Strange, and hard to believe (though Litvinenko had some sympathy for the Chechen rebels, which is one of the reasons he got under Putin's skin -- so maybe some semblance of plausibility).
At any rate, still absolutely no reason to whack a British citizen on British soil, using highly radioactive substances. Nothing to do with the Rosenbergs, either. Stop grasping at straws, JJ -- and remember the saying about what to do when in a hole.
BTW, I think that, at a bare minimum, the Brits should round up a bunch of ham-handed Russkies and declare them persona non-grata (if diplomats) or simply put them in gaeol (otherwise). Back to the clarity of the halcyon days of the Cold War?
Gibes somewhat with what Troitsky is saying. Perhaps it's a combination of motives: whack the guy who broke the omertà code, and leave a horse's head on Berezovsky's pillow.
5 comments:
Strange, and hard to believe (though Litvinenko had some sympathy for the Chechen rebels, which is one of the reasons he got under Putin's skin -- so maybe some semblance of plausibility).
At any rate, still absolutely no reason to whack a British citizen on British soil, using highly radioactive substances. Nothing to do with the Rosenbergs, either. Stop grasping at straws, JJ -- and remember the saying about what to do when in a hole.
What do you claim I am saying? Sounds like you've forgotten your pill.
BTW, I think that, at a bare minimum, the Brits should round up a bunch of ham-handed Russkies and declare them persona non-grata (if diplomats) or simply put them in gaeol (otherwise). Back to the clarity of the halcyon days of the Cold War?
New theory.
Gibes somewhat with what Troitsky is saying. Perhaps it's a combination of motives: whack the guy who broke the omertà code, and leave a horse's head on Berezovsky's pillow.
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