “European splitters.”

The question of launching the Nord Stream 2 gas pipeline is in the air. Its main opponents are Ukraine, which receives $3 billion a year for transiting Russian gas (in addition to outright theft and blackmailing), Poland, which wants to see itself as the new European gas hub, and American shale gas exporters. These opponents have, armed with the “Skripal poisoning”, put forth new arguments against Nord Stream 2 of a non-economic character. Henceforth, the pressure put on the newly formed Bundestag coalition to abandon the project will only increase. Meanwhile, the Kiev regime now has renewed pretexts to blackmail Russia by, for example, holding up Russian gas in European storages with the compliance of Kiev’s American and European partners.

In one of my recent articles, I suggested that attempts to rally a united Western bloc against Russia are not likely to succeed this time around. Now I do not have such an optimistic view. This does not mean that the battle for Europe is lost, but that there are real grounds for alarm – not panic, even if things do reach the point of a real, not figurative war between Russia and the collective West. As I have been warning for some time now, the chances of this war are only increasing.

Will Russia respond? - President Putin once made a big mistake by offering the Americans a shoulder on September 11th, 2001. Instead of gratefulness, in return Russia was met with NATO Troops in Afghanistan, a military base in Kyrgyzstan, and a temporary base in Russia’s own Ulyanovsk. Then, following the bloody terrorist attack in 2014 in Volgograd, Western leaders and the US President were demonstratively absent from the Olympics in Sochi.

According to Putin’s words in the new documentary, World Order 2018, the Americans apparently deceived him in February 2014 as well when they asked him to persuade Yanukovych not to use troops to disperse the Euromaidan. I hope that these conscious mistakes are enough to make the Russian leadership reconsider the nature of Russia’s relations with the United States and act accordingly.

Tactical changes, no doubt, will follow. Putin’s press secretary, Dmitry Peskov, promised a “mirror response” to the expulsion of Russian diplomats from the US, and even before this official announcement, Peskov stated: “In any case, the principle of reciprocity will be in force.” As things stand now, Russia could expel an equal number of American and European diplomats and the US Consulate General in Vladivostok, for example, could be closed.

Russia and Europe vs. Washington - Russia’s basic interests in Europe boil down to two key points: (1) Europe is still the most attractive market for Russian energy; and (2) Europe is a source of advanced industrial and energy technology. The second aspect has already lost some relevance since Russia can now buy such technology from developing East and South-East Asian countries. But the question of finding an alternative to the European market for Russian energy is much more complex.

Blackmailing Russia over the construction of Nord Stream 2, however, would be a double-edged sword. Russia is just as interested in stable profits from gas exports as is Europe, or at least Europe’s leading economies, in low-cost Russian gas. Only the US, for economic and geopolitical reasons, is interested in the collapse of Russian-European gas cooperation. Hence why, even today, the question of Nord Stream 2 is by no means predetermined.

The New Cold War with the West might bring unexpected dividends to Russia. Economically, Russia could be forced to focus more intensely on import substitution and developing its own production (especially machine-building). Politically, the pro-Western lobbies in the Russian establishment could be marginalized and even suffer political death. The ideological expression of these lobbies – liberalism – is only widely represented in these small strata among the elite. A new clash with the West would be a chance for a patriotic revolution in Russia.

The only truly serious threat posed by the ongoing Russia-West conflict is not economic, but military-political, and concerns the growing threat of a direct clash between Russia and NATO in a hot war. Such a clash, in my opinion, has a high chance of happening, although the scale and location is not yet clear. Will Syria, Donbass, or Transnistria be the battlefields? A no less important question is whether nuclear weapons will be used in such a conflict. In any case, Europe should be seriously concerned. At the end of the day, this is a question of whether Europe and Russia can engage in mutually beneficial cooperation, or if the former will continue to bow to Washington.
 
An alleged employee of the US Consulate in St. Petersburg, Russia, has been caught on video showing the middle finger to reporters covering the closure of the Consulate. Classy.

Diplomatic: Alleged US Consulate Employee Gives Middle Finger to Press (VIDEO) 01.04.2018
https://sputniknews.com/russia/201804011063107646-us-consulate-employee-middle-finger/
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1AqcX-BHy8g (0:59 min.)

The man on the video is seen packing furniture — chairs, actually — in an SUV with red (diplomatic) license plates in front of the Consulate building.

The video also shows workers packing boxes and furniture from the Consulate into a truck.

On March 29, Russia closed the US Consulate in Saint Petersburg and declared 60 US diplomats in Moscow and St. Petersburg as persona non grata. Since then, a group of reporters have been filming the events as people who are thought to be consulate employees pack various pieces of furniture into cars.

The videos also show vans and trucks being loaded with other objects suspected to be Consulate possessions.

According to Russian demands, the US Consulate must close and cease operations by March 31. The demands are a symmetrical response to a US move to expel 60 Russian diplomats and close the Russian consulate in Seattle, Washington. The US connect their move with alleged and unproven Russian involvement in the recent poisoning of Sergei Skripal and his daughter Yulia in Salisbury, UK.


According to the online flight tracking site "Flightradar 24" two aircraft carrying expelled Russian diplomats and their families have taken off from Dulles Airport and are now heading toward Moscow. In total 171 people have left the US, a number that includes the diplomat's family members.

Aircraft Carrying Expelled Russian Diplomats Departs Washington DC 01.04.2018
https://sputniknews.com/us/201804011063109071-usa-russia-diplomats-expulsion-flight/

The Russian embassy in the United States announced earlier that two specially-chartered aircraft of the Russian 'Rossiya' federal air fleet had landed in Washington DC to pick up the diplomats and their families. The head of the Russian diplomatic mission to the US, Anatoly Antonov, reportedly accompanied the expelled diplomats to the airport. No incidents during the compulsory departure of his colleagues were reported.

Earlier in the day, Antonov said that the Skripal case was a pretext to carry out a war of words against Russia that has been planned for a long period of time.


The second plane carrying the Russian diplomats expelled from the United States, that took off from Washington earlier on Sunday, is now heading toward Moscow after a stopover in New York, according to a real-time flight tracker "Flightradar 24".

Second Plane With Russian Diplomats Now Heading Toward Moscow - Flight Tracker 01.04.2018
https://sputniknews.com/us/201804011063109997-russia-usa-diplomats-aircraft-flight/

Earlier in the day, a Russian Ilyushin Il-96-600 passenger airliner, which is part of the Rossiya special flight detachment that provides services to state officials, in particular, to the Russian Foreign Ministry, departed from the Washington Dulles International Airport.

The plane made a stopover in New York, where it took another 14 Russian families. It departed from the John F. Kennedy International Airport at 8:51 p.m. local time (00:51 GMT on Sunday). The airplane is expected to land at Moscow's Vnukovo International Airport.

