Empoisonnement d’un ancien agent double : tout d’une provocation
Empoisonnement d’un agent double à Londres : tout d’une provocation pour empêcher un dialogue russo-européen
L’affaire de l’empoisonnement de l’ex-agent double Sergei Skripal et de sa fille (qui réside en Russie) le 4 mars dernier à Salisbury, et surtout du carnaval politico-médiatique qui a été développé autour par les autorités et des services britanniques, présente tous les signes d’une provocation, tellement la personnalité de la victime est aujourd’hui insignifiante et les circonstances pour le moins troubles.
Avant même d’avoir mené une enquête sérieuse, la Russie s’est retrouvée accusée. Tout en se voyant refusée toute communication sur les circonstances de l’empoisennement et le poison utilisé, alors que le droit consulaire obligerait à cette communication, puisque l’une des victimes est une citoyenne russe. Le type de poison serait un gaz fabriqué dans le passé en Russie et existant encore dans certains anciens pays de l’URSS. Il est appelé “Novitchok” chez les spécialistes russes. Mais aucune indication n’est donnée sur le gaz qui a été utilisé précisisèment dans ce cas. Or cela pourrait indiquer sa provenance. Selon la presse russe, des doses de ce gaz ont été achetées en leur temps par des pays occidentaux. Le fait qu’un tel gaz ait été produit en Russie, sert d’accusation à la Première ministre Thérésa May pour mettre en cause la Russie dans la tentative d’empoisonnement.
C’est tout.
Pour le reste ce ne sont qu’élucubrations basées sur des préjugés, des suppositions, du James Bond mal digéré. Bien sûr, on remet le couvert avec l’accusation dans l’affaire de l’assassinat en 2006 de Alexandre Litvinenko, l’ex-KGB-iste qui travaillait avec l’oligarque opposant inconditionnel au Kremlin, Boris Berezovski et les services britanniques et semble-t-il espanols. Berezovski est mort à son tour quelques années plus tard dans sa baignoire, après avoir écrit une lettre de repentir au président Poutine, en lui demandant de rentrer en Russie.
Sur cette affaire, le capitaine Barril, ex du GIGN et de la fameuse cellule de l’Elysée sous François Mitterrand semble avoir des lumières qui mettent en cause les services anglais et américains. Avec des arguments en attendant des preuves. Il en fait part dans plusieurs interviews que nous citons ci-dessous.
Pour revenir à Skripal, personne pour l’instant ne peut dire ce qui s’est passé réellement. Mais il est évident que les Russes n’ont aucun intérêt à empoisonner quelqu’un qu’ils auraient pu liquider tranquillement lorsqu’il a été jugé et emprisonné pendant deux ans pour haute trahison avant d’être échangé ! Sa fille qui vit en Russie, on peut vraiment se demander pourquoi les Russes auraient voulu l’empoisonner à Londres ! Et en plus pourquoi faire ? Avec le contexte international actuel et à moins d’un mois des élections présidentielles russes.
En revanche, ce contexte, se prête bien à une provocation : les Européens de l’UE semblent réticents devant l’aggravation des sanctions anti-russes par les Américains, les Allemands sont nettement contrariés par les mesures protectionnistes sur l’acier et les pressions contre le North stream 2. Peut-être aussi ne souhaitent-ils pas tant que ça augmenter les budgets militaires de l’OTAN, comme l’exige Trump pour les contraindre à des achats de matériels US et à soutenir peut-être une guerre hybrique en Ukraine contre la Russie.
Ce genre de choses peuvent justifier une provocation pour semer la haine et la méfiance dans l’opinion publique. C’est visiblement le but recherché par toute cette affaire.
Voici d’autres considérations sur le sujet et sur l’affaire Litvinenko.
http://www.defenddemocracy. press/new-huge-anti-russian- provocation-ahead-of-russian- election/
New Huge Anti-Russian Provocation ahead of Russian election
But Russians would be foolish to let the agent leave from Russia to try to assassinate him many years afterwards, at the eve of their Presidential Election.
Anti-Russia campaign follows alleged poisoning of former UK/Russian double agent and daughter
By Robert Stevens
8 March 2018
The British government and mass media have mounted a hysterical anti-Russian campaign centred on the still unexplained circumstances surrounding the hospitalisation of former British double agent Sergei Skripal and his daughter, after they were found unconscious on a bench in Salisbury on Sunday.
Initial reports Monday stated that Skripal, aged 66, may have ingested fentanyl, a synthetic opioid many times stronger than heroin, which can be fatal in small doses.
On Tuesday, the other person hospitalised was identified as Skripal’s 33-year-old daughter, Yulia, who was also said to be in a critical condition.
