lol. (yeah, sue me, sometimes I have a 12 year old’s sense of humor, although it’s usually closer to a Russian’s.)
Anyway, I can’t see how this is anything other than “snitches get stitches” writ large. America did after all execute people for spying for the Soviet Union, in living memory…an execution that they deserved, in my opinion. They knew what the deal was going in. All spies do. It’s a risk they accept.
Also, it seems to me that, in addition to making it clear that it was the Russian state that was doing a punitive killing, the use of things like polonium and nerve agents as killing methods was chosen in order to inflict maximum cruelty. Litvinenko took three weeks to die as his body shut down.
In 2012, his wife also died under mysterious circumstances.
That, and watching your loved ones die off. And also knowing that your turn will likely come one day, some day. Whether it’s by polonium-210, or something else. Every day is fear.
That thought occurred to me yesterday. I was going to post it as wild speculation, but I didn’t have enough information to speculate what leverage the Russian government might have that would induce her to assassinate her father.
Since she is also afflicted and is quite likely to die a horrible death, I think it unlikely that she would have done it deliberately. It’s possible that maybe she brought something over, like a gift or something for her father, that was laced with nerve agent without her knowledge.
She could be a ‘suicide bomber’. Leverage might be ‘You will kill your father and yourself, or your children will be executed.’ But there is no evidence for that, and I agree it is quite unlikely she was the perpetrator. But a thought must be thought before it can be rejected.
Totally avoidable collateral damage, though, if they’d chosen a more precise method of killing.
The Litvinenko killers were apparently very careless in their handling of the polonium, leaving a trail of contamination at various locations, and they were themselves both treated for mild radiation poisoning.
A strange new development - experts in hazmat suits set up tents over the graves of the Russian spy’s wife and son at at the city’s cemetery. Police have denied that any exhumations have taken place, so perhaps they detected nerve agent contamination there - it seems a place that the Russian spy and his daughter might have visited that afternoon.
Two hundred members of the armed forces now in Salisbury to assist police with investigations.
Are you guys stoned or just busting chops? I still don’t understand what the hell you mean. It’s ok, I don’t mean any ill intent towards anyone, I’m not trying to justify Russia’s obviously-negligent, sloppy, barbaric attempt at the poisoning, it’s clearly not the most diplomatic way to execute a spy. It’s fucked up that other people in the area got poisoned. That should never be a part of it. But spies deserve to fucking die, no matter who you are, no matter who your group is, if you have any sense of allegiance or honor, you’ll want to see spies punished. I guess killing them is actually maybe not as good as letting them live, in captivity, for the purposes of gathering information - and not that they should be tortured or treated inhumanely - but it’s in any country’s best interest to eliminate spies.
There is no way in hell that the British government is not doing EXACTLY the same thing right now in countries all over the world. They’re just more discreet about it…way more discreet. James Bond is a parody of the ideal, the reality is more like Keyser Soze…the proverbial “gray man” revered by military special operators and intelligence officials.
I think you seriously need to read more about the real life history of Ian Fleming and what he achieved. He was writing from actual experience. Exaggerated and played mostly for comedy, and with fanciful settings and plot contrivances, but still.