MY KOLKATA EDUGRAPH
ADVERTISEMENT
Regular-article-logo Sunday, 06 July 2025

Skripal suspects not criminals: Putin

Russia President's statement an abrupt shift from Moscow's earlier stand on poisoning

Andrew Higgins Published 12.09.18, 06:30 PM
 President Vladimir Putin

Moscow: President Vladimir V. Putin of Russia said on Wednesday that his country had found the two Russians that Britain accuses of trying to use a rare nerve agent to kill a former Soviet spy, and identified them as civilians who had done nothing criminal.

He also said he would like the men, who Britain says are Russian military intelligence officers, to come forward to tell their story.

Putin's statement, made at the Eastern Economic Forum in Vladivostok, Russia, was far from an admission of Russia's involvement in the poisoning of Sergei V. Skripal and his daughter Julia in Salisbury, England, on March 4. But it does amount to an abrupt shift from Russia's previous position that it had no idea who the two suspects named by Britain were, and that they may have been invented to blacken Russia's name.

"We of course checked who these people are. We know who they are, we found them," Putin said at the economic forum. "They are civilians, of course."

He said that he would like the two to come forward. "It would be better for everyone," he said "I can assure you that there is nothing special, nothing criminal there. We will see very soon."

Putin's remarks, clearly intended to project candor and transparency, suggested that the Kremlin had decided to recalibrate its response to a poisoning case that has roiled relations between Moscow and the West. In another effort to present a less snarling face to the outside world, Putin also said on Wednesday that Russia and Japan should finally sign a treaty this year to formally end hostilities from World War II. Decades of diplomatic efforts to accomplish that goal have foundered as a result of a dispute over islands that both countries claim. The territory, which Russia calls the southern Kurile Islands and Japan calls the Northern Territories, were seized by the Soviet Union at the end of the war.

Alexander Petrov (left) and Ruslan Boshirov

Putin, who has a talent for shifting rapidly between proud belligerence and butter-wouldn't-melt-in his-mouth reasonableness, was speaking just a week after the release by the British authorities of detailed forensic evidence relating to the Salisbury poisoning that pointed to involvement by Russia, or at least by two men who arrived in London from Moscow on Russian passports two days before the Skripals were poisoned.

The evidence included claims that British investigators had found traces of the nerve agent used in Salisbury in a London hotel room used by the two suspects, who traveled under the names Alexander Petrov and Ruslan Boshirov.

Britain says the names are probably aliases but nonetheless charged the pair with the attempted murder of Skripal and his daughter, as well as a police officer who fell ill while investigating the case.

Prime Minister Theresa May told Parliament that British intelligence agencies had concluded that the men were "officers of the Russian military intelligence service also known as the GRU."

The plot to kill Skripal, himself a former officer in the GRU, "was not a rogue operation" .

New York Times News Service

Follow us on:
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT