I Assumed
Putin’s Russia Had Litvinenko Killed … Then I Looked
for Myself
By Washington's Blog
January 25,
2016 "Information
Clearing House"
- January 22, 2016 -
"Washington's
Blog"
-
I’ve always
assumed that Putin’s KGB (now called the FSB) killed
Alexander Litvinenko.
But today’s
announcement by the British that Putin
“probably” approved Litvinenko’s murder made me
curious enough to take a look for myself.
Initially,
Litvinenko was poisoned with radioactive polonium as
he sipped tea in an upscale London hotel. The report
makes it sound like only Russia had access to
polonium, but it’s actually
available online to anyone.
Antiwar
notes:
If the
Russians wanted to off Litvinenko, why would
they poison him with a substance that left a
radioactive trail traceable from
Germany to
Heathrow airport – and, in the process,
contaminating scores of hotel rooms, offices,
planes, restaurants, and homes? Why not just
put a bullet through his head? It makes no
sense.
But
then conspiracy theories don’t have to make
sense: they just have to take certain
assumptions all the way to their implausible
conclusions. If one starts with the premise that
Putin and the Russians are a Satanic force
capable of anything, and incompetent to boot,
then it’s all perfectly “logical” – in the
Bizarro World, at any rate.
The
idea that Litvinenko was a dangerous opponent of
the Russian government who had to be killed
because he posed a credible threat to the
existence of the regime is laughable:
practically no one inside Russia knew anything
about him, and as for his crackpot “truther”
theories about how Putin was behind every
terrorist attack ever carried out within
Russia’s borders – to assert that they had any
credence outside of the Western media echo
chamber is a joke.
***
The
meat of the matter – the real “evidence” – is
hidden behind a veil of secrecy. Lord Owen’s
inquiry was for the most part conducted in
secret closed hearings, with testimony given by
anonymous witnesses, and this is central to the
“evidence” that is supposed to convict Kovtun,
Lugovoy, and the Russian government. Lord Owen,
explains it this way:
“Put very shortly, the closed evidence consists
of evidence that is relevant to the Inquiry, but
which has been assessed as being too sensitive
to put into the public domain. The assessment
that the material is sufficiently sensitive to
warrant being treated as closed evidence in
these proceedings has been made not by me, but
by the Home Secretary. She has given effect to
this decision by issuing a number of Restriction
Notices, which is a procedure specified in
section 19 of the Inquiries Act 2005. The
Restriction Notices themselves, although not, of
course, the sensitive documents appended to
them, are public documents. They have been
published on the Inquiry website and are also to
be found at Appendix 7 to this Report.”
In
other words, the “evidence” is not for us
ordinary mortals to see. We just have to take
His Lordship’s word for it that the Russian
government embarked on an improbable
assassination mission against a marginal figure
that reads like something Ian Fleming might have
written under a pseudonym.
So who
killed Litvinenko ?
Well, Mario
Scaramella
met with Litvinenko during the meal when
Litvinenko was poisoned. Scaramella
didn’t eat or drink a thing during the lunch,
and then himself came down with a mild case
of
polonium poisoning.
La
Republica (one of Italy’s largest newspapers)
wrote in 2006 (English
translation) that Scaramella was a bad guy who
may have worked with the CIA:
Mario
Scaramella is suspected of arms trafficking.
Earlier this year, the public prosecutor of
Naples has written for this offense to the
docket and, soon after, had to stop the
investigation. [He was
convicted in Italy for selling arms (original
Italian).]
***
Sources
found to be very credible by the prosecutor
recalled that investigators suspected that
Scaramella was actually in close
relationship, if not actually working for, the
CIA and that his ECPP could be a front
company of the agency’s Langley.
Antiwar
notes:
As I
pointed out
here:
“Litvinenko was an employee of exiled Russian
billionaire
Boris Berezovsky – whose
ill-gotten empire included a Russian
syndicate of car-dealerships that had
more than a nodding acquaintance with the
Chechen Mafia – but was being slowly cut out of
the money pipeline. Big-hearted Boris, who had
initially put him on the payroll as anti-Putin
propagandist, was evidently getting sick of him,
and the out-of-work “dissident” was reportedly
desperate for money. Litvinenko had several
“
business meetings ” with Lugovoi in the
months prior to his death, and,
according to this report , he hatched a
blackmail scheme targeting several well-known
Russian tycoons and government officials.”
Indeed,
Litvinenko, in the months before his death, had
targeted several well-known members of the
Russian Mafia with his
blackmail scheme. That they would take
umbrage at this is hardly shocking.
Alternatively, Litvinenko may actually have
accidentally poisoned himself. Antiwar again:
Furthermore, there are indications that
Litvinenko was engaged in the
smuggling of nuclear materials.
That he wound up being contaminated by the goods
he was peddling on the black market seems far
more credible than the cock-and-bull story about
a vast Russian plot originating in the Kremlin,.
Apparently Lord Owen has never heard of
Occam’s Razor.
See also -
Litvinenko - Jewish Mafia's
Nuclear Smuggling:
News analysis - Litvinenko, reportedly had links to
the Israel-based Russian mafia and the smuggling of
radioactive materials.
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