Tuesday, December 05, 2006

Litvinenko: Fake out

I have some new ideas on Litvinenko affair -- a mystery which, arguably, fascinates blog writers more than it interests blog readers. I would advise you to give this matter respectful attention, not least because the poisoning may cause a large segment of the public to take seriously Litvinenko's more off-the-wall allegations, such as his charge that Russian intelligence controls both Al Qaeda and the Italian Prime Minister. Not to mention the KGB-shot-the-Pope thing, which still pisses me off.

Beyond that, the controversy reveals that some people want a new cold war with Russia. A serious business, that.

From Joseph's notebook (imagine a crummy black binder picked up for 69 cents at a thrift store in the east San Fernando Valley):

Julia Svetlichnaja
is studying political science at the University of Westminster in London. She contacted Litvinenko in an attempt to reach an exiled Chechen leader named Akhmed Zakayev, who lived next door to the poisoned Russian spy. Although she never did get a chance to talk to the reclusive Chechen, Litvinenko drew the student into his own murky world.

In an ill-considered moment, he blurted out his audacious scheme to blackmail the Russian oligarchs. He wasn't the first guy to get blabby while trying to impress a young lady.

This Guardian story by Svetlichnaja has attracted much attention, but few have given it a sufficiently close reading. Here are some important excerpts (with emphasis added by me):
We first met beside the statue of Eros in Piccadilly Circus. Wearing dark glasses and leather jacket, Alexander Litvinenko appeared unexpectedly behind my back, saying: 'I was watching you from around the corner. You are not a spy, are you?' I suggested coffee in the nearby Caffe Nero, the first of our often chaotic, erratic conversations we would share from last April until his death.
And:
Ultimately, however, I almost regretted giving my email to Litvinenko. From our first meeting he started to feed me information with such gusto that in the weeks before his death I had started deleting most of his messages without opening them.
And:
After two hours of traipsing around the park, I suggested we sit down somewhere. 'Professionals never sit and talk, they walk and walk around so nobody can overhear their conversation,' he muttered darkly.
And:
It was very late when he drove me to the station. He stopped at the traffic lights and, indicating right, suddenly turned left into a dark alley. We drove round and round the crescent before stopping.

'Demonstration. I was famous for getting rid of the "tail". All you have to do is to indicate and then turn the other way,' he explained.
The lesson I draw from these words is simple enough. Litvinenko was bullshitting. None of this was real spy stuff; he was going out of his way to make a young woman feel as though she had entered a James Bond movie.

"You are not a spy, are you?" Oh, for crying out loud. What real spook would ever say such a silly thing? This sounds like the sort of line Bill Paxton might have tried on Jamie Lee Curtis in True Lies.

First Litvinenko insisted on walking around Hyde Park in a frenetic attempt to avoid electronic eavesdroppers. Then he barraged her with emails, hardly the most secure means of transmission, giving her more material than she knew how to handle. She wasn't even particularly interested in most of it.

Obviously, he didn't care about confidentiality. He was trying to entice a naive young thing, trying to create an exciting atmosphere of intrigue and danger. Lights, camera, action!

I doubt that any Gene Hackman-esque eavesdropper took an interest in their chats, and I seriously doubt that anyone tailed the car. (I mean, why? They didn't go anywhere important.) At any rate, that dramatic method of evasion won't work: Try the experiment for yourself, with a friend following your car. In most real-life situations, the tailee tries very hard not to alert the tail-er that he's been made.

So why the hell did Litvinenko engage in this ludicrous display of faux tradecraft? He was setting the scene, engaging in theatricals: You've entered the exciting world of espionage, young lady. Beware; there are enemies everywhere. My foes are a measure of how important I am. Stick with me, and I will guide you toward some of the world's deepest secrets...

I've seen this exact same tactic at work in previous situations. The target is usually female. Sorry for the sexism, but that's the way these guys think. The "you've entered a spy movie" gambit is a great way of conning the ingenuous into writing whatever horseplop you want to make public.