A total of 171 Russian diplomats and their family members left the United States on Saturday night.


The US decision to expel Russian diplomats from the UN mission in New York over the Skripal case contradicts international norms and is viewed by Moscow as an unfriendly move, Russian permanent representative to the UN Office in Geneva Gennady Gatilov told Sputnik.

Expulsion of Russian Envoys From UN Mission Conflicts Int’l Agreements - Moscow 31.03.2018
https://sputniknews.com/us/201803311063096582-us-russia-diplomats-expulsion-contradicts-international-agreements/

"They [diplomats] are working as Russian representatives accredited to the United Nations, rather than to the US government. And any expulsion of them is absolutely unlawful and contradicts all international agreements and conventions on diplomatic relations. We regard the US actions as a breach of all these international documents," Russian permanent representative to the UN Office in Geneva Gennady Gatilov.

According to Gatilov, it is not the first time when the United States has practiced the expulsion of Russian diplomats accredited to the United Nations. The diplomat reiterated that the move went against international norms and principles of the functioning of the United Nations and that Moscow viewed it as an "unfriendly step."

Gatilov noted that Washington had long been exercising "dishonest" practices toward Russian diplomats by denying them prolongation of their visas, which prevented them from leaving the country with the right to return and created generally unfavorable conditions for their work.

"The United States, on the whole, has been acting very indecently in this regard. Not the way a country which hosts diplomatic missions… accredited to the United Nations must behave," he concluded.

The diplomat also expressed a belief that Switzerland would not succumb to provocations and remain a responsible host to national UN missions in Geneva that treats their special status with due respect.

According to the 1947 agreement, the US government "shall not impose any impediments to transit to and from the headquarters district" for delegates of UN member states and UN officials as well as their families and this provision "shall be applicable irrespective of the relations existing between" the governments of these UN representatives and Washington.

London Leads Int'l Slander Campaign Against Russia With Limited Traction - "Unfortunately, we know that the United Kingdom is trying to use all venues. This campaign aims at slandering Russia, bringing the Skripal case to the international arena and trying to receive international support with its help. But they are not enjoying strong support and the majority of the rational delegations do not want to engage in this case," Gatilov said.

The diplomat said that London had been trying to raise the issue of Skripal's poisoning, especially in Geneva, in the framework of the disarmament conference.


The Russian embassy in the United States is very concerned over the reports about humiliation of jailed Russian pilot Konstantin Yaroshenko in a US prison, the embassy's press service said in a Saturday statement.

Russian Embassy in US Concerned Over Alleged Humiliation of Pilot Yaroshenko 01.04.2018
https://sputniknews.com/us/201804011063107389-usa-russia-embassy-yaroshenko-prison/

"The reports about humiliation of Konstantin Yaroshenko, who is currently in the US prison trigger concerns. We have demanded from the administration of the [detention] facility to stop violation of fundamental rights of a Russian citizen. We will continue our efforts to force US authorities to ensure confinement conditions of Yaroshenko, which will be in line with international standards," the statement said.

Yaroshenko was sentenced to 20 years in prison in 2011 on allegations of conspiring to import more than $100 million worth of cocaine into the United States.

The pilot was captured in Liberia in 2010 and transferred to the United States, prompting protests from Russia. In April 2016, the Appeals Court of New York denied revising the pilot's sentence.
 
The Russian Ambassador to the United States, Anatoly Antonov, said on Sunday that the Skripal case was a pretext to carry out a provocation against Russia that has been in the planning stages for a long time.

Russian Envoy to US: Skripal Case Pretext to Launch Long-Planned Smear Campaign 01.04.2018
https://sputniknews.com/us/201804011063108307-russia-usa-envoy-pretext-skripal/

"The developments in the United Kingdom served just as a pretext to carry out a provocation against Russia that was planned a long time ago. We have closely monitored, who attended the US Embassy in Moscow recently, what kind of people [attended it]," Antonov said in an interview with Russia's Channel Five.

The ambassador indicated that those people were from the crisis center of the UK department of the US State Department.


Russian Ambassador to the United Kingdom Alexander Yakovenko on Sunday said that the so-called Skripal case is a false flag operation conducted by the UK secret services.

Skripal Case 'Provocation' Carried Out by UK Intelligence - Russian Ambassador 01.04.2018
https://sputniknews.com/europe/201804011063118486-ambassador-uk-skripal-provocation/

"This provocation has been carried out by UK secret services. We are not provided with any facts, they refuse to cooperate with us. Such a state of affairs brings us to the judgment that it is a provocation organized by secret services," Yakovenko told the NTV broadcaster.

The diplomat said that the provocation has been caused by two reasons, including the need to hide the fact that London had accepted almost all the conditions laid down by Brussels in the Brexit talks. The second reason is the intention to be a leader in the so-called deterrence of Russia and the need to gain the support of both parliament and people.


Earlier, Moscow had sent the two sets of questions regarding the “fabricated” Skripal case to the authorities of the United Kingdom and France.

Russian Foreign Ministry Releases 13 Questions Addressed to OPCW on Skripal Case 01.04.2018
https://sputniknews.com/russia/201804011063121747-russia-opcw-questions/

Moscow is asking if London has sent any information regarding the poisoning of Skripal to the organization and what kind of help the UK authorities had requested. The foreign ministry has also asked what methods the OPCW used to collect samples of the substance purportedly behind the alleged poisoning attack.

The Russian Foreign Ministry also had asked the OPCW whether the organization planned to share the information provided by the UK side with other states and about the details of the recent mission, when a group of OPCW experts visited the United Kingdom amid the Skripal case probe.

Several other questions of the Russian side are related to participation of France in the investigation and the cooperation of Paris with the OPCW.

This comes in light of Russia addressing 14 questions on March 31 asking why the UK had denied Moscow consular access the Skripals, why London had allowed Paris to take part in the probe and why the UK had decided that the nerve agent used in the poisoning had come from Russia and if the UK has samples of the so-called "Novichok."

Moscow also sent 10 questions to Paris asking if France had invited the OPCW to take part in the probe and if France had produced samples of the nerve agent used in the poisoning of Skripal.


Russia will present "a clear proposal" contributing to the investigation into the so-called Skripal case at the special session of the Executive Council of the Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (OPCW), the Russian permanent representative to the OPCW, said in an interview with the Rosiyskaya Gazeta newspaper.

Russia to Present Proposal on Probe Into Skripal Case to OPCW – Envoy 01.04.2018
https://sputniknews.com/world/201804011063123685-russia-proposal-skripal-probe-opcw/

"At the extraordinary session of the OPCW Executive Council that will take place on April 4, we are going to make one more proposal… it will be a simple and clear proposal in order to contribute to the probe into the Salisbury incident. I will repeat one more time, we are interested in the establishment of truth not less but more than the UK side," Alexander Shulgin said.

Alexander Shulgin also said that the activities of the experts of the Technical Secretariat of the OPCW on the Skripal case were not transparent.

"We have a lot of questions to them because everything has been conducted in a very nontransparent manner. We have came to a consequence that it is time to make one more attempt and to send the consideration of the situation exclusively to a legal framework," Shulgin said.

The official added that the Russian side raised the issue that the UK-initiated investigation into the incident within the OPCW framework should be conducted in a transparent way.

"It is very important for the experts of the technical secretariat to share the information, but they clearly do not want to do that," Shulgin added.

He also said that the experts of the organizations would not be able to present the results of their work by April 4.

On Thursday, Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov said that Russia had officially proposed to convene an extraordinary session of the OPCW Executive Council on April 4 to have a "frank conversation" and establish the truth about the case of poisoning of former Russian intelligence officer Sergei Skripal in the UK town of Salisbury.

Skripal and his daughter, Yulia, have been in the hospital since the alleged poisoning in early March.


The credentials of the Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (OPCW) do not include the potential identification of those responsible for the poisoning of the Russian ex-intelligence officer Sergei Skripal, the Russian permanent representative to the OPCW said in an interview with the Rosiyskaya Gazeta newspaper.

Russian Envoy: OPCW Has no Authority to Probe 'Skripal Case' 01.04.2018
https://sputniknews.com/europe/201804011063124557-opcw-russia-uk-skripal-authority/

"We expect that the experts will provide an official, only fact-based statement on a chemical composition of the samples collected by the specialists of the Technical Secretariat [of the OPCW]… The credentials of the mission do not include any allocation of responsibility. No one expects that the experts would point at anyone," Alexander Shulgin said.

According to the Russian official, the OPCW experts should specify the use of a substance and its chemical formula. At the same time the official added that it was necessary to find out how the poisoning substance had been transported to the accident site and for this purpose it was important to get access to all the results of the investigation carried out by the UK side.

In addition, Russian envoy to OPCW said in an interview that the experts would not be able to present the results of their work on the so-called Skripal case by April 4.

"Likely [the results of the inquiry will] not [be ready]. It has been reported that after the collection, packaging and transportation of the samples to the places, where they could be analyzed, [the experts] will need two or three more weeks. It is obvious that this period has already started and the samples are in the relevant laboratories. But we assume that nothing will be ready by the extraordinary session [of the OPCW Executive Council]," Alexander Shulgin said answering a question whether the results of the probe were ready by the Wednesday session.

Moreover, Alexander Shulgin noted that the activities of the experts from the OPCW's Technical Secretariat concerning Skripal case were not so transparent.

"We have a lot of questions to them, because everything has been conducted in a very nontransparent manner. We have came to a consequence that it is time to make one more attempt and to send the consideration of the situation exclusively to a legal framework," Alexander Shulgin said.

The official added that the Russian side raised the issue that the UK-initiated investigation into the incident within the OPCW framework should be conducted in a more transparent way.

"It is very important for the experts of the technical secretariat to share the information, but they clearly do not want to do that," Shulgin added.


Russian foreign ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova has accused the UK and US of trying to stop Russia from hosting the World Cup this summer, according to UK news channel BBC.

Russian Foreign Ministry: UK and US want Russia out of World Cup Sunday 1 April 2018
http://www.arabnews.com/node/1277216/world

In an interview with Russian TV channel, 5 TV, she said the two western countries “main aim” was to “take the World Cup out of Russia…They will use any means. Their minds are only on that football and God forbid it should touch a Russian football field”, Ms Zakharova added.

The UK has been punishing Russia after accusing it of being responsible for a nerve agent attack in Britain.

The British Royal Family will shun the World Cup as part of the British response and UK Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson has likened Russia’s World Cup to Nazi Germany’s Olympic Games in 1936. One British Opposition MP has called for the Cup to be postponed or moved.

However, there is currently no suggestion the England team will boycott the event which opens in June.

Hundreds of diplomats have been expelled on both sides in the dispute over the poisoning of former Russian spy Sergei Skripal and his daughter Yulia in the English town of Salisbury on 4 March. Mr.Skripal is still critically ill but stable, while his daughter is steadily recovering.

The British Foreign and Commonwealth Office has said it will consider a request for Russian consular access to Yulia, who is Russian citizen.
 
Commenting on the recent diplomatic standoff between some Western countries and Moscow over the Skripal case, Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov noted that the situation is even worse than during the Cold War.

02.04.2018 Lavrov: Skripal Poisoning Could Play Into Hands of UK Intel, Government
Lavrov: Skripal Poisoning Could Play Into Hands of UK Intel, Government

"When they say that the order came from the very top, then, firstly, President Putin personally commented on this situation and said that only a completely biased person, a person who started a terrible, insane provocation, can insist on that Russia had a motive. As it is done by our British colleagues. What was our motive? On the eve of presidential elections, on the eve of the World Cup in football? This is a cynical point of view to treat this problem," the Foreign Minister told a press conference after his meeting with his Bangladeshi colleague.

In the time of the Cold War there were some rules, but now Britain and the United States have dropped all propriety and are playing children's games, he stated during a news briefing.

According to Lavrov, the question of how far mutual deportations of diplomats can go does not depend on Russia, the West should stop first.

How far we go, does not depend on us. In diplomacy there is a principle of reciprocity, nobody canceled it. This principle will be applied consistently… We do not want to play children's games, as our partners are exactly doing," said Lavrov.

In the time of the Cold War there were some rules, but now Britain and the United States have dropped all propriety and are playing children's games, he stated during a news briefing.

According to Lavrov, the question of how far mutual deportations of diplomats can go does not depend on Russia, the West should stop first.

"How far we go, does not depend on us. In diplomacy there is a principle of reciprocity, nobody canceled it. This principle will be applied consistently… We do not want to play children's games, as our partners are exactly doing," said Lavrov.

The minister explained that Russia didn't have any motive for poisoning Sergei Skripal and his daughter.

The man was released, was pardoned in exchange for the representatives of Russia a few years ago. And if there were any claims on this person, he probably would not be subject to an exchange… I hope that Sergei Skripal will follow the example (of his daughter Yulia Skripal, who earlier came out of a coma), because, apparently, he and his daughter were roughly equally affected by the incident that took place," he said.

He went on by hinting what forces could benefit from Skripal poisoning.

