Bryan MacDonald
RTThu, 01 Oct 2020 10:44 UTC
© Anadolu Agency via Getty Images/ Sefa KaracanAlexei Navalny
Western intelligence agencies - in particular, agents from the American CIA - are working with Russian opposition figure Alexey Navalny, Vladimir Putin's spokesman Dmitry Peskov alleged on Thursday:
"Probably, it is not the patient [Navalny] who works for the Western special services, but that the Western intelligence services who work with him - this would be more correct [to say]. I can even be specific: these days, specialists from the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) of the United States of America are working with him.
"This isn't the first time he's been given different instructions. The instructions given to the patient are obvious. We have seen such patterns of behavior on more than one occasion."
The bombshell allegation comes just hours after Navalny claimed Putin was behind his alleged poisoning in August. He told Germany's
Der Spiegel magazine that he had "no other explanation for what happened."
Peskov took umbrage at the activist's comments alleging Putin's involvement in the incident, dismissing them as "baseless" and "insulting." He told reporters
"we believe that such accusations against the Russian president are absolutely unfounded and unacceptable."German officials alleged, last month, that Navalny had been targeted with a nerve agent from the 'Novichok' family.
"We want to investigate the case of the Berlin patient [Navalny] and establish the cause of what happened," Peskov explained, expressing doubt about the veracity of the German analysis.
"For this, we need to get information from those who found traces of poisoning."The Kremlin has previously complained that Berlin has been uncooperative in providing evidence that the Moscow protest leader had indeed been attacked with Novichok.
Peskov also commented on Navalny's intention to return to Russia, as expressed to
Der Spiegel, observing that he saw no heroism in his declaration.
"Any citizen of Russia can return to his homeland at any time. Treatment can take place in our country, in fact, almost all people avail of this. Lives are saved in our country, and the life of this patient was also saved in Russia."
This refers to when Navalny had initially been hospitalized in Siberia.
Alexei Navalny was in a coma from August 20 to September 7, after falling ill during a flight to Moscow from Tomsk. First, he was hospitalized in Omsk, after an emergency landing, before being transported to Berlin's Charité clinic days later. After making a speedy recovery (taking into account the alleged lethality of Novichok), the anti-corruption activist was discharged last week.
Comment: Navalny fingers the Kremlin for his poisoning. If it were true, they wouldn't have used Novichok and he wouldn't be around to say so.
"I assert that Putin was behind the crime, and I have no other explanation for what happened," he told the magazine. Navalny added that, despite the apparent attempt on his life, he wants to return to Russia.
"My job now is to remain the guy who isn't afraid. And I'm not afraid! When my hands shake, it's not from fear - it's from this stuff (the poison). I would not give Putin the gift of not returning to Russia."
Throughout the opposition figure's recovery, the Kremlin has issued various statements wishing him well. In Russia, a pre-investigation check is underway into the possible poisoning, but a criminal case has not yet been initiated. Authorities have pointed out that Navalny's team moved some key evidence to Germany and insist that Berlin has not been cooperative in providing results from toxicology tests.
Navalny expressed his "tremendous gratitude to all Germans," saying that the country's politicians and Chancellor Angela Merkel saved his life. Der Spiegel did not mention the first responders in Siberia in the extract published on Thursday morning.
"I know it sounds a bit over the top, but Germany has become a special country for me," Navalny said. Referring to his private meeting with Merkel, at the Charité clinic, he said: "I was impressed by the detail she knows about Russia and my case."
UPDATE 1/10/2020
Navalny to sue Peskov over CIA allegation:
Navalny fired back on his blog:
"This is a direct allegation from a government official. Therefore, first of all, I am taking legal action against Peskov. And secondly, I demand that the proof and facts that suggest I am 'working with specialists from the CIA' are published. Put it straight on television, in prime time. You have my permission."
In the same press call on Thursday when Peskov linked the anti-corruption campaigner to the CIA, he responded to Navalny's interview by saying:
"We believe that such accusations against the Russian president are absolutely unfounded and unacceptable, and furthermore, we find a host of these statements completely offensive and inexcusable."
As tensions mounted, members of Russia's State Duma continued to throw their weight behind Peskov. According to its website, speaker Vyacheslav Volodin called Alexey Navalny a collaborator of Western intelligence agencies:
"Navalny is a shameless person and a skunk. Putin saved his life. If what happened to him had been orchestrated by the intelligence services of Western countries, then his statement fits perfectly into the scheme of things. Everyone genuinely worked to save him - from the pilots and doctors to the president. And only an ingrate could make such statements."
The head of the legal team at Alexey Navalny's Anti-Corruption Foundation, Vyacheslav Gimadi, confirmed that the lawsuit would be addressed to Dmitry Peskov's home address, and would fall under the jurisdiction of the Presnensky district court in Moscow.
Comment: Navalny fingers the Kremlin for his poisoning. If it were true, they wouldn't have used Novichok and he wouldn't be around to say so. UPDATE 1/10/2020 Navalny to sue Peskov over CIA allegation: