Pale Fire and London Fog: Illuminating Outliers in the Death of
Alexander Litvinenko
by Chris Floyd
by Chris Floyd
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I. The Baron
and the Billionaire
Everyone
knows that Russian exile Alexander Litvinenko was killed by radiation
poisoning in London last month. But beyond that bare fact, almost
nothing is clear about the case. The truth has disappeared, probably
forever, into the shadowlands that murky confluence of crime,
violence, money and politics where so much of the real business
of the world is conducted. However, an examination of some of the
curiously overlooked aspects of the affair might send at least a
few shafts of light into the cloud of unknowing that has enveloped
Litvinenko's death.
Of course,
one of the chief obstacles in assessing the situation is the fact
that almost everything we knew about the case for weeks was spoonfed
to the media by the most elite PR operation in Britain. Almost from
the moment that Litvinenko fell ill, he disappeared behind a phalanx
of handlers paid for by his patron, Boris Berezovsky, the fugitive
Russian billionaire and shadowlands operator par excellence. To
handle and generate the publicity surrounding the
incident, Berezovsky called on his old friend, Baron
Bell of Belgravia, who, back when he was just plain old Tim
Bell, served as the private propaganda chief for Margaret Thatcher,
as Sourcewatch reports. The baron has also flacked for disgraced
media mogul Conrad Black, disgraceful media mogul Rupert Murdoch,
and the Coalition Provisional Authority, the mechanism set up by
the Bush Administration to eviscerate Iraq.
(Speaking of
the CPA, UK investigators now say they've found traces of Polonium
210, the radioactive isotope believed to have killed Litvinenko,
in the London offices of Erinys, a private security company. As
I noted in CounterPunch back in December 2003, Bush's CPA gave
Erinys' Iraqi branch formed as a joint venture with business
cronies and family members of bigtime shadowlander Ahmad Chalabi
$40 million to guard oil pipelines in the conquered land.
This has grown into a much larger stashn, not to mention an armed
force of 16,000 men something of a militia, one might say.
The freebooters also bagged big money riding shotgun for Halliburton
and Bechtel in those palmy CPA days of yore. And as the Guardian
reports, Erinys is also active in Russia. You pull at one string
in the shadowlands, and a whole tangled nest of other dark business
starts shaking somewhere else.)
The leaping
lord's PR shop has also represented Ukraine President Viktor Yushchenko,
another victim of a spectacularly ham-handed poisoning laid at the
Kremlin's door. Yet another client was former Russian President
Boris Yeltsin, whose "miraculous" 1996 election victory
in
the face of single-digit approval ratings was engineered
by a small group of oligarchs who were later given carte blanche
to plunder Russia's state-owned enterprises and vast natural resources
for private profit. The acknowledged leader of this clique
which had muscled its way to riches and power in the brutal, Hobbesian
free-for-all that characterized the Yeltsin years was of
course a certain Boris Berezovsky.
As one of the
prime vetters of political aspirants in the Yeltsin court, Berezovsky
was instrumental in bringing the obscure but presumably biddable
ex-KGB apparatchik Vladimir Putin to power. But Putin had a clique
of his own, based in the security organs and soon the oligarchs
found themselves out-muscled, on the receiving end of the state
machinery they had manipulated for so long. Most fled abroad, where
they'd stashed their billions; some were jailed. Berezovsky, charged
with embezzlement and money laundering, repaired to sumptuous digs
in London and environs, there to become Putin's most ferociously
outspoken critic. He also found new friends in high places
including Neil Bush, George W.'s scandal-ridden brother. Berezovsky
is one of the backers of Neil's "educational software"
company, which peddles a
dumbed-down "interactive teaching" system called COW
to public school systems loath to risk their federal funding by
rejecting a First Family boondoggle.
This then is
the team that controlled the flow of information during the three
agonizing weeks it took Litvinenko to die. They set out the basic
storyline that was followed, with scarcely a variation, by all the
leading UK papers and most of the world media. The Cold War had
come again, we were told: a bold dissident against the tyrannical
Putin regime had been assassinated in the streets of London by the
undead KGB, wielding strange poisons concocted in secret laboratories.
(All this while the latest James Bond movie was having its gala
premiere!) A carefully composed photograph of the martyr was released
by the baronial PR outfit, and quickly became the global emblem
of the case. This is what Putin has done, Litvinenko was said to
have said: see his evil handiwork with your own eyes.
The human tragedy
of the victim's painful deterioration was genuine: a man cut down
in his prime, leaving behind a grieving wife, an orphaned son, a
weeping father. As a PR move, it was even more effective: the disturbing
images, coupled with the drumbeat of accusations against Putin,
obscured several essential questions, such as: Who was Alexander
Litvinenko? Why would the Kremlin risk a rupture with the West by
killing him in such an open, garish fashion? And who was the obscure
"Italian academic" he met with at that fatal sushi bar
where, we were told, he probably ingested, somehow, the radioactive
hemlock?
