British parliamentary reports don't often make global headlines, but that is exactly what happened with a report released Thursday that looked into the 2006 death of a former Russian secret agent in London.
The
Owen Report -- named for Sir Robert Owen, the senior British judge
conducting the investigation -- provides details on how rare radioactive
polonium-210 came to be found in Alexander Litvinenko's body, and the
series of events that led to the death of the former agent, who
specialized in tackling organized crime.
According to CNN, The
report was much anticipated in the United Kingdom, where a lawyer for
the Litvinenko family described his murder as "an act of nuclear
terrorism on the streets of a major city that put the lives of numerous
members of the public at risk." And, as expected, the report highlights
the links between Litvinenko and the Russian government, even pointing
the finger at President Vladimir Putin himself as likely having approved
the alleged murder.
But
as important as the findings are in terms of trying to establish how
someone may have died on British soil as the result of radioactive
poisoning, the report does not explicitly address a broader, troubling
development -- the increase in the use of Chemical, Biological,
Radiological and Nuclear (CBRN) material as tools of war, terrorist
tactics and even assassinations.
The
use of CBRN weapons is certainly nothing new in the history of warfare.
Large-scale use of gas killed an estimated 1.3 million in World War I,
while the nuclear attacks in World War II were used with devastating
effect against Japan. And the use of poisons in assassination attempts
dates back to the Renaissance and ancient Rome.
By one accounting,
there were 13 CBRN attacks during the 15-year period from 2000-2015,
and that does not count the Litvinenko case and other recent suspected
assassination attempts. Meanwhile, the total for the other materials
over the last 15 years is more than double the six that occurred during
the 15-year period from 1985 to 2000, with eight of the 13 more recent
attacks occurring in the last five years.
As
a result, the modern day use of chemical material -- from battlefield
weapons to toxic industrial chemicals -- by states and terrorists has
killed or injured thousands since the dawn of the new millennium.
Indeed, the use of chemical weapons by the Bashar al-Assad government in
Syria alone is reported to have killed or injured thousands since 2013.
And in 2002, the Russian government used an unidentified gas to subdue
Chechen terrorists during the siege of a Moscow theater, in which more
than 600 were injured or killed.
The
poisoning of Litvinenko is not the only example of this. In 2004,
Viktor Yushchenko was campaigning for the Ukrainian presidency when he
became seriously ill
due to what was later found to be dioxin in his system. And U.S.
officials may not be immune to the threat. In her memoir, Laura Bush
detailed suspicions that several members of their delegation,
including President George W. Bush, were poisoned during the G8 Summit
in Germany in 2007. While the Secret Service investigated the incident,
no definitive conclusion could be reached.
Slipping
radioactive material into a spy's tea in the middle of London may not
sound like a CBRN attack, but it is, as the Owen report has confirmed.
Hopefully, the report's release will help focus global attention on the
growing threat posed by these potentially devastating weapons.
Source: CNN




0 Comment to "TROUBLING TRUTH: PUTIN PROBABLY ORDERED ALEXANDER LITVINENKO'S DEATH!"
Post a Comment