- Alexander Litvinenko in a Scottish cap and KGB
gauntlets, brandishing a Chechen sword
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- Recent revelations that spy-defector Litvinenko was on
a 2,000 pound per month retainer with MI6 at the time of his untimely
death keep this New Cold War episode in the news, writes Eric Walberg
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- Four Russian diplomats were expelled from Britain this
summer as a pressure tactic to try to force Russia to extradite Andrei
Lugovoi, the key suspect in the death of a former KGB officer and proud
new UK citizen, Alexander Litvinenko. The expulsion came shortly after
Russian President Vladimir Putin announced that Russia was pulling out
of the Conventional Forces in Europe (CFE) treaty and as Polish President
Lech Kaczynski was visiting Washington to finalise the US missile bases
in Europe. What a coincidence.
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- Yet another coincidence: less than 48 hours before the
expulsions, ex-US Secretaries of State Henry Kissinger and George Schultz,
Chevron Chairman David O'Reilly and assorted friends had discussions
with President Putin in Moscow at a conference "Russia- USA: A view
on the future", which the US side later described as "frank",
meaning Putin didn't give an inch on anything. In case Kissinger didn't
get the message, Putin slipped out of the conference to meet Chinese Foreign
Minister Yang Jiechi who agreed with him that China wants a "multipolar
world" and even more trade with Russia. Chinese-Russian trade has
increased by almost 50 per cent annually the last few years.
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- It seems all the Western guns available weren't able
to budge the Kremlin, so the British bulldog, or in today's world, poodle
was called in to bark and make a scene.
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- A spokesman for the Russian Foreign Ministry said that
the expulsions were "a well-staged action to politicise the Litvinenko
case" and pointed out that the government of Britain had refused
to extradite two prominent opponents of the Kremlin who live there: a
businessman, Boris Berezovsky, and Akhmed Zakayev, the exiled Chechen
leader -- both friends and mentors of poor, dead Litvinenko.
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- Although both sides expelled diplomats in 1996 on accusations
of spying, the latest turn of events seemed far more serious, reminiscent
of 1985, when Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher expelled 24 Soviet diplomats,
prompting CPSU General Secretary Mikhail Gorbachev to do the same, despite
their mutual admiration.
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- This is all vintage Le Carre. You could easily mistake
2007 for 1967 or better 1937. Though on his deathbed Litvinenko purportedly
accused Putin of ordering his murder, even his widow Marina doesn't agree,
though she does think it was planned in Moscow. It could very well be
that the KGB's successor, the FSB, is implicated in this cloak-and-polonium
affair, just as the CIA, KGB, Mossad and their ilk were and are active
in hundreds of assassinations of their enemies.
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- After 18 years as a model KGB/FSB officer he seems to
have cracked, beginning with a theatrical press conference in November
1998, where he publicly accused his superiors of ordering the assassination
of oligarch Boris Berezovsky, "the Jew who'd robbed half the country".
Critics say the accusation was fabricated to help Berezovsky blacken enemies
in the FSB. Litvinenko was fired and later joined Berezovsky in the UK,
where he was granted political asylum and citizenship. He soon published
The FSB Blows up Russia (2001) which claims agents from the FSB rather
than Chechen terrorists coordinated the 1999 Russian apartment bombings
that killed more than 300 people.
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- His accusations against Putin and the FSB continued to
come thick and fast. In his next book, Gang from Lubyanka (2002), he alleged
that Putin was personally involved in organised crime. With regard to
the July 2005 bombings in London, Litvinenko said that, "terrorist
infection creeps worldwide from the cabinets of the Lubyanka Square and
the Kremlin" and accused Putin of being a paedophile, comparing him
to the notorious rapist and serial killer Andrei Chikatilo. In October,
he publicly accused Putin of assassinating crusading journalist Anna Politovskaya.
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- Two weeks later, on 1 November 2006, Litvinenko suddenly
fell ill and was hospitalised. Alex Goldfarb, who had arranged Litvinenko's
defection from Moscow in 2000 and is now director of Berezovsky's International
Foundation for Civil Liberties, emerged as his official spokesman using
Berezovsky's PR agency, Bell Pottinger. Through them, Litvinenko stated
that he met three former KGB agents on the day he fell ill, including
Andrei Lugovoi.
