CBS/AP/ February 11, 2009, 5:41 PM

Spy Mystery Growing Fast In London

As the London-based investigation into the death of a former Russian KGB agent snowballed Thursday, with traces of radiation now confirmed at a dozen sites and five jets being investigated for possible contamination, Russian doctors said a former Russian premier also had been poisoned.

The U.S. Federal Bureau of Investigation's experts in weapons of mass destruction will assist with some of the scientific analysis, FBI spokesman Richard Kolko said. Previously, the FBI had only been involved in informal consultations in the case, he said, adding there is no suspected link to the U.S.

In Moscow, meanwhile, doctors said they believed Yegor Gaidar, a former Russian leader and head of a liberal opposition party, may have been deliberately poisoned during a conference last week in Ireland, his spokesman Valery Natarov told The Associated Press.

Gaidar, 50, became violently ill and was rushed to a hospital in Ireland, but was improving in a Moscow hospital Thursday.

He became ill the day after Litvinenko died, but officials have not connected the two cases in any way.

Gaidar, who is a well respected politician and economist in Russia and has been called upon as an adviser to the current president, reportedly received a call in the hospital Friday from President Vladimir Putin, wishing him well.

A coroner in the U.K. formally opened an inquest into the poisoning of Alexander Litvinenko, who died on Nov. 23 after falling ill more than three weeks earlier. It was quickly adjourned so police could continue their investigation, but three pathologists were expected to participate in an autopsy Friday at Royal London Hospital.

Interactive: Radiation Exposure And The Human Body
High doses of polonium-210 — a rare radioactive element usually made in specialized nuclear facilities — were found in Litvinenko's body after his death. Investigators are now checking places visited by the former KGB agent and others who had contact with him in the weeks before he fell ill on Nov. 1.

Home Secretary John Reid told Parliament that "around 24 venues" have been or are being monitored as part of the investigation, and that experts had confirmed traces of radioactive contamination at "around 12 of these venues." He did not say whether the radioactivity found at the sites was polonium-210.

Reid told lawmakers that officials believed the risk to public health to be low. He said 1,700 calls had been made to the National Health Service, and 69 people were referred to the Health Protection Agency. Of those, 18 who may have been exposed to polonium-210 have been referred to specialist clinics, but all urine tests so far have been negative, he said.

Litvinenko also said before he died that a group of Russian contacts who met with him on Nov. 1 had traveled to London from Moscow, prompting the searches of planes.

Three British Airways planes — two at Heathrow Airport and one in Moscow — are being investigated, and Reid said that a Boeing 737, leased by the Russian airline Transaero, was also "of interest."

Besides that, "there is one other Russian plane that we know of that we think we may be interested in," Reid added. He did not elaborate, except to say that it is Russian.

He said early tests of two of the three British Airways planes showed low levels of a radioactive substance. The third BA plane remains on the ground in Moscow, and has not yet been tested. BA will make a decision whether to bring the plane back from Moscow, he said.

The Transaero jet arrived at Heathrow from Moscow on Thursday, and airline officials said no radioactivity was discovered aboard. "Local security did not find on Transaero planes any toxic substance," said Irena Borodulina, a spokeswoman for Transaero.

The Russian Transport Ministry announced increased radiation checks on international flights and at international airports across the country Thursday.

The three British planes were on the London-Moscow route, but also made stops in Barcelona, Frankfurt and Athens over a period of three weeks. Thousands of passengers aboard some 200 flights have been asked to report any symptoms of radiation poisoning.

It was not immediately clear whether the traces found onboard could have come from passengers who may have come into contact with Litvinenko, or whether a radioactive substance could have been smuggled on board. Authorities refused to specify whether the substance found was polonium-210.

Around 33,000 passengers and 3,000 crew and airport personnel had contact with the 221 flights on the three British planes, said airline spokeswoman Kate Gay. She said the government contacted the airline but would not say what aroused its suspicions.

British Airways has said that "the risk to public health is low," but it has published a list of the flights affected on its Web site and told customers on these flights to contact a special help-line set up by the Health Ministry.

The 43-year-old Litvinenko, a fierce Kremlin critic, had blamed Russian President Vladimir Putin for his poisoning from his deathbed. However, Britain has been careful not to blame the Kremlin for his death, despite criticism of Putin's increasing authoritarianism since the poisoning — even within Prime Minister Tony Blair's Cabinet.

The Russian government has denied any involvement in Litvinenko's death.

Gaidar returned from Ireland to Moscow for treatment earlier this week and was in stable condition on Thursday, said his spokesman, Natarov.

Natarov told the AP that doctors were unable to "detect any natural substance known to them" in Gaidar's body, leading them to believe he may have been poisoned. However, they have not been able to determine what caused specifically his illness and have asked medical experts in Ireland for more information on his condition immediately after he became sick.

Colm Keane, spokesman for National University of Ireland at Maynooth, where the conference was held, said Wednesday that medics initially suspected Gaidar's diabetes or some sort of ailment caused his illness.

A spokesman for the Irish Department of Foreign Affairs, speaking on customary condition of anonymity, said "we have received no evidence of anything untoward about this. He was certainly well enough to travel back home."

Gaidar, an economist, is best known for as the architect of the sweeping free-market reforms that were instituted in the early years of former President Boris Yeltsin's administration. He is one of the leaders of the liberal opposition party Union of Right Forces and heads a think-tank called the Institute for the Economy in Transition.

