Britain risks a Cold War clash
Britain and Russia are heading for the most serious breakdown in
relations since the end of the Cold War over the man wanted for the
murder of the former spy Alexander Litvinenko.
Western sources acknowledged that the two countries were on "a path
to confrontation" after President Putin refused to extradite Andrei
Lugovoy to stand trial in London. Britain is expected to underscore
official anger at the Kremlin by imposing punitive measures on Russia
within days. Whitehall is preparing for swift retaliation in what
threatens to spiral into a tit-for-tat exchange of hostilities that
could bring the first expulsion of diplomats since 1996.
Britain is determined to demonstrate to Russia that it will not
simply ignore the murder of a British citizen in London with radioactive
polonium210, an incident that endangered the lives of hundreds of other
people.
Russia seems equally determined to face Britain down. The Foreign
Ministry said yesterday that it was very surprised by London's reaction
and urged Britain not to hold the relationship hostage to the Litvinenko
case.
Mikhail Kamynin, a government spokesman, said that Moscow had
rejected Britain's request to hand over Mr Lugovoy in line with Russian
law, which includes a constitutional ban on the extradition of its
citizens to face trial abroad.
The British Council is already coming under pressure from Russian
authorities. Russia's main state television channel focused on its
activities in a documentary on Sunday about alleged British espionage.
Britain and Russia last expelled each other's diplomats in May 1996.
Moscow ordered nine British embassy officials to leave, claiming they
were running a spy ring, and London hit back by throwing out four
Russians.
Mr Litvinenko, who became a British citizen shortly before his death,
was a dissident former agent with the Russian Federal Security Service
and a vocal critic of Mr Putin. In a dramatic deathbed statement, he
accused the Russian President of ordering his murder. Mr Lugovoy is a
former KGB bodyguard who met Mr Litvinenko at a London hotel on November
1, the day that he fell ill. The Crown Prosecution Service named him in
May as the man wanted for the murder of Mr Litvinenko.
The stand-off is the first big test for the new Foreign Secretary,
David Miliband, who must balance a tough stance with the Kremlin against
potential damage to British business interests in Russia's booming
economy.
The Times, UK
|