A
week ago we asked
if 'Novichok' poisons are real. The answer is now in: It is 'yes' and 'no'.
Several Russian scientist now say that they once researched and developed
lethal poisons but they assert that other countries can and have copied these.
'Novichok', they say, is a just western propaganda invention. They see
the British accusations as a cynical plot against Russia. The people who push
the 'Novichok' accusations have political and commercial interests.
The
British Prime Minister Theresa May insinuated
that the British-Russian double agent Sergej Skripal and his daughter Yulia,
who collapsed
on March 4 on a public bench in Salisbury, were affected by a 'Russian'
nerve agent:
It is now clear that Mr Skripal and his daughter were
poisoned with a military-grade nerve agent of a type developed by Russia.
It is part of a group of nerve agents known as Novichok.
Theresa
May's claims are highly questionable.
Maria Zakharova, spokeswomen of the Russian Foreign Ministry: "'Novichok'
has never been used in the USSR or in Russia as something related to the chemical weapon
research" - bigger
A
highly potent nerve agent would hurt anyone who comes in contact with it. But
the BBC reported that a doctor who administered first aid to the collapsed
Yulia Skripal for 30 minutes was not
affected at all. Another doctor, Steven Davies who heads the emergence room
of the Salisbury District Hospital, wrote
in a letter the London Times:
"... no patients have experienced symptoms of nerve
agent poisoning in Salisbury and there have only been ever been three
patients with significant poisoning."
The
name 'Novichok' comes from a
book written by Vil Mirzanyanov, a 1990s immigrant to the U.S. from the
former Soviet Union. It describes his work at Soviet chemical weapon
laboratories and lists the chemical formulas of a new group of lethal
substances.
AFP
interviewed
the author of the 'Novichok' book about the Salisbury incident:
Mirzayanov, speaking at his home in Princeton, New Jersey,
said he is convinced Russia carried it out as a way of intimidating opponents
of President Vladimir Putin.
...
The only other possibility, he said, would be that someone used the formulas in his book to make such a weapon.
...
The only other possibility, he said, would be that someone used the formulas in his book to make such a weapon.
"Russia
did it", says Mirzanyanov, "OR SOMEONE WHO READ MY BOOK".
A
'Novichok' nerve agent plays a role in the current season of the
British-American spy drama StrikeBack
which broadcasts on British TV. Theresa May might have watched this clip (vid)
from the series. Is it a source of her allegations?
The
Russian government rejects the British allegations and demands evidence which
Britain has not provided. Russia joined the Chemical Weapon Convention in 1997.
By 2017 it had destroyed
all its chemical weapons and chemical weapon production facilities. Under the
convention only very limited amounts of chemical weapon agents are allowed to be held in
certified laboratories for defense research and testing purposes. The U.S. has
such laboratories at Fort Detrick in Frederick, Maryland, the British lab is in
Porton Down, a few miles from Salisbury. The Russian lab is in Shikhany in the southern
Saratov Oblast. The Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (OPCW)
audits these laboratories and their declared stocks "down to the milligram
level".
The
spokeswoman for the Russian Foreign Ministry and famous high heels folk dancer
(vid) Maria Zakharova explains in a TV
interview (vid, English subtitles) that 'Novichok' was not and is not the
name of any Soviet or Russian program. The word was introduced in the
"west" simply because it sounded Russian.
Western
media claimed that Vil Miranzayanov is the developer of the 'Novichok'
chemicals. It turns out that this is not the case. Interviews with two retired
Russian chemists, both published only yesterday, tell the real story. The
Russia news agency RIA Novostni talked with Professor
Leonid Rink (machine
translation):
Did you have anything to do with creating what the British
authorities call the "Novice"?
-
Yes. This was the basis of my doctoral dissertation.
At
that time I worked in Shikhany, in the branch of GosNIIOKhT (State Research
Institute of Organic Chemistry and Technology, during Soviet times was engaged
in the development of chemical weapons), was a leading researcher and head of
the laboratory.
Professor
Rink says that:
- 'Novichok' or 'novice' was never used as a program
name. New Soviet formulas had alphanumeric codes.
- Several new nerve agents were developed in Shikhany in the
1970s and 80s.
- These new substances can cause immediate deadly
reactions when applied to humans.
- Vil Mirzayanov was head of the chromatographer group,
chemists who deals with the separation and analysis of various mixtures of
substances. He was responsible for environmental control and not a
developer of any new substances.
The
Associated Press summarizes
other parts of the interview with Professor Rink:
Rink told Russia’s state RIA Novosti news agency Tuesday
that Britain and other western nations easily could have synthesized the nerve
agent after chemical expert Vil Mirzayanov emigrated to the United States and
revealed the formula.
Echoing
Russian government statements, Rink says it wouldn’t make sense for Moscow to
poison Sergei Skripal, a military intelligence officer who spied for Britain,
because he was a used asset “drained” by both Russia and Britain.
He
claims Britain’s use of the name Novichok for the nerve agent is intended to
convince the public that Russia is to blame.
The
English-Russian magazine The Bell interviews
another Russian scientists involved in the issue:
The Bell was able to find and speak with Vladimir Uglev, one
of the scientists who was involved in developing the nerve agent referred to as
“Novichok”. [...] Vladimir Uglev, formerly a scientist with Volsk branch of
GOSNIIOKHT (“State Scientific-Research Institute for Organic Chemistry and
Technology”), which developed and tested production of new lethal substances
since 1972, spoke for the first time about his work as early as the 1990s. He
left the institute in 1994 and is now retired.
–
The Russian Ministry of Foreign Affairs insists that there was no research
nor development of any substance called “Novichok”, not in Russia, nor in the
USSR. Is that true?
–
In order to make it easier to understand the subject matter, I will not use the
name “Novichok” which has is now commonly used by everyone to describe those
four substances which were conditionally assigned to me to develop over a
period of several years. Three of these substances are part of the “Foliant” program,
which was led by Pyotr Kirpichev, a scientist with GOSNIIOKHT (State
Scientific-Research Institute for Organic Chemistry and Technology). The first
substance of a new class of organophosphorous chemical agents, I will call it
“A-1972”, was developed by Kirpichev in 1972. In 1976, I developed two
substances: “B-1976” and “C-1976”. The fourth substance, “D-1980”, was
developed by Kirpichev in the early 1980s. All of these substances fall under
the group referred to as “Novichkov”, but that name wasn’t given to the
substances by GOSNIIOKHT.
All
four chemical agents are “FOS” or organophosphorous compounds which have a
nerve paralyzing effect, but they differ in their precursors, how they were
discovered and in their usage as agents of chemical warfare.
The
four substances were developed by Pyotr Kirpichev and Vladimir Uglev. These
substances were not readily usable by the military as they could not be safely
transported and used in the field like binary chemical
weapons can. Once synthesized they were extremely dangerous. Professor
Leonid Rink, working later in a different group, tackled the problem but did
not succeed. Uglev confirms that Vil Miranzayanov was not involved in the
development at all. His group was responsible for chemical analysis and for
environmental control around the laboratory.
Vladimir
Uglev, like Renk and Miranzayanov, notes that these agents "of a type
developed by Russia" can now be produced by any sufficiently equipped
laboratory, including private ones.
Uglev
mentions a criminal use of one of the agents in the 1990s:
One of these substances was used to poison the banker, Ivan
Kivelidi and his secretary in 1995. A cotton ball, soaked in this agent, was
rubbed over the microphone in the handset of Kivelidi’s telephone. That
specific dose was developed by my group, where we produced all of the chemical
agents, and each dose which we developed was given its own complete
physical-chemical passport. It was therefore not difficult to determine who had
prepared that dose and when it was developed. Naturally, the investigators also
suspected me. I was questioned several times about this incident.
Journalist
Mark Ames, who worked in Moscow at that time, remarks:
This muddles the narrative a bit —"novichok" used
in 1995 Moscow mafia poison hit on top mobster Ivan Kivelidi. So:
1) novichok [is] in mob hands too
2) used during reign of #1 Mobfather Boris Yeltsin, Washington's vassal
1) novichok [is] in mob hands too
2) used during reign of #1 Mobfather Boris Yeltsin, Washington's vassal
Uglev
further notes that blood samples from the Salisbury victims, which Moscow
demands but Britain has not handed over, can show what agent (if any) were
involved and "where the specific dose was produced and by whom."
A
new article in the New Scientists confirms
the claims by the Russian scientists that the 'Novichok' agents which may have
affected the Skripals may have been produced elsewhere:
Weapons experts have told New Scientist that a number of
countries legally created small amounts of Novichok after it was revealed in
1992 and a production method was later published.
In
2016 Iranian scientists, in cooperation with the OPCW, published
production and detection methods for such agents. It is likely that the various
government labs secretly re-developed and produced these chemicals for their
own purposes even prior to the Iranian publication.
[UPDATE]
In an interview with Deutsche Welle British Foreign Minister Boris
Johnson admits
that Porton Down had (illegal?) 'Novichok' agents when the incident in
Salisbury happened:
DW: You argue that the source of this nerve agent,
Novichok, is Russia. How did you manage to find it out so quickly? Does
Britain possess samples of it?
Boris
Johnson: Let me be clear with you … When I look at the evidence, I mean the
people from Porton Down, the laboratory …
DW:
So they have the samples …
Boris
Johnson: They do. And they were absolutely categorical and I asked the
guy myself, I said, "Are you sure?" And he said there's no doubt.