"Now our Western partners, I mean primarily the United Kingdom, the United States and several countries that have blindly followed them, have run out of niceties, resorting to open lies, to outright misinformation. We will respond to this fairly calmly, coolly, and insist that any accusations, any allegations must be justified by facts," Sergei Lavrov said.

The reasons behind the incident may lead to different services, according to Lavrov.

"There are other explanations besides the ones our Western colleagues talk about, stating that only a Russian trace may be adopted as a final decision. (For example), experts say that it can be quite beneficial to the British intelligence services, which are known for their ability to act with a license to kill. This may be beneficial to the British government, which has clearly turned out to be in an uncomfortable situation, failing to fulfill the promises to its constituents about the conditions under which they will provide Brexit (Britain's withdrawal from the EU)," he emphasized.

If London fails to answer Russia's questions on the Skripal case at the upcoming meeting of the Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (OPCW) Executive Council, it will mean that the entire incident was a provocation, Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov emphasized.

There are many questions, and the inability of our UK colleagues to answer them will mean only one thing — that this is all a fiction, and more specifically, a gross provocation," Lavrov told the press conference.

The Russian Ministry of Foreign Affairs is very interested on what basis France joined the Salisbury incident investigation, said Lavrov.

"We have strictly distributed specific questions in full compliance with the Convention on the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons. The questions are addressed to the technical secretariat of the OPCW, and to our British colleagues and to our French colleagues because suddenly some reports have appeared and President Macron had said that France was actively involved in the investigation," Sergei Lavrov noted.

Earlier, Lavrov said that Russia had officially proposed to convene an extraordinary session of the OPCW Executive Council on April 4 to have a "frank conversation" and establish the truth about the poisoning of former Russian intelligence officer Sergei Skripal and his daughter in the UK town of Salisbury.


The British Ambassador to Russia, Laurie Bristow, has been summoned to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs. This was reported by the Russian Foreign Ministry. Maria Zakharova said that decisions on Moscow’s response to London have been taken and will soon be communicated to the British side.

March 17, 2018 Russia shuts down undercover MI6 operation in Moscow
Russia shuts down undercover MI6 operation in Moscow - Fort Russ

On March 14, British Prime Minister Teresa May announced the expulsion of 23 Russian diplomats.

Moscow’s response to the actions of Britain are tougher, as “political rudeness can not be tolerated,” said the first Deputy Chairman of the Federation Council Committee on Foreign Affairs, Vladimir Jabarov. The Russian Foreign Ministry announced demanded that 23 diplomatic employees of the British Embassy in Moscow leave in a week’s time. Also, the activity of the British Council in Russia is to be ceased and the British Consulate General in St. Petersburg is to be closed.

“Our measures are tougher: this is not a question of reciprocating the usual expulsion of diplomats, but because the United Kingdom has accused Russia of a country that distributes and uses chemical weapons. Such political rudeness can not be tolerated, “Jabarov explained.

During the visit of British Ambassador Laurie Bristow to the Russian Foreign Ministry, he was informed about Russia’s response.After leaving the Foreign Ministry building, the ambassador did not answer the journalists’ questions, but did make a short statement.

Bristow recalled the position of Britain: the crisis in relations began with the incident in Salisbury, which he called “an attack on the entire international system.” The chemical weapons used there, according to the ambassador, were developed in Russia and not declared to the Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons. According to the ambassador, Great Britain “will do everything necessary to protect itself and its allies.”

Meanwhile, the head of the State Duma’s international affairs committee, Leonid Slutsky, believes that Moscow has responded symmetrically to London’s actionsAccording to him, the announcement of 23 British diplomats as non-grata persons is ” an absolutely adequate and symmetrical response to the actions of London , where a provocative campaign was launched to libel Russia in connection with the “Skripal case”.

According to Slutsky, Great Britain ” is completely in subservient to the United States , where also, under a far-fetched pretext and without any evidence, there was, in fact, a diplomatic confrontation.” “We did not start it, but we have to react with appropriate measures,” says Slutsky.

Deputy Chairman of the State Duma Committee for International Affairs, Alexei Chepa, also believes that Russia gave an adequate response to Britain’s actions. He does not exclude a new round of tension in bilateral relations, suggesting that Britain “will try to do something else in response to our steps.”

The decision to stop the activities of the British Council in Russia was made because of the fact that British intelligence MI6 was operating under the guise of this organization, as stated by a veteran of the Foreign Intelligence Service of Russia, Igor Morozov. He recalled that the British side did not agree to the opening iof the Russian Center of Science and Culture in London, whose functions correspond to the officially announced functions of the British Council.

“The British Council worked in Russia without permission, with our goodwill, which we wanted to develop in a constructive way between Russia and the UK, which did not happen,” Morozov said.


The conclusion that Russia is to blame for Skripal's poisoning was based not only on nerve agent laboratory data but partially on information, received from the intelligence, the UK Foreign Office stated.

03.04.2018 London Admits Russia's Alleged Guilt in 'Skripal Case' Based on Assumptions
London Admits Russia's Alleged Guilt in 'Skripal Case' Based on Assumptions

According to the Foreign Office, the UK has information that Russia has produced and stored a small amount of the poison gas.

A British Government spokesperson said Porton Down's identification of Novichok was "only one part of the intelligence picture".

"This includes our knowledge that within the last decade, Russia has investigated ways of delivering nerve agents probably for assassination — and as part of this programme has produced and stockpiled small quantities of Novichok; Russia's record of conducting state-sponsored assassinations; and our assessment that Russia views former intelligence officers as targets. As the Prime Minister has set out in a number of statements to the Commons since 12 March, this includes our knowledge that within the last decade, Russia has investigated ways of delivering nerve agents probably for assassination — and as part of this programme has produced and stockpiled small quantities of Novichoks," he noted.

London also took into consideration "Russia's record of conducting state-sponsored assassinations; and our assessment that Russia views former intelligence officers as targets."

"It is our assessment that Russia was responsible for this brazen and reckless act and, as the international community agrees, there is no other plausible explanation," the Foreign Office statement read.

Earlier in the day, Sky News reported that Porton Down experts are unable to identify the precise source of the nerve agent that was used in poisoning the former Russian agent, but that it was a military-grade nerve agent.

"We were able to identify it as Novichok, to identify that it was a military-grade nerve agent. We have not identified the precise source, but we have provided the scientific info to the government who have then used a number of other sources to piece together the conclusions you have come to," Gary Aitkenhead, chief executive of the Defence Science and Technology Laboratory (DSTL) at Porton Down stated.


The chief of Britain's military research center at Porton Down says experts are unable to identify the precise source of the nerve agent that was used in poisoning the former Russian agent, but that it was a military-grade nerve agent, Sky News reports.

