“An appeaser is one
who feeds a crocodile, hoping it will eat him last”
Winston Spencer Churchill
Alphen, Netherlands. 22 January. Yesterday,
a British judge at the formal publication of a formal report at the conclusion
of a formal and legal public inquiry cited a foreign head of state for complicity in murder
on British soil of a British and EU citizen. Such an occurrence is unheard of
and should be a matter of the gravest international import. And yet within
twenty-four hours of the publication by Sir Robert Owen of “The Litvinenko
Inquiry: Report into the Death of Alexander Litvinenko”, the British Government
is attempting to bury it, and the EU has said nothing. Instead, the British
Government has frozen the assets of two Russian citizens accused of carrying
out the murder of Mr Litvinenko even though they have no assets in the UK, and called
in the Russian Ambassador to Britain for a severe dressing down. In a crass
attempt to deflect British public attention away from London’s cravenness Defence
Secretary Michael Fallon took the opportunity to make a speech reinforcing the
continued need for Britain’s nuclear deterrent. It was less news management
more Monty Python. So, why did the report conclude Russia committed this murder
and why has Britain’s and the EU’s response thus far been so supine as to smack
of appeasement?
Here are the facts. On 1
November, 2006 Mr Litvinenko met two former KGB officers Andrei Lugovoy and
Dmitri Kovtun at the Millennium Hotel in central London. Several hours after drinking
green tea Mr Litvinenko became ill and was subsequently diagnosed as suffering
from acute radiation syndrome. It later transpired that Mr Litvinenko had been
poisoned with radionuclide polonium-210 at a level some 200 times greater
than the median lethal dose. Mr Litvinenko died on 23 November, 2006 at 2121
hours.
The polonium was traced back to
the tea pot from which Mr Litvinenko’s tea had been poured, to the hotel room
of one of the two accused, and then to a British Airways aircraft upon which
the accused had travelled from Moscow to London. Indeed, the report identifies a
trail of polonium across London that closely matched the movements of Mr
Lugovoy and Mr Kovtun and which British authorities believe exposed over 100
Londoners to direct contamination and put several thousand at risk. Yesterday,
in the House of Commons the Shadow Home Secretary (Interior Minister) Mr Andy
Burnham called the act “state-sponsored terrorism”.
The reasons for Russia’s actions against
Mr Litvinenko are complex and revealing. On 13 November, 1998. shortly after Vladimir
Putin’s appointment as Director of the FSB (Russian Federal Security Service
and successor of the KGB), Mr Boris
Berezovsky, with whom Mr Litvinenko was close, published an open letter in Kommersant. The letter stated; “Vladimir Vladimirovich
you have inherited a difficult legacy from your predecessors. Criminal elements
and officials at various levels, whom they have corrupted, including officials
in your own agency, are striking at our people who are unwilling to back to being
cattle. Criminal terror is on the rise in Russia”.
On 17 November, 1998 Mr
Litvinenko took part in a press conference alongside five other FSB agents at
which he accused his own FSB organised crime unit of criminal acts. Mr
Litvinenko began the press conference stating; “We do not seek to compromise
the Federal Security Service, but to purify and strengthen it”. Subsequently, Mr
Litvinenko met with Director Putin and tried to present him with a dossier
detailing his allegations. The dossier was rebuffed. Instead Mr Putin prepared
his own dossier against Mr Litvinenko and on 19 November, 1998 went on state
television network Rossiya to
ridicule the Litvinenko press conference as, “a spectacle with characters from
a children’s story”.
Subsequently, Mr Litvinenko moved
to Britain in 2000. In July 2006 Mr Litvinenko accused President Putin of being
a paedophile. On 27 July, 2006 President Putin approved amendments to a 2002
Russian law entitled, “On Counteracting Extremist Activity”. The new law appeared
to support attacks on anyone who defamed holders of high office in the Russian
state.
The reasons for Britain’s weak
response and the EU’s non-response thus far are equally complex and revealing. The
City of London is awash with dodgy Russian money and London has ‘specialised’
in not asking too many questions as to the provenance of said moneys. Indeed, in
the wake of the 2008 financial crash the current British Government adopted a mercantilist
foreign policy which included moving closer to illiberal regimes such as Russia
and China. Indeed, it was only with Russia’s 2014 invasion of Crimea and
eastern Ukraine that the Owen public inquiry was allowed to proceed. Critically,
London claims that Moscow’s help is needed to end the war in Syria. However,
Moscow’s aim is to keep President Assad in power and thus perpetuate the war in
Syria.
The reasons for the EU’s
non-response reflect deep divisions within the EU over how best to deal with an
aggressive Russia. France, Germany and Italy in particular are cautious about
taking any further action against Russia beyond the sanctions already in place
following the invasion of Ukraine and the July 2014 downing of MH-17. Reasons for
this lack of solidarity are in part due to narrow national economic
considerations, and in part out of fear that a clearly instable Russia could
become even more aggressive. However, the EU’s lack of solidarity with Britain
over the murder of one of its own citizens does beg a very serious question;
part of the rationale for Britain remaining within the EU is that membership strengthens
Britain’s influence on the world stage. Thus far the EU has done all it
can to kill the issue doing little or nothing to take this extremely serious
matter to the Russians.
What should happen now? At the
very least all EU member-states should withdraw henceforth from the 2018 World
Cup which is due to be held in Russia. Given the report clearly cites the role
of the FSB in the murder one other step would be to identify and remove all
Russian agents from EU member-states.
What will happen now? Next to
nothing. That said, the Dutch investigation into criminal responsibility for
the downing of MH 17 is due to report and also likely to cite Russia. Further
inaction will simply confirm that Britain and the EU far from crafting a
sophisticated, long-term policy response are merely repeating the mistakes of
history and appeasing an aggressive Russian regime.
There is one other finding in the
report that bears strategic consideration. The report alleges that the actual
order to murder Mr Litvinenko was given by Mr Nikolai Petrushev in his 2006
capacity as FSB director. The virulently anti-Western Mr Petrushev is currently
Secretary (Head) of the Security Council of the Russian Federation. That is
exactly the same route President Putin took to power. Mr Berezovsky? He was found
dead in suspicious circumstances at his English home on 23 March, 2013. Mr Lugovoy? He is currently preparing a
documentary for Russian state television. Its title? “Traitors”.
Winston Churchill said of
appeasement, “…do not suppose that this is the end. This is only the beginning
of the reckoning. This is only the first sip, the first foretaste of a bitter
cup which will be proffered to us year-by-year unless by a supreme recovery of
moral health and martial vigour, we arise again and take our stand for freedom
as in the olden time”.
Have you heard that Sir Humphrey?
Julian Lindley-French
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