But
Porton Down did not agree with the British government to claim that the
supposed nerve agent was "made by Russia." It only
agreed to the compromise formulation "of a type developed by
Russia" i.e. it could have been made anywhere. [End Update]
The
claims by the British government that a. the Skripals were affected by a nerve
agent and that b. Russia was involved in the Skripal incident because it has
some exclusive access to these agents seem both baseless. Unless there is
significant further evidence the British incrimination of Russia looks like a
cynical plot invented for political and/or commercial purposes.
As
usual in the military-industrial complex the people who push such scares, are
the ones who profit from them.
The
British Morning Star points
to one former British military intelligence officer, Colonel (rtd) Hamish de
Bretton-Gordon, as a common protagonist in the Skripal case, in the claims of
Syrian chemical weapon use and in commercial interests around chemical weapon
defense:
Quoted daily by multiple media outlets on the Skripal case,
de Bretton-Gordon has become a very public expert, relied upon for unbiased
comment and analysis by the British and foreign media on chemical weapon
threats from Salisbury to Syria.
He
is a former assistant director of Intelligence Surveillance and Reconnaissance
Land Forces with the Ministry of Defence. Before that de Bretton-Gordon was
commanding officer of Britain’s Chemical, Biological, Radiological and Nuclear
(CBRN) Regiment and Nato’s Rapid Reaction CBRN Battalion.
While
his CBRN background is often mentioned, his military intelligence links are
rarely referred to publicly.
Long
before the Salisbury event, de Bretton-Gordon was urging greater government
expenditure on chemical protection counter-measures and equipment.
...
de Bretton-Gordon is managing director CBRN of Avon Protection Systems, based in Melksham, Wiltshire.
...
In 2017, the company made £50m from its US military contracts and a further £63.3m from other “protection and defence” revenue.
...
de Bretton-Gordon is managing director CBRN of Avon Protection Systems, based in Melksham, Wiltshire.
...
In 2017, the company made £50m from its US military contracts and a further £63.3m from other “protection and defence” revenue.
The
former(?) army intelligence officer is also deeply involved in the
"moderate rebels" chemical weapon scams in Syria:
On April 29 2014, the [Daily Telegraph] reported that it
“obtained soil samples collected from sites of chemical attacks inside Syria by
Dr Ahmad — a medic whose real identity cannot be revealed for his own
protection — who had previously received training in sample collection by western
chemical weapons experts.
“Mr
de Bretton-Gordon, a British chemical weapons expert and director of Secure
Bio, a private company, was one of the trainers.”
And
who carried out the tests? None other than de Bretton-Gordon himself.
The
"White Helmets" propaganda group in Syria was founded and is run by
the former(?) British army intelligence officer James Le Mesurier with British
and U.S. government money. His former(?) colleague de Bretton-Gordon is running
the parallel Syria chemical weapon scam. Both profit from their government
financed operations.
Other
British agents involved in the Skripal case are Pablo
Miller who recruited
Skripal for the MI6. He was a friend of Skripal, also lived in Salisbury and
worked for Christopher Steele, the former(?) MI6 agent who produced the 'dirty
dossier' about Donald Trump for the Clinton campaign. Both are involved
with Russian mafia emigres in Britain like Boris Berezovski and the deceased
Alexander Litvinenko who's father says
that he was killed by an MI6 or CIA guy.
While
the British government blamed the Russians just a week after the incident in
Salisbury happened it now seems interested in delaying any further
investigations. It took more than two weeks after the incident for the British
government to invite the OPCW to help with the case. The head of the OPCW says it will take
another three weeks for the organization to analyze the samples the British
laboratory now handed over. The British police requires several
months to find out what happened to the Skripals.
How
could the British government be sure of "Russian" involvement within
a week and even expel Russian diplomats when the primary chemical experts on
the issue will need three weeks for their first analyses and the British police
predicts a several months long investigation?
The
Russian scientist and their government have explained their history and
position in relation to 'Novichoks' and the Skripal incident. It is high time
now for the British government, its scientists at Porton Down and its greedy
mafia of former(?) British intelligence officer and their criminal Russian
emigres to come clean about their own roles in it.
---
Previous
Moon of Alabama reports on the Skripal case:
- March 8 - Poisioned
British-Russian Double-Agent Has Links To Clinton Campaign
- March 12 - Theresa
May's "45 Minutes" Moment
- March 14 - Are
'Novichok' Poisons Real? - May's Claims Fall Apart
- March 16 - The
British Government's 'Novichok' Drama Was Written By Whom?
- March 18 - NHS
Doctor: "No Patients Have Experienced Symptoms Of Nerve Agent
Poisoning In Salisbury"