Maria Gaidar, his daughter, is a well-known liberal youth activist and vociferous Kremlin critic.
© 2009 CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
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inarguable says:
RADIOB - Yeah, i read your post right the first time, sorry if i didnt make it clear about the mole thing...i realize you weren't talking about Litvinenko being the mole. Last night i was in bed wondering about your theory actually, and it will be interesting to see whether or not we EVER truly find out just how the Polonium-210 was administered. This is one of those things that may come out 15 years from now during some other SPY GAMES situation. Either way, i have a feeling Putin will face some repercussions from this, but it may bode well for the USA with the Iran sanctions situation, (just thinking outside the box here) because Putin may be more willing to play ball now to try to draw attention away from the Litvinenko debacle.

NCOLSENS - you can bet your bottom dollar that the dramatized movie script is already being written by someone. This is one of those situations where if you were to read this story in a fictional Le Carre novel or something a month ago, one would probably say "Nah, that is too far-fetched to be plausible!" Life most certainly is stranger than fiction, isn't it?
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usawatchman says:
inarguable

you Apology accepted , a real gentleman after all..
got to run be back latter
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says:
I wonder when the book/movie will come out?
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radiob-2009 says:
inarguable It is early and know i have to apologize for misreading your last post.No coffee in me yet.
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radiob-2009 says:
inarguable I was not suggesting that Litvinenko was a mole ,I was referring to some of his associates.A quote from my post "it is highly likely that one or more of the people that Litvinenko was in contact with was working both sides of the aisle and brought about his dismise.In hence a mole/double agent that may have even been his friend,to whose loyalties is not determinable".I understand that you are tired and probaly overlooked this part of the post.
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says:
I just saw a movie called The PeaceMaker (fiction), in which USAwatchman described his satellite system, now I know why he calls himself USAwatchman, watching too much televsion
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inarguable says:
As for your theory regarding Litvinenko's demise, i have to say that i do agree with you about the mole possibilty. What is interesting to me though is the timing of the assassination. I mean, Litvinenko has already published two books that shredded the Putin Administration and the FSB, and it seems like the hit came about 5 years too late, as he already has spilled plenty of the beans. I know Litvinenko has become a whistle-blower of sorts however since, and was still digging up dirt on Putin and other Russian powerbrokers in the government and intel community, so it makes me wonder what he had either discovered, or was on the verge of discovering that forced the hand of the Russians to decide to shut him down permanently. It appears that Litvinenko is not the only poisoning victim now, making it a distinct possibilty that the upper-echelon Russian apparatichki is being forced to react to protect something from coming out that could be seriously detrimental to the Putin regime. Enemies of the Russian State being targeted in this manner with Polonium-210, a ultra-rare assassination tool, is rather perplexing really, and was sure to draw serious attention when used on foreign soil. The FSB are usually cleaner than that, but getting close to Litvinenko was a major problem, and because of that i think your theory of someone playing both sides of the fence is one that should be heavily investigated. Watching how this whole incident unravels will be VERY interesting indeed.
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inarguable says:
RADIOB - I am not Air Force, but am actually a terrorism analyst for a global NGO think-tank (I am Canadian). It took me awhile to answer your query about Philby because i was stuck in internet phone call with a co-worker who is in Egypt right now working. I myself just got back from 6 months in the Middle East actually, and my field of expertise is primarily in dealing with the militant Islamic terror realm. I know i was being a *** with Watchman, but i had a rough day today, and just get sick and tired of people who spout absolutist, concrete opinions about subject matter they clearly do not understand or are TOTALLY incorrect on. I deal with it every day in my line of work, and it just irks me when people like Watchman make statements about something they dont know ANYTHING about and can't back up with an ounce of evidence in order to try to look informed, and when i get in one of those moods, i call them on it vehemently. I am firm believer that if you are gonna make an absolutist statement about anything and tell people how it is, then you better be able to back up what you say with facts to show you actually have that foundational base of knowledge, and i noticed Watchman was getting yippy in his earlier posts, so i decided to go off on him. I realize that aint an excuse, and i will tone it down...like i said, it was a rough day though....LOL
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radiob-2009 says:
One last thing I must clear up before people start assuming, 31 years ago I worked in intel while in the Navy.I have not since nor will I ever again.It is not my cup of tea.
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radiob-2009 says:
inarguable You obviously either work for the Air Force or one of the companies that build the equipment.The equipment you speak of is designed for defense purposes.MATRIX MRDS Mobile Radiation Detection System is designed for the detection of radiation, the Geo-Synchronous DSP was designed to alert of incoming missile's and was used in the first Gulf War.This leads me to beleive that you are in the Air Force or was in the Air Force in a intelligence position.That all though is usefull intelligence is not the type of intel that is used in tracking individuals, that has many factors involved.The fact that you never responded to my question regarding Kim Philby also suggsest that your specialization is more military intel orientated.As far as USAWatchman goes or anyone else for that matter civility backed with facts usually work better than insults.Back to my original question in regards to Mr.Philby it is highly likely that one or more of the people that Litvinenko was in contact with was working both sides of the aisle and brought about his dismise.In hence a mole/double agent that may have even been his friend,to whose loyalties is not determinable.Do you concur?
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