Russia Probing Alleged U.K. Espionage
Security Service Investigation Result Of Claims By Suspect In Litvinenko Case
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Play CBS Video Video Spy Poisoning Plot Thickens Only On The Web: Andrei Lugovoi, an ex-KGB agent accused of poisoning Alexander Litvinenko, says he has proof of British interest in Litvinenko's death. Elizabeth Palmer reports.
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Video Poisoned Spy Charges Six months after the death of former Russian spy Alexander Litvinenko, British authorities are ready to file murder charges against another ex-KGB agent. Richard Roth reports.
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Russian businessman Andrei Lugovoi gestures entering Interfax news agency for a news conference in Moscow, Thursday, May 31, 2007. (AP Photo/Alexander Zemlianichenko)
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Former Russian spy Alexander Litvinenko appears in a May 10, 2002 file photo at left, and at right, former KGB officer Andrei Lugovoi, now charged by British authorities with Litvinenko's murder, seen in November 2006. (AP)
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Andrei Lugovoi, a former KGB officer, speaks to the media in Moscow, in this Friday, Nov. 24, 2006 file photo. (AP Photo/Alexander Zemlianichenko)
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Alexander Litvinenko in 2002. (AP)
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Interactive Mystery Of The Poisoned Spy A former KGB agent gets a fatal dose, and traces of the poison keep turning up.
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Fast Facts Russia Learn about the people, economy and history.
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Fast Facts United Kingdom Learn about the people, economy and history.
The suspect, Andrei Lugovoi, claimed last month that both Litvinenko and his patron, Kremlin critic Boris Berezovsky, had contacts with British intelligence and that Berezovsky had given Britain sensitive information about Russia.
The announcement came against the background of persistent friction between Russia and the West, and repeated Russian claims that British and other Western intelligence agencies — as well as Russians who have found refuge abroad — are seeking to weaken Russia.
The Federal Security Service did not say who was suspected of spying on Russia, but its one-sentence statement said the criminal investigation was based on Lugovoi's statements.
Lugovoi has said Litvinenko and Berezovsky, both Kremlin opponents, had contacts with the British spy agency M16 and that Berezovsky had given British intelligence sensitive information about Russia. He said he had evidence but only would provide it to Russian investigators.
Britain and Berezovsky have denied the allegations, dismissed by Kremlin critics as an effort to distract attention from Moscow. Lugovoi, also a former KGB agent, is Britain's chief suspect in the poisoning case.
Lugovoi denies he killed Litvinenko, a Berezovsky ally who died Nov. 23 in a London hospital after ingesting radioactive polonium-210. In a deathbed statement, he accused Russian President Vladimir Putin of being behind his killing. A former KGB agent, he had alleged the FSB was behind deadly 1999 bombings that stoked support for a new Kremlin war against Chechen rebels.
Lugovoi and business associate Dmitry Kovtun met with Litvinenko on Nov. 1, the day he said he fell ill. Radiation traces were found at several locations connected with the men, including the hotel bar where they met Litvinenko.
Litvinenko's killing damaged Putin's image in the West, already tarnished by accusations of democratic backsliding and concerns over the Kremlin's treatment of critics. Kremlin allies have sought to counter that by suggesting the killing was masterminded by enemies of Russia to discredit the country and its leadership.
The new espionage case could further strain relations between London and Moscow, which is angry over Britain's refusal to hand over Berezovsky and other foes of Putin for prosecution in Russia.
Russia has long sought Berezovsky's extradition on charges of economic crimes. Britain granted the billionaire political asylum in 2003 after he had a falling out with Putin.
Both Kovtun and Lugovoi were questioned in the presence of British investigators in Moscow in December, and British authorities last month requested Lugovoi's extradition, saying they had sufficient evidence to charge him. Putin refused, calling the request "stupidity." He cited a constitutional prohibition on the extradition of Russian citizens.
Russian prosecutors have said Lugovoi could be tried in Russia if Britain provides enough evidence to warrant a charge, but Lugovoi is under no restrictions and has appeared on a handful of television news and talk shows.
Lugovoi declined to comment Friday on the FSB statement, but told ITAR-Tass that he was cooperating with Russian authorities, "including in questions of providing for the security of our state."
© MMVII, 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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nJULY 21 2007 IS WHEN AMERICANS WILL BE FREE AGAIN
EVERYONE THAT WANTS TO HELP WITH THIS SHOULD BE TALKING TO ALL MEDIA OUTLETS AND TELLING THEM THAT AMERICANS ARE READY TO TAKE WASHINGTON ON AND ITS NOT A FEW AMERICANS ITMILLIONS OF AMERICANS THAT WILL TAKE BACK THERE COUNTRY..
I AM WILLING TO GIVE MY BLOOD FOR ALL AMERICANS TO GET OUR COUNTRY BACK TO WHAT OUR FORFATHERS WANTED.
AM A VET AND AM READY TO TAKE CHARGE OF THIS AMERICAN BOYCOT/COOP IF WE THE PEOPLE DONT DO THIS NOW WE WILL BE GIVENING UP ON OUR CONSTITUTION AND WHAT ALL OUR VET HAVE DIED FOR..
DAVID A BELANGER,VET US ARMY,for-america@hotmail.com
ok so wants to join in on this great american REVOLUTION
they cant kill millions of americans at once so if we charge them all at once we will win and take them out and hang them all..
just like in the old days of the west...hang them from the trees in front of the whitehouse and see how many start telling the truth about what they have done to all us americans..
its time to take all this *** and take our government back now..
they are the ones that started this and we will finnish it now..we the people will take our country back and everyone in washington can sit there and thinks we the people are ok with what they are doing..go ahead and let them think that we are comming to take them out - Reply to this comment