II. Wheels
Within Wheels
In the press,
Litvinenko is invariably described as a "fierce critic of Putin"
or words to that effect, and as former officer in the FSB, one of
the post-Soviet successor agencies of the KGB. (Most of the media
stories skate over the fact that Litvinenko was also a military
counterintelligence officer in the old KGB as well.) He is said
to have fled Russia after refusing an alleged order to murder Berezovsky
who promptly took him in, provided him with a house in London,
and bankrolled Litvinenko's book, which accused Putin of staging
the 1999 Moscow apartment bombing that the Kremlin cited as justification
for its second savage war of destruction against Chechnya.
Litvinenko's
deathbed j'accuse against Putin again, released by
the Berezovsky phalanx was heard around the world, as we
all know. But this was the first time that Litvinenko's relentless
barrage of charges against Putin had ever attracted widespread attention
or an assumption of credibility. His previous book had sunk
without a trace; Berezovsky had in fact been shopping around for
someone to write another terrifying tome on the subject, once asking
Russian journalist Oleg Sultanov t o take it on and make it "as
scary as possible," as
The Scotsman reports. "Alex Goldfarb, Berezovsky's
closest ally [and one of the chief spokesmen during Litvinenko's
illness], admitted the Litvinenko books were a flop. So it [was]
urgently necessary to create some hot new reading material which
would prove that 'our cause is just' and Putin is the enemy of the
human race," Sultanov told the paper.
Over the years,
Litvinenko had charged, among many other things, that the Kremlin
had trained al-Qaeda's top leaders prior to 9/11; that Putin was
behind last year's subway bombings in London; that the FSB was responsible
for the 2002 Moscow theater massacre and the horrific 2004 slaughter
at the Beslan schoolhouse; and that Italian Prime Minister Romano
Prodi was a long-time KGB agent. This summer, when Putin was filmed
playfully smooching a small boy's belly, Litvinenko rushed out a
piece declaring that Putin was a paedophile a proven
fact that he and other FSB officials had known for years, he said,
although he didn't explain why he had refrained from revealing this
damning information before.
None of these
charges had been taken seriously, or even noticed in the media.
Almost no one had ever heard of Litvinenko before the poisoning.
Unlike
Anna Politkovskaya, the muckraking, anti-Putin journalist murdered
in Moscow in October, Litvinenko did not have an international reputation
based on years of solid, credible work in the field. He was an ex-KGB
agent who had fled one quadrant of the shadowlands in the Kremlin
for another quadrant under Berezovsky's roof. The fact that he had
accused Putin of involvement in every major crime of the 21st century
does not mean that he was necessarily wrong in this last, fatal
instance, of course. But awareness of that fact would have given
a different, more shaded context to the dramatic deathbed charges.
Yet Berezovsky and his baron skillfully kept such mitigating data
out of the public eye and the media were happy to seize on
the simple, more sellable tale of the dying champion of truth surrounded
by simple, loving friends.
They
were equally willing to ignore the curious connections of the last
man who supposedly met with Litvinenko before the onset of his disease:
Mario Scaramella (right), invariably described as an "Italian
academic" or "security expert" who had either given
Litvinenko documents revealing the Putin-backed murderers of Politkovskaya,
or else passed on the word from his contacts in Russian intelligence
that Litvinenko was marked for death, or in one account purportedly
by Litvinenko himself, produced some vague, non-urgent emails about
Politkovskaya then pointedly and nervously refused to eat sushi
with the Russian.
It was weeks
before the Mail on Sunday sussed out the fact that Scaramella
was in fact "a self-professed expert in nuclear materials"
especially loose nukestuff floating around the ex-Soviet
states who also had strong connections with both Russian
and Italian intelligence sources. The former tipped him off about
attempts to smuggle nuclear materials out of Russia and the east
to terrorist and criminal gangs; the latter allowed him to lead
an armed police raid to snatch some smugglers he'd fingered. What's
more, Scaramella had also gone commercial with his nuclear services,
founding a company that offered "environmental protection and
security" against various biohazards services that some
panicky Londoners might have paid good money for as Polonium scares
swept the capital after Litvinenko's death. Scaramella also claimed
academic associations with the universities of Stanford, Naples
and Greenwich none of which had any record of his working
for them.
The wheels
within wheels grind on. On that same portentous day of sushi, Litvinenko
also met three Russians in a bar, including yet another ex-KGB/FSB
man: Andrei Lugovi, who had once been arrested for assisting Berezovsky
ally Nikolai Glushkov in an alleged escape attempt from police custody,
"where he was being held on charges of embezzlement (to the
tune of $250 million) and massive fraud," as
Justin Raimondo notes in his exhaustive series on the case at Antiwar.com.
