Was Russian Spy Poisoned To Avert Brexit?
15
March, 2018
Submitted
by Nauman Sadiq,
In
July 2003, Dr. David Kelly, a British weapons inspector who disclosed
to the media that Tony Blair’s government’s dossier on Iraq’s
weapons of mass destruction was “sexed up,” was
found dead in a public park a mile away from his home.
The inquiry
into his death concluded Kelly had committed suicide by slitting his
left wrist but
the mystery surrounding his death has remained unresolved to date,
though the
obvious beneficiary of his propitious “suicide” was the British
intelligence itself.
More
recently, Sergei
Skripal, a Russian double agent working for the British foreign
intelligence service, and his daughter Yulia were found
unconscious on
a public bench outside a shopping center in Salisbury on March 4.
Eight
days later, another Russian exile Nikolai Glushkov was found dead in
his London home and
the cause of his death has not been ascertained yet.
In
the case of Skripal, Theresa May
promptly accused Kremlin of attempted assassination.
There
are a couple of caveats, however.
Firstly, though Skripal was a double agent working for MI6, he was released in a spy swap deal in 2010. Had he been a person of importance, Kremlin would not have released him and let him settle in the UK in the first place.
Secondly, British government has concluded that Skripal and his daughter were poisoned with a Moscow-made, military-grade nerve agent, novichok.
A
question naturally arises - why
would Kremlin leave a smoking gun evidence behind that would lead
prosecutors straight to Moscow when their assassins could have used a
gun or a knife to accomplish the task?
Leaving
mainstream media’s conspiracy theories aside, these
assassination attempts should be viewed in the wider backdrop of the
Brexit debate.
Both
NATO and European Union were conceived during the Cold War to offset
the influence of former Soviet Union in Europe. It is not a
coincidence that the Soviet Union was dissolved in December 1991 and
the Maastricht Treaty that consolidated the European Community and
laid the foundations of the European Union was signed in February
1992.
The
basic purpose of the EU has been nothing more than to lure the
formerly communist states of the Eastern and Central Europe into the
folds of the Western capitalist bloc by
offering incentives and inducements, particularly in the form of
agreements to abolish internal border checks between the EU member
states, thus allowing the free movement of labor from the
impoverished Eastern Europe to the prosperous countries of the
Western Europe.
Reportedly,
79,000 US troops have currently been deployed in Europe out of
275,000 total US troops stationed all over the world, including
47,000 in Germany, 15,000 in Italy and 8,000 in the UK. By
comparison, the number of US troops stationed in Afghanistan is only
15,000 which is regarded as an occupied country. Thus,
Europe is nothing more than a client of corporate America.
No
wonder then the Western political establishments, and particularly
the deep states of the US and EU, are as freaked out about the
outcome of Brexit as
they were during the Ukrainian Crisis in November 2013 when Viktor
Yanukovych suspended the preparations for the implementation of an
association agreement with the European Union and tried to take
Ukraine back into the folds of the Russian sphere of influence by
accepting billions of dollars of loan package offered by Vladimir
Putin.
In
this regard, the founding of the EU has been similar to the case of
Japan and South Korea in the Far East where 45,000 and 28,500 US
troops have currently been deployed, respectively. After the Second
World War, when Japan was about to fall in the hands of
geographically-adjacent Soviet Union, the Truman administration
authorized the use of nuclear weapons on Hiroshima and Nagasaki to
subjugate Japan and also to send a signal to the leaders of the
Soviet Union, which had not developed their nuclear program at the
time, to desist from encroaching upon Japan in the east and West
Germany in Europe.
Then, during
the Cold War, American entrepreneurs invested heavily in the
economies of Japan and South Korea and made them model industrialized
nations to forestall the expansion of communism in the Far East.
Similarly, after
the Second World War, Washington embarked on the Marshall Plan to
rebuild Western Europe with an economic assistance of $13 billion,
equivalent to hundreds of billions of dollars in the current dollar
value. Since
then, Washington has maintained its military and economic dominance
over Western Europe.