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- Litvinenko died three weeks later of lethal polonium-210
radiation poisoning. A senior official said investigators had concluded
the murder was "a 'state-sponsored' assassination orchestrated by
Russian security services." On 28 May 2007, the British Foreign
Office officially submitted a request to the government of Russia for
the extradition of Lugovoi. On 31 May Lugovoi held a news conference at
which he accused MI6 of attempting to recruit him and blamed either MI6,
the Russian mafia, or fugitive Kremlin opponent Boris Berezovsky for the
killing, saying he is a "victim not a perpetrator of a radiation
attack". This claim was dismissed at the time by Western media and,
of course, MI6 as nonsense. Now it appears that the Russian version of
events was spot on. Sir John Scarlett, who is now the head of MI6 and
was once based in Moscow, was fingered as Litvinenko's recruiter, according
the the Daily Mail.
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- Some of Litvinenko's accusations have a ring of truth
-- possible FSB assassination attempts on Berezovsky, Politovskaya, and
others. Others, while far-fetched, merit further investigation -- FSB
blowing up a Moscow apartment building and blaming Chechens, and the
Moscow theatre hostage-taking abetted by Chechens working for the FSB.
However, his claims of FSB training Al-Qaeda number two Ayman El-Zawahri
in Dagestan in the years before 9/11 or that the Kremlin had ordered the
Beslan massacre or that Putin is a paedophile suggest he was paranoid
and obsessed with stirring up personal animosity towards Putin, to the
point of invoking his own death.
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- Whatever the truth about Litvinenko, he was clearly off
the deep end by the end. A Russian student friend at University of Westminster,
Julia Svetlichnaja, said she received more than 100 e- mails from him
in the months prior to his death, proposing that she enter into a business
deal with him and "make money". Despite his MI6 stipend, he
was low on money and his anti-Putin campaign was going nowhere. He was
courting death, whether from the FSB, his purported friends or his own
doing. And just as it was tragic that many well-meaning people -- East
and West -- were caught in the superpower meatgrinder in the Old Cold
War, it is sad today that many people, disgusted with the horrors taking
place everyday, go crazy and/or become victims of the harsh world of political
intrigue.
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- It's very doubtful that this tale will ever be unravelled
-- perhaps the Western media account of his death is true, though Lugovoi's
assertion is looking pretty good these days. Even if it was some rogue
FSB agent, what difference does it really make? Just as the Soviet Union
played a positive role in world politics, a counterveiling force to Western
imperialism in its Hitlerian incarnation and its softer US/European variants,
Russia under Putin is playing a positive role on the world stage today.
All the Litvinenkos in the world, packaged by their PR managers, can't
change that fact. And there are Western assassinations every bit as suspect
-- David Kelly, the British scientist whose mysterious "suicide"
implicated the British government, and which was airbrushed out of the
picture by a very partisan government "investigation", for one.
Politics is a dirty business, and threats to the powers- that-be often
suffer ill fates.
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- While we can cherish British traditions of free speech
and democracy, we must remember Britain is also crafty political animal,
deeply implicated in US imperial plans, as the "coincidences"
above suggest. We can also cherish the haven free from the imperialist
mindset that the SU once provided, and that Russia provides to some extent
today. It is not a benign place -- it is the home of corruption, violence,
bureaucracy and, yes, political and Mafia-style assassinations, the legacy
of the SU and its collapse.
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- But it is also the home of much greater freedom of thought
than the West, now in the grip of US-Israeli brainwashing. And its influence
-- political and economic (it is currently the biggest oil and gas producer
in the world) -- is spreading rapidly in a world tired of US-led serial
wars and bullying. Putin's recent trip to Teheran and warning that no
country in the region would allow an invastion of Iran to take place from
its soil is only the most recent indication of this remarkable resurgence
of Russia under his leadership.
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- It is a shame that Litvinenko died his gruesome death,
but he was courting disaster, from his flamboyant press conference onwards.
His actions were not well-thought out; he was impulsive and emotional,
to the point of touchingly converting to Islam in sympathy with the Chechens
as he lay dying. I wonder of Goldfarb and Berezovsky had a hand in that
little PR stunt? He is a reminder that the world of international politics
is one of intrigue and danger. He played the game and lost. Just as Soviet
dissidents had little real influence on events -- they were more gadflies
or weathervanes, so are the likes of Litvinenko today.
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- Another "coincidence": the day after the Russians
announced they were expelling four British diplomats, the media solemnly
reported that fighter planes from Britain and Norway scrambled Friday
to keep watch on Russian Uf-95 bombers that were approaching the countries'
air space, though a Norwegian military official admitted this was actually
routine. Yes, "the Russians and coming!" Let's build some nice
US bases in eastern Europe and, in the meantime, scurry to take protection
under Great Britain's generous skirts. Ho- hum.
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- Eric Walberg is a Canadian journalist at Al-Ahram Weekly
in Cairo. You can reach him at his site www.geocities.com/walberg2002/
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