Anglo-Saxons got old maps against Russia

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The Skripals affair, which received wide international response, made me recall another case of poisoning in England by an ex-officer of the Russian special services. This is a former FSB lieutenant colonel Alexander Litvinenko. But he was less fortunate: the case was fatal.





Recently, the father of the poisoned lieutenant colonel, Walter Litvinenko, gave an interview to Russian journalists, in which he opens the veil of secrecy over the story of the death of his son.

The story of the father of the officer

Walter Litvinenko accuses the death of the son of the CIA. The man considers Alexander Goldfarb, who was considered a friend of Alexander Litvinenko and a confidant of the scandalous Russian oligarch Boris Berezovsky, to be the specific executor of the murder.

It was he who helped the lieutenant colonel to move to the UK. Walter Litvinenko categorically states that Goldfarb was an agent of the US Central Intelligence Agency.

According to him, the poisoning of Alexander Litvinenko was part of a complex multi-pass operation by the American intelligence service. It was planned to convince the world community that the crime was committed by order of the Kremlin.

This fact was supposed to lead to large-scale anti-Russian sanctions that would cause discontent in the country and lead to riots. The final stage of the operation was to be a coup in Russia.

What happened to Litvinenko

Lt. Col. Alexander Litvinenko left Russia in 1999, hiding abroad from criminal prosecution. Subsequently, it was stated that Litvinenko had taken to the West documents allegedly confirming the involvement of the FSB in the bombings of apartment buildings in Moscow and other Russian cities.

He sought asylum in the United States, but did not receive it. Then Alexander Goldfarb, the former head of the Civil Liberties Fund, helped him get political shelter in the UK.

There he began to guard Boris Berezovsky and wrote “revealing” books about the work of Russian special services.

In 2006, Litvinenko was poisoned with the polonium-210 radioactive substance. According to his father, there were several poisoning attempts. The latter was successful. Alexander was very thin, his hair fell out, and he soon died.

After his death, British Mi-6 intelligence announced that Litvinenko was their agent.

Was Litvinenko an English spy?

It may well be that the British secret service told the truth, but most likely his work was not directed against Russia. It is known that Litvinenko in England maintained close friendly relations with Akhmed Zakayev, a well-known Chechen field commander and terrorist, put on the Russian and international wanted list, as well as with other Chechen fighters.

It is likely that his activity in Mi-6 was connected (if he was really connected with this special service) in working with criminal elements that flowed from Russia to the UK. The lieutenant colonel could well deal with this, as he was previously one of the best investigators in Moscow.

It is also possible that, while in England, the officer continued to work in the FSB, although this is not confirmed by anything.

It doesn’t matter who Litvinenko worked for, what functions he performed. It is important to know exactly who committed his murder and for what purpose. This may help uncover another poisoning that happened more than a decade later. I mean the “Skripals affair”.

After all, it caused just the reaction in the world that anti-Russian forces needed. Perhaps the “Litvinenko case” will serve as a thread that will help in solving the “Skripals case” and lead to the true culprits of both crimes.