03.04.2018 Porton Down Lab Unable to Prove Novichok Used to Poison Skripal Was From Russia
Porton Down Lab Unable to Prove Novichok Used to Poison Skripal Was From Russia

Gary Aitkenhead, chief executive of the Defence Science and Technology Laboratory (DSTL) at Porton Down, said they had not been able to prove A-234 substance, allegedly used for Skripals' poisoning, was made in Russia, according to Sky News broadcaster.

"We were able to identify it as Novichok, to identify that it was a military-grade nerve agent. We have not identified the precise source, but we have provided the scientific info to the government who have then used a number of other sources to piece together the conclusions you have come to," he stated.

However, Aitkenhead affirmed the nerve agent required "extremely sophisticated methods to create, something only in the capabilities of a state actor".

According to him, there is no antidote to the nerve agent.

The chief of Britain's military research center at Porton Down refused to comment on whether the lab had produced or maintains stocks of the A-234 nerve agent but dismissed that the agent used to poison the Skripals came from Porton Down.

"There is no way anything like that could have come from us or left the four walls of our facility," Aitkenhead noted.

According to the official, the lab's job was to "provide the scientific evidence of what this particular nerve agent is," but not to say where it was manufactured.
 
The United Kingdom unknowingly admitted that its government has been lying, accusing Russia of allegedly poisoning former spy Sergei Skripal and his daughter Yulia by the nerve agent Novichok on March 4 in Salisbury. The British government has already made two grave mistakes.

April 04, 2018 U.K. is Lying: If Skripal was Poisoned at His Home, The Agent Used against Him Cannot be Nerve Gas
https://www.globalresearch.ca/u-k-i...t-used-against-him-cannot-be-novichok/5634615


First, it reported that an assassin smeared a nerve agent on the door handle at Skripal’s home. Second, according to the doctors of the hospital where Yulia Skripal is being treated, her condition is getting better and her health status is currently described as stable.
Previously, the same doctors stated that Sergei Skripal and his daughter have only 1% hope of survival and ‘will be invalids for life’. Moreover, former chemical weapons scientist and former Russian chemical weapons’ program whistleblower Vil Mirzayanov, who is currently a leading western expert on toxic agents, assured the British media that 2 grams of Novichok will be enough to kill 500 people instantly. He also told the Daily Mail:
“These people are gone — this man and his daughter. Even if they survive they will not recover.”​
It seems that Mirzayanov made these statements under the direction of the mainstream European and American media with the aim of discrediting his former homeland in the eyes of the world community.

If Sergey and Julia Skripal were poisoned in front of their house, then they wouldn’t have been able to walk through Salisbury. Thus, this fact completely excludes the use of nerve agent Novichok.

CNN, March 29
(The earlier report that Skripal and his daughter had been attacked while sitting on a bench at a shopping mall has also been refuted by Scotland Yard (GR Editor)).

Let us remind you, Scotland Yard detectives came to a conclusion that Sergey Skripal and his daughter were poisoned at their house. A particularly high concentration of agent was detected at the entrance door. If Skripal was poisoned at his home, then the agent used against him cannot be a nerve gas.

A number of experts believe that such gases can kill people within a few minutes. Skripal simply did not have time to walk to a restaurant or shopping center, where he was eventually found.

There is no way that the agent used to poison Skripal and his daughter could be Novichok. More likely the victims received an overdose of painkillers that are used for anesthetics.

This show with the involvement of pseudo-experts and baseless allegations was specially staged by the British government to increase tensions in Europe and contribute much to the rise of Russophobic sentiments around the world.

  • Evgeny Buzhinskiy warned diplomatic fallout from Salisbury poisoning is moving the world into a situation that is 'worse than the Cold War'
  • 'Worse than the Cold War is a real war, the last war in the history of mankind'
  • He accused the US and EU of 'cornering Russia', saying that is 'very dangerous'
  • Russia has vehemently denied being behind the poisoning of Sergei Skripal and daughter Yulia, and has suggested British intelligence were responsible
3 April 2018 The world is on the brink of 'the last war in the history of mankind', warns Russian ex-general, as tensions between Putin and the West intensify amid fallout over Salisbury spy poisoning
Russian former general warns world is on the brink of 'the last war' | Daily Mail Online

A Russian former general has warned the world is on the brink of 'the last war in the history of mankind' amid the diplomatic fallout over the poisoning of a UK spy.

Evgeny Buzhinskiy, who served 41 years in the Russian military, said expelling diplomats from the EU and US after Sergei Skripal and his daughter Yulia were poisoned in Salisbury is creating a situation which is 'worse than the Cold War'.

Asked to explain himself, Mr Buzhinskiy added: 'A real war. Worse than the Cold War is a real war. It will be the last war in the history of mankind.

Mr Buzhinskiy, who retired with the rank of Lieutenant General in 2009, was being quizzed by Nick Robinson on BBC Radio 4.

When the presenter asked whether the Skripal case could lead directly to war, Mr Buzhinskiy responded: 'Not the Salisbury poisoning, but the pressure.

'The United States is saying the pressure will continue. What is that going to achieve? You are going to achieve regime change? It is useless.

'You don't know Russians. The more pressure there is, the more the society is concentrated around the President.

'You expel diplomats, we expel diplomats, you further expel, what's the next step? It's a breach of the diplomatic relations.

'Actually you are cornering Russia, and to corner Russia is a very dangerous thing.'

Asked about other countries not believing the Kremlin's comments about the Salisbury poisoning, Mr Buzhinksy branded it 'such a nonsense' arguing that in this crime Russian President Vladimir Putin 'is the last guy to benefit'.

Britain and its allies have accused the Russian state of either sanctioning or being complicit in the poisoning of Sergei and Yulia in Salisbury last month.

Investigators say a VX nerve agent of a group called Novichok, which were developed by Russia, was left on the door handle of their home.

After touching the poison the pair were found collapsed in a nearby park and rushed to hospital where they were placed into a coma.

Doctors say Yulia is no longer in a critical condition and is 'improving rapidly', while her father is still listed as critical.

Russia vehemently denies being behind the poisoning and has requested to visit Yulia in hospital.

Meanwhile Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov has suggested that British intelligence services could be behind the attack in order to distract from Brexit.

He argued that Russia had no motive to attack Mr Skripal, who was a former MI6 double-agent released in a 2010 spy swap.

'If there were any gripes against the man, he wouldn't have been swapped,' Mr Lavrov said.

'There are other explanations besides those put forward by our Western colleagues, who declare that it can only be the Russians who are responsible,' Mr Lavrov said.

'It could also be advantageous to the British government, who find themselves in a difficult situation having failed to fulfil their promises to voters over Brexit.'

Theresa May's official spokesman said on Tuesday: 'As the Prime Minister has made clear, the UK would much rather have in Russia a constructive partner ready to play by the rules.

'This attack in Salisbury was part of a pattern of increasingly aggressive Russian behaviour as well as a new and dangerous phase in Russia's hostile activity within our continent and beyond.

'As the Prime Minister has said we must face the facts and the challenge of Russia is one that will endure for years to come.'

Mrs May's spokesman declined to comment specifically on warnings the stand-off with Russia could deteriorate into an active war.


Salisbury is still suffering from the crazy Skripal/nerve agent event that took place on Sunday 4th March. Four weeks on the picture is still grim despite local efforts to encourage people to come to the city. It is after all a shopping and tourist magnet.

April 03, 2018 Salisbury Continues to Suffer while Theresa May Plays Novichok Game
https://www.globalresearch.ca/salis...while-theresa-may-plays-novichok-game/5634501

On 23rd March Environment Minister Michael Gove visited the city and promised government support. He said, “I know that local businesses have taken a bit of a hit understandably as a result of the events…”

A ‘bit of a hit’?

Across the city, businesses have taken a 20% fall and are still far from back to normal. There has been a a 90% drop in visitors to the city, with a corresponding drop in trade, particularly for those shops near the Maltings where the unconscious Skripals were found, and it is not much better now. It could take weeks for things to return to anything like it should be.

The government is providing £1 million to help faltering business, although they haven’t said when. And promises are often empty where this government is concerned. It may sound a lot but it isn’t, and Salisbury will be lobbying for more. It really should be seen as compensation for the damage done by the government in pushing its anti-Russia agenda. In a more constructive fashion, Wiltshire County Council took the decision to make all parking free within the city, even though it would lose them a lot of revenue. Did that work? (Article continues.)
 
John Helmer generally puts out some really good articles but I haven't come across any other references - that hint Dmitry Peskov might be replaced or shuffled into another position in the next six weeks? My impression is that Putin works very closely with Peskov and if he was going to do something - like an interview - that it was probably cleared through Putin first?

I would say so too. From following him over the years he seems more than capable and represents things well. Perhaps on deeper levels during transitions (any administration) there is jockeying for positions and innuendos are spread around. Besides, you have to give the foggy bottom peeps something to do, some analysis to occupy themselves with, so maybe they threw them a few things to chew on. :whistle:

Reading tonight on Canada's - whatever it is that passes for news now - in defense of Ms. Freeland, the neo-fascist Ukraine clapper extraordinaire, is this (practicing with the new forum - formatting/emoticons) article:

Trudeau cites smear campaign against Freeland in justifying banishment of Russian diplomats

You don't say, and you can't just make this up - no British toxins, it's Russia's attack on Freeland that maters (gotta love the headline): Trudeau cites smear campaign against Freeland in justifying banishment of Russian diplomats | CBC News

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has linked the recent expulsion of four Russian diplomats to last year's alleged smear campaign directed against Foreign Affairs Minister Chrystia Freeland.

He offered it up as evidence :knitting:of attempts to interfere with democracy in Canada, but stopped short of directly accusing the individuals who have been ordered out of the country.

Also, Trudeau carefully chose not to accuse the government of President Vladimir Putin of orchestrating the sometimes virulent social media campaign against Freeland, which played off historical material that showed her maternal Ukrainian grandfather was the chief editor of a Nazi newspaper in occupied Poland during the Second World War.

Instead, he pointed the finger at shadowy proxies.

"I think we can all remember the efforts by Russian propagandists to discredit our minister of Foreign Affairs in various ways through social media and sharing scurrilous stories about her," he said following a meeting with NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg — who warned several Ottawa audiences Wednesday of the danger of Russian disinformation campaigns.

"There are multiple ways in which Russia uses cyber and social media propaganda to sway public opinion to try and push a pro-Russia narrative." :zzz:

The expulsions were announced last week as part of a broader international response to the poisoning of an ex-Russian spy and his daughter in Britain with a nerve agent. :umm:

In doing so, Canada's Global Affairs department said the diplomats — three in Montreal and one in Ottawa — were really "intelligence officers or individuals who have used their diplomatic status to undermine Canada's security or interfere in our democracy." :-D

Trudeau's comments are the first clear explanation :nuts: for what was meant by the reference to Russian efforts to "interfere" in Canada's democracy. Both Treasury Board President Scott Brison and Defence Harjit Sajjan were vague last week when asked to describe the acts that led to the diplomats' expulsion.

Trudeau also said Wednesday that Canadian troops, deployed in Latvia as part of the NATO mission in the Baltic states, have a faced similar smear campaigns. :-O

"Certainly our troops in Latvia are currently experiencing a wave of interference and propaganda by Russia," he said. :whistle:

Tit-for-tat expulsions

Global Affairs confirmed the banished Russian diplomats have until the end of Thursday to leave the country. :phaser:

Moscow has repeatedly denied being behind the poisoning of former Russian officer turned MI-6 spy Sergei Skripal and his daughter Yulia on March 4.

The Russian foreign ministry met the expulsion of its diplomats, in Canada and around the world, with a series of its own banishments. :wrongbar:

On Friday, it ordered four Canadian diplomats out of the country. :troll:

Wesley Wark, an University of Ottawa professor and one the country's leading experts on intelligence, said earlier that he didn't think the interference reference suggested that Canada had been subjected to the kind of meddling alleged to have taken place during the 2016 U.S. presidential election.

"It is meant to send a message to the Russians that we won't put up with influence operations, which can range from interfering with the diaspora community :scared:, to trying to develop influential political and business connections clandestinely, all the way to election meddling," he said.

Stoltenberg talked up :violin:NATO's own expulsion of Russian diplomats while addressing a University of Ottawa audience earlier today.

He said the use of a chemical weapon in the attempted assassination:jawdrop:is just one of the actions through which Russia has worked to undermine "a rules-based international order."

Stoltenberg, a former Norwegian prime minister, struck a decidedly hawkish tone :pirate: in his speech Wednesday before a group of students and dignitaries, including Canada's top military commander.
Still, Stoltenberg said no one should give up on diplomacy. :cheer:

"We continue to strive :whistle: for a better relationship with Russia," he said. "Russia is our neighbour. Russia is there to stay. We are not aiming at isolating Russia. :halo:

"It would be beneficial for us and them if we could improve the relationship between NATO allies and Russia.

The alliance, he said, "will continue to work for arms control, prevent a new Cold War, prevent a new arms race and continue to work for a political dialogue with Russia." {emoticon with fingers crossed behind back}

Stoltenberg didn't explain how that's possible in the current political climate.

His remarks came a day after U.S. President Donald Trump told the leaders of three Baltic states that nobody has been tougher on Moscow than he has, and that "getting along with Russia is a good thing, not a bad thing."

They also came on the same day Russia conducted missile tests in the Baltic region, forcing the partial closure of air space for a few hours.

Trump also has invited Putin to a still-to-be-arranged bilateral meeting at the White House.

When pressed in a later interview on CBC News Network's Power & Politics with Vassy Kapelos, Stoltenberg endorsed the idea of the meeting.

<iframe src="//www.cbc.ca/i/caffeine/syndicate/?mediaId=1202659907927" width="720" height="" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe> {is this possible outside youtube now ?}

Where does a 'shadowy proxy' even start with all this article...

Photo clip from recent documentary:

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Published on Mar 18, 2018 - Turns Out “Novichkov” Isn’t a Russian Chemical Weapon...The UK Lied Through Its Teeth
(6:45 min.)

As a response to London's exile of 23 Russian diplomats, 23 British diplomats will also have to leave Moscow. But Russia took it further this time. The British will have to close their Consulate in St. Petersburg, along with the British Council in Moscow. Maria Zakharova visited our headquarters earlier today.


Streamed live on Mar 22, 2018 - LIVE: Russian Ambassador to UK speaks in London following diplomats’ expulsion
(RT UK 45:11 min.)

LIVE: Russian Ambassador to the United Kingdom Alexander Yakovenko holds a press conference in London after the expulsion of 23 Russian diplomats from the country over the Sergei Skripal poisoning case.


Published on Mar 22, 2018 - Lavrov: We Expect an Apology From the UK Over the Accusations and Botched Skripal Investigation
(3:43 min.)

London has to stop stressing and complete the Skripal investigation before making any accusations. Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov gave this piece of advice to his British counterparts. More than 150 foreign diplomats have been invited to the Russian Foreign Ministry to be briefed on Russia's stance on this. And they offered to ask Russian experts and the military any questions. But Britain again refused to listen to Moscow's answers.


Published on Mar 28, 2018 - Lavrov: Russia's Patience Has Its Limits, EU Will Regret Succumbing to US/UK Blackmail
(0:58 min.)

Russia will respond to the expulsion of our diplomats from European countries, the United States, Canada, and Ukraine. This was stated by Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov in Tashkent. He called the action of other states, "cheekiness".


Published on Apr 3, 2018 - Lavrov: “UK Took It Too Far and They Know It, But They’ll Have to Answer For It Regardless”
(4:09 min.)

Our British colleagues took it too far. But, they can't avoid answering for the Salisbury poisoning that they blamed on Russia. In the opinion of the Russian Foreign Minister, the UK government benefits from the international scandal as it draws attention away from Brexit.


Published on Apr 3, 2018 - Lavrov: British colleagues have gone too far with their game
Lavrov: British colleagues have gone too far with their game (RT 4:15 min.)

RT's Igor Zhdanov reports as Sergey Lavrov accuses British colleagues of going 'too far' with Skripal 'game'.


Published on Apr 5, 2018 - Yulia Skripal issues statement
Yulia Skripal issues statement (4:58 min.)

Salisbury poisoning victim Yulia Skripal has released a statement through police in London.


Apr 5, 2018 - Yulia Skripal describes ‘disorientating’ episode in first public statement
Yulia Skripal describes ‘disorientating’ episode in first public statement

One month after being found slumped on a bench in Salisbury, Yulia Skripal has released her first public statement after she and her father were poisoned with a nerve agent. Yulia, 33, says her "strength is growing daily".

Yulia issued a statement on Thursday saying the "entire episode is somewhat disorientating".

"I woke up over a week ago now and am glad to say my strength is growing daily," the 33-year-old said in the statement issued on her behalf by London police.

I am grateful for the interest in me and for the many messages of goodwill that I have received.

"I am sure you appreciate that the entire episode is somewhat disorientating, and I hope that you’ll respect my privacy and that of my family during the period of my convalescence."

Last week Yulia was reported to be in a stable condition after falling into a coma following the chemical attack. Moscow-based relative Viktoria Skripal told the Guardian that she had spoken to Yulia and that a statement would soon be released by Russian news agencies - “even in English.”

She said everything is fine and she is doing OK,” Viktoria told the Guardian over the telephone. “That’s all I’m going to say.”

Viktoria also recorded the phone conversation with Yulia which was later played on a talk show on TV network Russia-1. Yulia can be heard telling her relative that she is calling from a phone that is “just temporary”. The 33-year-old also said that neither she nor her father had health problem that could not be fixed.

In the recording, Viktoria can be heard telling her cousin “If I get my visa tomorrow, on Monday I will fly to you”, to which Yulia responded, “nobody will give you a visa.”

At one point in the conversation, Yulia cut off Viktoria from going into depth about what happened, insisting “later, let's talk later. In short, everything is OK.”

When asked about her father Sergei Skripal, who is still understood to be in a critical condition, Yulia can be heard replying that “Everything’s OK. He’s resting now, he’s sleeping. Everyone’s health is OK. No one has had any irreversible [harm]. “I’m being discharged soon,” she added.

Yulia and her father Sergei Skripal were found slumped on a bench in Salisbury on March 4, after they were attacked with an A-234 nerve agent, similar to Novichok. Since the attack on the ex-Russian double agent and his daughter, the British government has placed the blame at Russia’s feet; a claim which Moscow has repeatedly denied.

On Wednesday, Porton Down chief executive Gary Aitkenhead revealed that the laboratory was unable to confirm the origin of the chemical agent used in the attack.


Apr 5, 2018 - Yulia Skripal: I woke up over a week ago and my health is improving
Yulia Skripal: I Woke Up Over a Week Ago and My Health is Improving

The UK's Metropolitan Police Service has issued a statement on behalf of Yulia Skripal, one of the victims of the poisoning attack in southern England which sent Russian-UK relations into a tailspin.

"I woke up over a week ago now and am glad to say my strength is growing daily," Skripal said in a statement published on the Met's website. "I am grateful for the interest in me and for the many messages of goodwill that I have received," the statement added.

Skripal voiced her gratitude to the many people she said were responsible for her recovery, and offered special thanks to the people of Salisbury "that came to my aid when my father and I were incapacitated."

"Further than that, I would like to thank the staff at Salisbury District Hospital for their care and professionalism," the statement added.

The 33 year old Skripal asked the public to respect the privacy of her and her family during her continued recovery.

The statement made no mention of the condition of her father Sergei, who is believed to be in critical condition in hospital.

Scotland Yard has declined to tell Sputnik whether or not police have questioned Skripal since she came out of her coma. "I'm afraid this is not something we would discuss," a police spokesperson said. "Yulia does not wish to speak to the media at this time. As you know, she has been receiving treatment following a serious incident," the spokesperson added.