Skripal is a former colonel in Russia’s GRU, the military intelligence service. He spent four years in jail in Russia after being found guilty in 2006 of passing secrets to MI6, the UK’s foreign intelligence service. He was sentenced to 13 years in prison.
Skripal served four years before being released in 2010, when he was pardoned by Russia as part of a well-publicized 10-person spy swap between the US, the UK and Russia. He moved to the UK where he has lived for the past seven years.
The pair were found unconscious and slumped on a bench near the Maltings shopping centre. Police stated that two became ill at around 13.30 p.m. Police arrived on the scene at around 16.15 p.m., after being alerted by a concerned member of the public. It was announced Wednesday that a police officer is also in critical condition after attending the incident. The Skripals visited a nearby restaurant, Zizzi’s, which was cordoned off, as well as a local pub, The Bishop’s Mill.
By Tuesday, despite nothing of substance being reported by the police, the government and media had effectively declared the incident an act of terrorism, with the finger pointing at Russia’s Putin government. References to an opioid being involved were dropped, with media reports saying the government’s secret chemical lab at Porton Down was as yet unable to identify the substance. Wiltshire police announced that London’s Metropolitan Police counter-terrorist unit would be taking over the investigation.
In parliament, Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson spoke about the “disturbing incident in Salisbury” and stated, “Although I am not now pointing fingers, because we cannot point fingers, I say to governments around the world that no attempt to take innocent life on UK soil will go either unsanctioned or unpunished,” He then referred to Russia as a “malign and destructive force” and warned that if Moscow were found to be involved, the government would “take whatever measures we deem necessary to protect the lives of the people in this country, our values and our freedoms.”
In another pointed reference to Russia, he stated that the case had “echoes of the death of Alexander Litvinenko in 2006”—the former officer in Russia’s Federal Security Service (FSB, the successor to the KGB), who died on November 23, 2006 after having been granted asylum in Britain in 2000. The UK, backed by the US have long claimed that the Putin regime ordered the killing despite no evidence being presented in an official British inquiry in 2016—other than the presence of the radioactive substance polonium.
Johnson threatened that England could consider boycotting the soccer World Cup in Russia this summer.
Every newspaper, apart from the Financial Times, led with hysterical anti-Russian headlines . The Sun blared, “Red Spy in UK Poison Terror,” with an accompanying story referring to “fear over a Kremlin backed hit…” The Daily Mirror’s headline was “ ‘Assassins’ on British street”.
In an article in the Spectator, columnist Ed West posed the question, “Will Britain stand up to Russia?”
By the evening, despite Newsnight anchor Kirsty Wark introducing the story by saying, “so far we know nothing about what happened to them, if they were poisoned and if they were, by whom,” the BBC’s flagship news programme was dedicated to a narrative that Russia was responsible and that Skripal and his daughter were likely victims of an attack by Russia intelligence operatives.
The media have reported the deaths of Skripal’s wife, his son and his older brother as mysterious events requiring investigation. His wife died of cancer in 2012 in Britain.
The following day the Daily Telegraph asserted that “Putin swore death on poisoned Russian spy.” The Times went with “MI5 believes Russians tried to kill former spy.”
On Wednesday morning, the government convened its COBRA committee, which meets during periods of national emergencies. On Wednesday evening, Met Police Assistant Commissioner Mark Rowley announced that Skripal and his daughter were subjected to an attack by a “nerve agent,” with it being classified as a case of “attempted murder.”
No information released by the authorities can be taken at face value. All reports attest that Skripal was supposedly politically inactive. He evidently did nothing to hide his identity, buying a house for £260,000 in his real name and applying to join a railway social club. He regularly bought lottery scratch cards and purchased food from a local Polish food store.
If the Putin regime were indeed set on killing Skripal and his daughter, some explanation needs to be made as to motive. Skripal’s daughter lived and worked in Russia and made regular trips back and forth.
At least one other person released from jail in Russia would appear to have been a much more likely target of the Putin regime than Skripal, if indeed its intention was to prevent anti-Russian activities. Igor Sutyagin developed into a prominent anti-Putin figure in the UK, becoming a fellow at the Royal United Services Institute (RUSI) defence and intelligence think-tank.
RUSI is central to the formulation of British imperialism’s anti-Russian policy. Even the Guardian’s main advocate against the Putin regime, columnist Luke Harding, was forced to acknowledge that Sutyagin “gave lectures on Vladimir Putin’s darkening state, and kept a high public profile. Skripal, by contrast, eschewed London. He settled with Liudmilla [his wife] in the comparative quiet of Wiltshire.”