There
is an essential stipulation in the European Union’s charter of
union, according to which the developing economies of Europe that
joined the EU allowed free movement of goods (free trade) only on the
reciprocal condition that the developed countries would allow free
movement of labor. What’s obvious in this stipulation is the fact
that the free movement of goods, services and capital only benefits
the countries that have a strong manufacturing base, and the free
movement of people only favors the developing economies where labor
is cheap.
Now,
when the international financial institutions, like the IMF and WTO,
promote free trade by exhorting the developing countries all over the
world to reduce tariffs and subsidies without the reciprocal free
movement of labor, whose interests do such institutions try to
protect? Obviously,
they try to protect the interests of their biggest donors by shares,
the developed economies.
Regardless, while
joining the EU, Britain compromised on the rights of its working
class in order to protect the interests of its bankers and
industrialists, because free trade with the rest of the EU countries
spurred British exports. The
British working classes overwhelmingly voted in the favor of Brexit
because after Britain’s entry into the EU and when the agreements
on abolishing internal border checks between the EU member states
became effective, the cheaper labor force from the Eastern and
Central Europe flooded the markets of Western Europe, and
consequently the wages of native British workers dropped and it also
became difficult for them to find jobs, because foreigners were
willing to do the same job for lesser pays, hence raising the level
of unemployment among the British workers and consequent
discontentment with the EU.
The
subsequent lifting of restrictions on the Romanians and Bulgarians to
work in the European Union in January 2014 further exacerbated the
problem, and consequently the majority of the British electorate
voted in a June 2016 referendum to opt out of the EU. The biggest
incentive for the British working class to vote for Brexit is that
the East European workers will have to leave Britain after its exit
from the EU, and the jobs will once again become available with
better wages to the native British workforce.
The
developed economies of the Western Europe would never have acceded to
the condition of free movement of labor that goes against their
economic interests; but the political establishment of the US, which
is the hub of corporate power and wields enormous influence in the
Western capitalist bloc, persuaded the unwilling states of the
Western Europe to yield to the condition against their national
interests in order to wean away the formerly communist states of the
Eastern and Central Europe from the Russian influence.
Thus,
all the grandstanding and moral posturing of unity and equality
aside, the hopelessly neoliberal institution, the EU, in effect, is
nothing more than the civilian counterpart of the Western military
alliance against the erstwhile Soviet Union,
the NATO, that employs a much more subtle and insidious tactic of
economic warfare to win over political allies and to isolate the
adversaries that dare to sidestep from the global trade and economic
policy as laid down by the Western capitalist bloc.
It
would be pertinent to mention that though Theresa May’s
Conservatives-led government is in favor of Brexit, the
neoliberal British deep state and European establishments led by
France and Germany are fiercely opposed to Britain’s exit from the
EU. They
could have hired any rogue agent for the attempted assassinations on
the Russian exiles that draws suspicions toward Kremlin.
Since
the referendum, the British deep state and European establishments
have created numerous hurdles in the way of Brexit. The
First Minister of Scotland Nicola Sturgeon is demanding more
autonomy and control over Scotland’s vast oil and gas reserves and
a debate is raging on over a “soft border” between Northern
Ireland and the Republic of Ireland which will remain in EU
post-Brexit. Instead of a smooth transition to an independent state,
Britain is more likely to disintegrate in its effort to leave the EU.
Finally,
a New Cold War has begun. 25
out of 28 EU member states have recently signed an enhanced security
cooperation agreement known as the Permanent Structured Cooperation
(PESCO) whose aim is to structurally integrate the armed forces of EU
members. Britain along with Denmark and Malta are being left out. The
main objective of the recent assassination attempts on the Russian
exiles is to intimidate the Conservatives-led government that Britain
will be left to fend for itself post-Brexit.
* * *
Nauman
Sadiq is an Islamabad-based attorney, columnist and geopolitical
analyst focused on the politics of Af-Pak and Middle East regions,
neocolonialism and petro-imperialism.
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