by Copydude

Whatever the outcome of the Litvinenko affair, the damage to East-West relations has been done. Or perhaps, it has simply exposed the latent Russophobia that still resides in the West.
Day by day, the story of a grisly tyrant taking out a good ole boy scout has fallen apart. But the propaganda machine is still running, albeit running on empty.
Funniest gaffe of the week from the Times, which ran the headline, ‘Murder Witnesses Run For Their Lives‘. That’s because they couldn’t find wobbly source Yevgeny Limarev. Well, Yevgeny just happens to have a blog on MSN spaces and the Times could easily have sent him an e-mail. Limarev put more egg on the face of the Murdoch paper by denying the hit-list story. Meanwhile even KGB veterans had never heard of him. Ouch.
That short-of-money Sasha was being used - alive and dead - there is no doubt.
Almost everything put out by Berezovsky and Bell PR
has been exposed as a lie. Litvinenko wasn’t on a hit-list. He wasn’t
investigating the death of Politkovskaya. He was working as an
intermediary for ’security’ firms - private armies and mercenaries. It
even looks like he was under contract to Erinys.
Totally discredited
is Litvinenko’s deathbed conversion to Islam which, like his deathbed
speech, was somehow supposed to come from a man too weak to speak, who
hardly spoke English and who was mostly unconscious. Even his wife
didn’t seem to know anything about it until some mullahs barged into the funeral.
I’ve commented before that there’s any number of reasons why
no one would ever use Polonium as a murder weapon. Which is presumably
why no one ever has. And now that there’s simply too much Polonium at
too many locations for it to be a simple hit, it’s finally dawned on
Scotland Yard too. It’s fortunate that the German police aren’t taken
in by British newspapers. They turned out from day one with proper
protective clothing and decontamination equipment. Only the Italian
police thought to check into Scaramella’s background on nuclear smuggling.
So only now has the British police force hurriedly ordered some proper
protective kit. The Bell PR media hype even addled the British police
brains.
Why did everyone want a scary Kremlin story so much? The self-interest
of exiles facing extradition is obvious. But it’s also true that Putin
has been making enemies right and left. Poland has a beef ban and an
energy problem. Poland has a port blockaded
by Kaliningrad. The lifeline Odessa-Plok pipeline has just been
shelved. Estonia has a fish ban from Russia, Lativia a sprat ban,
Georgia and Moldova a wine ban and assorted sanctions. Lithuania has an
oil ‘delivery problem’ to its major refinery. All these actions
significantly impact the feeble, fledgling economies - and therefore
effectiveness - of the new NATO countries. And that’s without
mentioning Shell’s Sakhalin woes while Hambro’s Russian goldmining
licenses are under threat as we speak. Putin is taking back Russia. Hey, he’s not supposed to do that.
So, while it all looks increasingly like a smuggling accident, one can’t rule out the possibility that Litvinenko was helped to have an accident. A reporter
reminded me the other day of the truism that ‘assassins have to be
opportunists’. Any number of parties would have an interest in framing
Putin at this time, given half a chance. A radioactivity sweep of MI6
offices would be revealing, now wouldn’t it?


Mister Wong
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