Steve LeVine covers foreign affairs for BusinessWeek. He previously was correspondent for Central Asia and the Caucasus for The Wall Street Journal and The New York Times for 11 years. His first book, The Oil and the Glory, a history of the former Soviet Union through the lens of oil, was published in October 2007. Putin’s Labyrinth, his new book, profiles Russia through the lives and deaths of six Russians. It was released this week.

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A Blog on Russia, Central Asia and
the Caucasus

Wednesday, January 16, 2008

Brits Go Home

The latest in the fracas between the U.K. and Russia would be amusing were its origin not so serious. Here it is in a nutshell: Russia, angry that Britain won't let bygones be bygones in the London poisoning murder of Russian defector Alexander Litvinenko, has sent a message to that effect by closing down Britain's cultural arm in cities outside Moscow. Britain, angry that Russia presumes to have control over its own territory, says these British Council offices will remain open. As one might expect, we now have a farce involving the St. Petersburg police, the son of a lord (yes this country still calls grown men "lord") and fears of "provocative games."

This all goes back to Litvinenko's assassination in November 2006 by a rare nuclear isotope called polonium-210. Britain rapidly tracked back the polonium to Moscow, and specifically to two former Russian intelligence officers who, for reasons unproven as yet in a courtroom, apparently had this alpha-emitting isotope all over their clothes, and left traces in Hamburg and London. Britain has filed murder charges against one of them, a recently elected member of the Russian Duma named Andrei Lugovoi. Vladimir Putin has chosen to treat the case similar to a traffic violation, and argue (innaccurately) that he's constitutionally barred from extraditing Lugovoi. Britain says rightly that the case is anything but run-of-the-mill, and that Putin should send Lugovoi to Britain post-haste.

Meanwhile, Britain has expelled some Russian diplomats, and Russia has ordered the British Council offices in St. Petersburg and Yekaterinburg closed. For reasons known only to God, Gordon Brown and perhaps the Queen, Britain has rejected Russia's right to close these offices, and left its staff there. So yesterday you had the spectacle of Putin upping the stakes by having the FSB (successor to the KGB) summoning some Russian employees of the British Council for questioning, and detaining the head of the St. Petersburg office, Stephen Kinnock (whose father is Lord Neil Kinnock, a British politician), for an hour on an alleged traffic violation. In the case of the FSB questioning, the intelligence agency said it was acting to prevent them being from used by Britain as an "instrument in provocative games" by Britain, according to the Bloomberg account.

I'm sympathetic with the U.K.'s case. You are right to pursue the Litvinenko murder. But you don't have a leg to stand on in this latest turn. In the world of diplomacy, you have to pack up those offices.

Photo: Laertes
Rights: Creative Commons

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