Lugovi was later released; Glushkov was tried and convicted on lesser
charges of financial chicanery related to the case and served three
years in prison. Last month, a Moscow court in Putin's iron-handed
tyrannical regime refused Kremlin requests to retry Glushkov on
the fraud charges, Novosti reports.
During his
FSB days, Lugovi also served as one of the bodyguards for Acting
Prime Minister Yegor Gaidar, during the latter's short but tumultuous
tenure guiding Russia's first post-Soviet government. Gaidar was
a "free-market" zealot and ardent Thatcherite who, under
the guidance of Harvard economist Jeffrey Sachs, applied a chainsaw
to Russia's social and economic infrastructure: "shock therapy,"
it was called, and it almost killed the patient. Millions lost their
jobs, were driven out into the streets to beg or sell off their
possessions, millions fell ill as the economy collapsed, multitudes
died, and Russia began its horrifying plunge in average lifespan
an unprecedented event for a developed nation.
Now Gaidar's
family claim that he too has been poisoned by some mysterious substance;
he became violently ill during a trip to Dublin last week. The Gaidar
illness, with its tenuous link to Lugovi, is yet another dark string
in the increasingly tangled skein. Gaidar, by the way, although
nominally in the political opposition, also works occasionally as
an economic consultant for the Putin government.
Lugovi meanwhile
has apparently become a successful private detective and "security
consultant" in Moscow. In recent days, Berezovsky has begun
hinting heavily that his former friend Lugovi has been restored
to the good graces of the Russian security organs and thus might
have had a hand in Litvinenko's poisoning. How else to explain his
booming business? "Anyone close to me can normally not even
find work in Moscow, let alone have a successful business,"
Berezovsky told the Moscow Times (again, noted by Raimondo). Yet
Berezovsky himself has maintained successful business interests
in Moscow throughout his bitter exile and denunciations of Putin.
He only sold his controlling interest in the top Russian newspaper,
Kommersant, earlier this year and not because he was forced
to sell by the media-controlling Kremlin tyrant, but evidently because
he wanted a quick cash infusion for other enterprises, the Independent
reports. (Maybe Neil Bush was about to bounce a check.)
All of this
adds up to
well, nothing much in particular. It's the usual
murky ooze you find whenever an incident like the Litvinenko case
turns over a rock in the shadowlands: strange connections, mixed
motives, bluffs and double-bluffs, half-truths, black ops, lurid
tales, chancers, bagmen, spies, tycoon, mercenaries, war, murder,
and money. It's clear that almost every single player in the Litvinenko
killing could have had access to the sophisticated technical means
necessary to deliver Polonium 210 as an edible poison. It's not
clear at all that any of them had a compelling reason to do so.
To be sure,
Putin is a ruthless operator on behalf of what he perceives as Russia's
national interests, which he tends to identify with the power and
privilege of his own elitist clique, as do all our world statesmen
none more so than his avowed soulmate, George W. Bush. And
like Bush, Putin has proven himself capable of wholesale slaughter
and pinpoint "extrajudicial killing" in the service of
those interests. Some of his critics have certainly ended up dead.
Some of his supporters have too. (And so have some of Berezovsky's
critics, such as the American journalist Paul Khlebnikov, whose
book, "Godfather
of the Kremlin" blackened Berezovsky's name around the
world far more successfully than Litvinenko's ignored, forgotten
tome ever did with Putin. Khlebnikov was gunned down, Godfather-style,
in Moscow in 2004.)
But it beggars
belief that a savvy operator like Putin would have countenanced
a plan to kill a small-fry critic in a such a spectacularly public
fashion, in the capital of a foreign country, with a slow-acting
radioactive isotope that guaranteed weeks of damaging headlines
and international outcry, putting at risk months of delicate negotiations
over Russia's expansion into the European energy market and other
lucrative deals. Someone who wanted to embarrass Putin, for whatever
reason, might have done it. (Matt
Taibbi has an excellent article with some of the more solid
speculations on this point.) Someone with motives entirely unconnected
to Russian politics might have done it. Rogue
elements of this or that faction or agency or government might
have done it. But it's clear from all the facts available that the
one person who would benefit least from the murder is the one who
has been most widely and confidently accused of ordering it: Putin.
And so the
question of who killed Alexander Litvinenko remains an impenetrable
mystery. But at least it has thrown a flickering light on the borders
of the shadowlands, a pale fire in which we can dimly perceive the
ugly machinations, the violence and deceit, the crime and corruption
that lie beneath the gilded images of the movers and shakers of
the world.
This is
an expanded version of an article written for Truthout.org.
December
2, 2006
Chris
Floyd [send him mail]
is the author of Empire
Burlesque: The Secret History of the Bush Regime.
Copyright
© 2006 Chris Floyd
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