Advertisement
Advertisement
Britain
Get more with myNEWS
A personalised news feed of stories that matter to you
Learn more
Russian President Vladimir Putin. Moscow said on Friday it could hit back at Britain at “any minute” with its own raft of punitive measures after the West blamed Russia directly for a nerve agent attack on a former double agent. Photo: AP

Kremlin says response to Britain’s spy poisoning allegations and diplomat expulsions could come ‘any minute’

But Vladimir Putin’s spokesman refused to say if such action would come before Sunday’s presidential elections

Britain

Moscow said on Friday it could hit back at Britain at “any minute” with its own raft of punitive measures after the West blamed Russia directly for a nerve agent attack on a former double agent.

President Vladimir Putin’s spokesman Dmitry Peskov said Russia’s sanctions could come “any minute” even though he declined to say whether Moscow would deliver its response before Sunday’s presidential election.

“All the steps will be well thought out,” he said.

In a rare joint statement, the leaders of Britain, France, Germany and the US on Thursday condemned the attack on former double agent Sergei Skripal and his daughter Yulia as an “assault on UK sovereignty”.

Moscow has vehemently denied it had a hand in the poisoning of its former spy in the cathedral city of Salisbury early this month.

A forensics tent surrounds the grave sites of the wife and son of former Russian spy Sergei Skripal. Skripal had visited the site around the time he was poisoned. Photo: AFP
Investigators in protective suits examine the scene in Salisbury, where an allegedly Russian-made nerve agent was used to poison ex-spy Sergei Skripal and his daughter. Photo: AP

Britain’s key allies closed ranks against Putin after British Prime Minister Theresa May announced the expulsion of 23 Russian diplomats and suspended high-level contacts, among other measures.

Russia said earlier this week it would expel British diplomats in response to London’s move as well as adopt other measures that the Kremlin said would “most suit Moscow’s interests”.

“Of course we will,” Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov told journalists when asked whether Moscow would respond in kind. He did not provide further details.

Moscow’s ambassador to Britain Alexander Yakovenko said that most of the Russian diplomats would leave the country next week.

The crisis unravelled in the thick of a Russian presidential campaign, with Putin expected to win a fourth Kremlin term on Sunday.

Britain's Prime Minister Theresa May talks with police in Salisbury where former Russian double agent Sergei Skripal and his daughter Yulia were poisoned. Photo: AFP

The Russian president has barely weighed in on the row, only telling a BBC reporter earlier this week: “Sort things out from your side and then we will discuss this with you.”

Russia insists it had no motive to target Skripal with what Britain says was a highly potent Soviet-designed nerve agent called Novichok, in the first such attack in Europe since the second world war.

Many Russians remain sceptical that the state was involved in an attack on British soil and some analysts didn’t rule out the involvement of ordinary criminals or rogue agents.

The official military newspaper Krasnaya Zvezda (Red Star) interviewed the former head of Russia’s GRU military intelligence, Fyodor Ladygin, who denied his officers had been involved.

“We don’t care about the fate of a traitor,” said Colonel General Ladygin.

“For an intelligence officer, a traitor dies immediately – he absolutely ceases to exist in the memory. For a traitor, oblivion is death.”

Britain's Labour Party leader Jeremy Corbyn said the party was split over how firmly to point the finger at Moscow for the poisoning. Photo: AP

The attack on the Skripals revived memories of the fate of Alexander Litvinenko, a Russian dissident who died of Polonium poisoning in a 2006 attack in the UK that London blamed on Moscow.

The leaders of Britain, France, Germany and the United States said on Thursday there was “no plausible alternative explanation” for the use of the Soviet-designed nerve agent.

We don’t want a new cold war, we don’t want a new arms race
Jens Stoltenberg

In a joint statement, they demanded Moscow “address all questions” related to the attack against Skripal, which they said amounted to a “breach of international law”.

But on Friday, Britain’s opposition Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn poured cold water on claims the Russian state was involved, suggesting instead that “mafia-like groups” could have been responsible.

Skripal moved to Britain in a 2010 spy swap and had taken his daughter, who was on a visit from Moscow, out for lunch before they both collapsed on a bench in the street on March 4.

The Daily Telegraph reported late Thursday that intelligence agencies now believe the nerve agent used on the pair was planted in the daughter’s suitcase before she left Moscow.

Vil Mirzayanov, a Soviet-era chemist who helped create Novichok, denied that Skripal’s poison could have come from stocks in the former USSR and said that terrorists also could not produce it.

Mirzaynov was sacked after revealing the existence of Moscow’s classified programme to produce Novichok and now lives in the United States.

May warned more measures could follow, noting that the US-led Nato alliance and the UN Security Council had discussed the attack, while it was also expected to be on the agenda at a European Union summit next week.

Nato Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg said Friday the alliance did not want a return to cold war hostilities with Russia while expressing support for Britain’s stance.

“We don’t want a new cold war, we don’t want a new arms race, Russia is our neighbour therefore we have to continue to strive for an improved better relationship with Russia,” he told BBC radio.

This article appeared in the South China Morning Post print edition as: Kremlin will respond tosanctions‘any minute’
Post