Under conditions in which the NATO powers, including Britain, are seeking to utilise any pretext to justify their ongoing encirclement of Russia’s border, Putin authorising the murder of two people on the streets of the UK would be a propaganda gift to his opponents.
The response of the government and media to these events must be placed in the context of the concerted drive by London to demonize Russia. Only last week the Times devoted its front page, an op-ed piece and an editorial to bellicose calls by senior military figures, including second in command of the armed forces, Sir Gordon Messenger, for an increase in military spending, naming Russia as the power that must be confronted.
This followed a January speech given at RUSI by General Sir Nick Carter, the Chief of the General Staff of the British Armed Forces, in which he declared that the UK had to actively prepare for war with Russia and other geo-political rivals.
Operation Beluga: A US-UK Plot to Discredit Putin and Destabilize the Russian Federation,
|
(4 fans) |
Headquarters of the British Secret Intelligence Service (SIS, MI6)
(Image by wikipedia) Permission Details DMCA
Renowned French security expert Paul Barril has let loose a bombshell: the existence of Operation Beluga, a covert Western intelligence scheme intended to undermine Russia and its leaders.
Is that what’s behind much of the threatening rhetoric now going back and forth between the US and Russia?
Barril exposed Operation Beluga in a recent interview with Swiss businessman Pascal Najadi on the 2006 Alexander Litvinenko death case. Litvinenko was a reputed former spy who many believe was murdered with radioactive polonium on orders of Vladimir Putin.
Najadi says the interview drew out the converse revelation that Litvinenko was actually killed by “an Italian who administered the deadly polonium 210.” What’s more, he astonishingly says, the operation was carried out under the auspices of the US and UK.
In my books The Phony Litvinenko Murder and Litvinenko Murder Case Solved I’ve written about an Italian connection. But I can’t confirm that Barril is talking about the same person.
Here’s what Najadi told me:
“According to Paul Barril, Litvinenko was himself working for the late Boris Berezovsky [a Russian fugitive oligarch that made London his home] who, according to Barril, was in turn working for and with the British intelligence service MI6. Barril said, ‘Litvinenko has betrayed his employers, Berezovsky and the MI6, and has pocketed large sums of money, millions of US dollars, that were destined for agent provocateurs within the Berezovsky clan. The sole goal was to globally discredit Putin and the Russian Federation. This Western intelligence operation was directed from Washington DC and London. Its code name is Beluga.'”
Barril’s comments deserve serious consideration. A former officer of the French Gendarmerie Nationale, he’s been dubbed “Supercop” in France. Barril is cofounder of the GIGN French antiterror group, and has also served in French presidential security. During his career he has led several private security companies, as well.
Najadi says, “These new revelations from Captain Paul Barril now open a new window to the truth about the motive for killing Alexander Litvinenko.”
Litvinenko’s death has been a hot topic for officials within British officialdom. A UK coroner’s inquest failed to reach a verdict on the manner and cause of Litvinenko’s death, even after the passage of almost ten years. Then a politically-motivated official inquiry was authorized by Prime Minister David Cameron. Its final report hypothesized that Putin was behind the death, but it failed to produce any credible evidence. (See “Six Reasons You Can’t Take the Litvinenko Report Seriously“)
Britain had accused two Russians of poisoning Litvinenko. But the UK prosecutor failed to make his case against them, claiming that he had only “grave suspicions” about who’s to blame. Then there was the aborted coroner’s inquest, and finally a report was issued under suspicious circumstances by a discredited judge who lacked the basic qualifications for conducting an official inquiry. (See “Britain Allowed Unqualified Judge to Decide Litvinenko Case. Now Inquiry Report Must Be Recalled” and “Discredited Litvinenko ‘Judge’ Sends Parliament Untrustworthy Verdict.”)
Now the Litvinenko scandal takes on a new proportion. It’s no longer just an incessantly long-running murder mystery. It just might be the telltale sign of an enormous geopolitical provocation that is wreaking havoc with world stability.
In the run-up to the American presidential election many of the candidates have talked very tough on dealing with Russia’s role in the world. I wonder how many of them have bought into the Beluga scheme.
Accés au archives des articles :
Voici les liens par rubriques qui donnent accés à tous les articles du site :
- TOP ACTU
- CE QU’ILS EN DISENT
- LA RUSSOPHOBIE EN ACTION
- BETES ET MECHANTS
- PROTESTATIONS ET REACTIONS
- Revisionnisme et russophobie
- MEDIAS ET RUSSOPHOBIE
- Mise au point
- DE LA RUSSOPHOBIE
- Nos Twitte-ripostes
- DANS DES BONNES LIBRAIRIES