Apr 5, 2018 - Moscow to keep pushing for Inclusion in Probe into Skripal Poisoning
Moscow to Keep Pushing for Inclusion in Probe Into Skripal Poisoning

Moscow will continue insisting on the inclusion of Russian experts in the investigation into the poisoning of Russian ex-intelligence officer Sergei Skripal in the United Kingdom, Alexander Shulgin, the Russian permanent representative to the Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons, said on Wednesday.

Russian President Vladimir Putin said on Tuesday that Moscow had prepared at least 20 questions about the Skripal case that will be raised at the upcoming OPCW emergency meeting.

"We have posed questions to the [OPCW] Technical Secretariat because these questions are legitimate … Unfortunately, we have not received any answers. This is not satisfactory for us, which is why we insist, and we will insist, that the investigation [into the Skripal case] is absolutely transparent, comprehensive, unbiased, and indispensably involving the Russian experts," Shulgin told a press conference on the results of the emergency OPCW Executive Council meeting in The Hague.

Shulgin specified that apart from the OPCW Technical Secretariat, Russia's questions concerned the United Kingdom and France.

The OPCW meeting took place earlier on Wednesday upon Russia’s request.

It followed accusations by London that Moscow had organized an attack on Skripal and his daughter Yulia in the UK city of Salisbury on March 4 with the use of military-grade nerve agent Novichok.

Moscow had denied the claims, pointing to the lack of proof provided by the United Kingdom on Russia's involvement in the attack.
 
Roger Annis pens; The wheels are coming off the 'Russian chemical poisoning' story being waged by the UK government and its NATO allies - A Socialist in Canada

Pretty typical as the story crashes in the MSN (yet they are all mostly clinging to the narrative for dear life it seems), and the author here cites the Guardian's Patrick Wintour doing some type of the Wichita two step;

Guardian newspaper bewails UK and NATO losing their propaganda drive against Russia over ‘chemical weapons used in England’ accusation
Two articles by the diplomatic editor of the anti-Russia Guardian daily in Britain, Patrick Wintour, amount to remarkable admissions that the British government is losing the diplomatic and public relations war over its attempts to smear Russia with accusations of chemical weapons usage on British soil on March 4.

The unproven accusations have been quickly used by Britain and other NATO countries to step up their new cold war against Russia. They have undertaken more sanctions and more threats against Russia since March 4, including expelling some 150 Russian diplomats from their respective countries.

Russia is accused by Britain and its NATO allies of the attempted assassinations of two former Russian nationals, Sergei and Yulia Skripal, in Salisbury, England on March 4, 2018. But the evidence is lacking and so cracks are appearing in the smear edifice.

Weblinks to the two Guardian articles by Patrick Wintour are below. In one, the Guardian editor explains that the reason the British government is losing the propaganda war it started is because “Scientific research and political rhetoric operate at different velocities, leaving a gap that Moscow has exploited.” In layman’s language, the editor is saying that leaders of the British government got carried away with their lies. They stretched the boundaries of credibility with false and unproven claims that the supposed chemical which poisoned the Skripals was manufactured in Russia and transported from there. In order to avoid being completely discredited itself, the British Foreign Office has been obliged to acknowledge that it has no such proof.

All this leaves aside the thorny problem that the very existence of a ‘Russian-made’ poison class of chemicals called ‘novichoks’ is unproven. A 2013 report by the Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (OPCW) examined the class of chemical named by Britain as having poisoned the two individuals on March 4, 2018, so-called novichoks. The 2013 report concluded:

Regarding new toxic chemicals not listed in the Annex on Chemicals but which may nevertheless pose a risk to the Convention [Chemical Weapons Convention, Wikipedia], the SAB [Scientific Advisory Board] makes reference to ‘Novichoks’. The name ‘Novichok’ is used in a publication [2008 book] of a former Soviet scientist who reported investigating a new class of nerve agents suitable for use as binary chemical weapons. The SAB states that it has insufficient information to comment on the existence or properties of ‘Novichoks’.

Below is further examination of this side of the story, published in two parts by the UK-based Working Group on Syria, Media and Propaganda.

Russia has requested a meeting of the UN Security Council on April 5 to respond to the UK and NATO governments’ accusations. Prior to the meeting, the best that Britain’s representative to the United Nations could offer to journalists was, “We are confident of our position.” At the meeting, Russia’s representative called the whole story a “theatre of the absurd”.

On April 4, Russia requested that a joint investigation of the British accusations be conducted by the OPCW at a meeting of that body. This would supplant an “independent investigation” announced earlier by the OPCW and to which Russia is not invited to participate. The Russian proposal on April 4 was defeated by a vote of 15 to six. Britain’s representative to the UN Security Council repeated the refusal at the April 5 meeting.

Britain and NATO are counting on the fact that after one month of propaganda barrage against Russia, facts will not matter in the outcome of its propaganda war. The public perception of Russian skullduggery has already been created by the toxic media barrage accompanying the British accusations. But even the best laid plans can go awry. Witness the long-term discrediting suffered by the United States following its ‘weapons of mass destruction’ lies levelled against Iraq in 2002 and 2003.

NATO governments won’t stop lying. But as the aforementioned Guardian articles demonstrate, the lying edifice is not invincible. Though in this case, NATO’s new cold war continues to silence or intimidate antiwar forces.

Following an initial endorsement on March 15 of Prime Minister Theresa May’s accusations that Russia was behind the alleged Skripal poisonings, British Labour Party leader Jeremy Corbyn is now voicing some doubts.[1] His change has been prompted by the embarrassing overstretch of Foreign Minister Boris Johnson. Two weeks ago, Johnson told the German media outlet Deutsche Welle that Britain’s chemical weapons laboratory, Portan Down, is “absolutely categorical” that the origin of the alleged poison was Russia. That blew up two weeks later when the Foreign Office was obliged to quietly acknowledge that the claim is not true.


Note:
[1] Corbyn stated: “Theresa May was right on Monday to identify two possibilities for the source of the attack in Salisbury, given that the nerve agent used has been identified as of original Russian manufacture. Either this was a crime authored by the Russian state; or that state has allowed these deadly toxins to slip out of the control it has an obligation to exercise…”

This article on SOTT today looks at the buffoonery of the British.
 
Did you guys notice, how at the UNSC-session yesterday, the British envoy said regarding Russia's request to grant a permit to visit Yulia S. something like: "She might not want to accept visitors from Russia" (can't remember the exact phrasing).

My first thought was that she was planting a seed, so that they can prevent the Russians from meeting Yulia, and question her, by claiming that she doesn't want to talk to them. This was partly confirmed by the "leaked" telephone conversation (if authentic).
 
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