The motive? I cannot say for certain at this time, although that email cache may contain clues. We know that Boris Berezovsky wanted to recruit a new writer to spread anti-Putin conspiracy stories. The neocons (allies of the oligarchs) always welcome fresh talent, preferably someone who has tumbled out of the turnip truck and seems willing to accept fibs at face value. Litvinenko's own books had gone over like the proverbial lead balloon, gaining an interested readership only after his death. Svetlichnaja might have proven more sucessful at reaching the public.

(I'll have further excerpts from that notebook later...)

5 comments:

Anonymous said...

"In fact Litvinenko wasn't even a "spy." His background was instead in what are called "convoy troops" -- a rather lowly division of the Ministry of Interior concerned with guarding the rail cargo, transportation of prisoners and such. In the early 90's he was transferred to another division within the same ministry, this time dealing with organized crime. In 1994 in Moscow there was an attempted assassination of Boris Berezovsky -- his car was blown up. Berezovsky himself was slightly injured, while his driver was killed (his head was torn off by the explosion), and his bodyguard was badly crippled.

Litvinenko was among the first police officers who came to the scene and this is how he became acquainted with Berezovsky. Soon they became much closer. And with that fortunate meeting, Litvinenko's career accelerated. After a while he found himself as the head of the organized crime unit which served as a sort of liaison between the Ministry of Interior and the FSB -- hence the often repeated, yet wrong claim in the Western media that Litvinenko was a "spy" and an "FSB agent." Many of his colleagues considered him instead to be one of Berezovsky's agents within the security services.

Anonymous said...

not to make too much of the random odd coincidence, but then again....

guess who presented the intelligence report to reagan regarding the notion that the soviets were behind the assassination attempt on the pope?

none other than... robert gates.

http://fairuse.100webcustomers.com/fuj/latimes110.htm

Anonymous said...

Disinformation abounds nowadays. Is Svetlichnaya telling the truth? Why is there so much American MSM attention to this, when all the other assassinations around the world have gone virtually unreported? How does this relate to the current middle east problems? Are we involved in developing the Cold War again by spotlighting Putin as the bad guy? I get confused.

Anonymous said...

http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20061205/ts_nm/britain_poisoning_russia_dc_11

"Lugovoy met Litvinenko in London on November 1, the day the former spy fell ill. Radiation was found at London's Millennium Hotel, where the two men met, and minute traces of polonium 210 were found at the stadium of London soccer club Arsenal.

Lugovoy watched CSKA Moscow play Arsenal in a European Champions League game on November 1 before he met Litvinenko.

Litvinenko died in hospital on November 23."

An earlier british news report suggested that the police had been able to follow the trail of alpha radiation and suggested that the police believed the killers had attended the CSK Moscow - Arsenal game.

http://www.exile.ru/2006-December-01/litvinenko_a_very_public_execution.html

"In my book "Limonov Versus Putin" I wrote that Gluskov was arrested for one purpose: that in exchange for closing the "Aeroflot Affair" Putin's people obtained the shares for the television corporation ORT.

The Russian state, like a crude gangster, took a hostage, namely Glushkov, and bargained with Beresovski, who was main shareholder of ORT. Glushkov refused to testify against Beresovski. The "Aeroflot Affair" almost collapsed. The Chief Investigations Department of FSB is located building to building with Lefortovo prison. One of the doors of Lefortovo prison's 3rd floor opened up to the Chief Investigations Department, when investigators, "Chekists," understood that Glushkov was not scared and he will not give up Beresovski. So they organized a provocation. They organized an "escape" of Glushkov. They permitted Glushkov to spend one night at his apartment in Moscow, making him believe that anyway he will be released soon.


But on the following night when Glushkov supposed to go again to his apartment, accompanied by few Lefortovo officers and his own bodyguard Andrei Lugovoi, Glushkov was accused of attempting to "escape." Lefortovo officers as well as Lugovoi were arrested. They spent less than a year at Lefortovo prison, and then they relocated. As you see, Lugovoi was already involved in very dubious, suspicious provocation. One of my co-accused comrades from among National-Bolshewiks, Sergei Aksionov, have been held in same cell with Glushkov, so I know the story."

This may not help much but my guess is that Lugovoi conducted the hit. On behalf of who?

Anonymous said...

there was a mentioning in the blogs somewhere that litvinenko did not have a british driver's license - so he could not have driven this girl around like she describes...