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The head of MI6 says Russia broke one of the primary rules of espionage, and won’t be trusted again

  • The head of MI6 said Russia broke one of the primary rules of espionage by trying to assassinate double agent Sergei Skripal after he moved to Britain as part of a spy swap.
  • Alex Younger said the UK trusted the pardon Russia gave to Skripal, but after the attack on him — which the UK blamed on Russia's GRU — all bets are off.
  • Spy swaps date back to the Cold War and rely on two nations trusting each other.
  • Younger warned Russia not to underestimate the UK and said the two nations are now in a "perpetual state of confrontation."
The head of MI6 said Russia broke one of the primary rules of espionage and won't be trusted again after it tried to assassinate a former Russian agent despite giving him away in a spy swap.

Alex Younger said British spies had to revise their assumptions about Moscow after Skripal was attacked with a deadly nerve agent, in an operation which Britain has pinned on Russia's GRU spy agency.

Younger is the Chief of the Secret Intelligence Service, more commonly known as MI6, and gave a speech to students at St. Andrews University in Scotland, which was reported by the Financial Times.

In the speech, Younger said the UK had partly trusted Russian President Vladimir Putin when Russia pardoned Skripal in 2010 in return for its own agents.

Younger said he and his agents assumed that Moscow's spy swap "had meaning" and would be honored, but he said they revised their opinion in light of the Skripal attack.

He said, according to the Financial Times: "Mr. Skripal came to the UK in an American-brokered exchange, having been pardoned by the president of Russia and, to the extent we assumed that had meaning, that is not an assumption that we will make again."

Skripal was part of an ambitious spy-swap deal with the US in 2010, when four Russian agents who had betrayed their country were released by the Kremlin in exchange for 10 Russian spies in the US.

The UK accused Russia of being behind the attack on Skripal in March 2018, a charge the Kremlin denies.

Novichok, the nerve agent used in the poisoning, has been traced to Russia, and the two men accused by the UK of attempting to assassinate Skripal have been identified by investigative journalism site Bellingcat as GRU officers.

Spy swaps
Spy swaps are understandings between the West and Russia that date back to the of the Cold War.

Jonathan Eyal, international director at think-tank the Royal United Services Institute (RUSI), told Business Insider in March that the safety of the spies is typically put at the forefront of the exchange.

"Spying agencies try to maintain a gentleman's agreement that these people are beyond retribution," he said.

The goal is typically to have them go smoothly so more spy swaps can be done in the future.

Professor Anthony Glees, the director of the Centre for Security and Intelligence Studies at the University of Buckingham, told Business Insider that the Russians take spy swaps "very seriously" because of the concern that "no one will ever do a swap with them again" if they break faith.

He said if Russia had really wanted to kill Skripal, the country could have executed him in prison.

So Russia would have needed to believe it had a good reason to attempt to assassinate Skripal on UK soil.

"The idea that they would do it for fun or anything less serious is to be discounted," Eyal said.

A state of confrontation
Speaking on Monday, Younger said Russia was in a "perpetual state of confrontation" with the UK and warned the Kremlin not to underestimate the UK's determination to fight attempts to interfere with its way of life.

"The conclusion [Russia has] arrived at is they should apply their capabilities across the whole spectrum to ... our institutions and our partnerships," Younger said.

"Our intention is for the Russian state to conclude that whatever benefits it thinks it is accruing from this activity, they are not worth the risk."
Espionage has no rules, period
 
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tell that to the ghost of Alexander Litvinenko

the last time I checked Pakistanis migrate to settle in UK not to Russia. that tells who you trust and who you don't
From where Alexander Litvinenko has jumped into the subject? You are a true specimen of the dictum "if you cant solve the issue then confuse the issue". Your distraction wont work here so might as well stick to the subject.

nobody assassinated Edward Snowden. that is the difference.
You killed 1200000 innocent Iraqis by concocting false evidence in CIA labs and your liar General Collin Powell showed fake Anthrax vial at UN National Assembly by lieing in front of the whole world and you have the cheeks to blame other ?

powell bumperstickers.jpg

How can the world ever forget this ?

DVL8k80X0AAT_Dz.jpg


during the cold war there were rules. CIA and KGB never assassinated each other agents
Before you say this you have to prove it was an assassination

"Russia broke one of the primary rules of espionage"
LOOOOOOZZZZZ! Every country should add this one to their rules: "If some lower than pig traitor ran off to another country, Specially to England, And started betraying his own country for some money, We're not only to leave him alone to have his long happy life, But we're to send him a bag of flowers every week, Otherwise the British c*nts won't trust us again!"

Also the Satan himself speaks more truth than these Brits, British c*nts didn't provide any proof that Russians did it, And even if they did, They did him good! Hats off to the Russians, May the traitors of the world and this British c*nt burn in fire, Amen!

And also, The Yankees have absolutely no rights to have a saying on this subject when they themselves are trying to assassinate a hero like Edward Snowden, That would be hypocrisy at it's highest level.
UK is the internationa hiding place of criminals. Some of Pakistan's biggest criminals and murderers are sitting in london. Altaf Hussain is just one example who is wanted for thousands of murders back home.
 

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What could be a greater proof of British being theives of the world than the fact that Koh-e-noor a stolen diamond is part of crown jewels of Queen of England, what a shame, what a disgrace !!!!!!
Country of origin India
Mine of origin Kollur Mine
Cut by Levie Benjamin Voorzanger
Owner Queen Elizabeth II in right of the Crown
The Koh-i-Noor (/ˌkoʊɪˈnʊər/;[8] Persian: کوهِ نور‎), also spelt Kohinoor and Koh-i-Nur, is one of the largest cut diamonds in the world, weighing 105.6 carats (21.12 g),[a] and part of the British Crown Jewels.

The diamond was originally owned by the Kakatiya dynasty.[9] Probably mined in Golconda, India, there is no record of its original weight, but the earliest well-attested weight is 186 old carats (191 metric carats or 38.2 g). Koh-i-Noor is Persian for "Mountain of Light"; it has been known by this name since the 18th century. It changed hands between various factions in modern-day India, Pakistan, Iran, and Afghanistan, until being ceded to Queen Victoria after the British conquest of the Punjab in 1849.

Say that to these people. Oops, You cant! Yankees wiped them off the face of the earth.
012_3_0058_jpeg_1f8af856-c967-4862-9822-bdb45c920ff5.jpg
Desmond Tutu once said, " When the missionaries came to Africa, they had the Bible and we had the land. They said “let us close our eyes and pray.” When we opened them, we had the Bible, and they had the land."
 
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From where Alexander Litvinenko has jumped into the subject? You are a true specimen of the dictum "if you cant solve the issue then confuse the issue". Your distraction wont work here so might as well stick to the subject.

It is relevant. It shows Russian attempts under Putin to assassinate in the past.

During the cold war the KGB and CIA never killed each other agents. If you have evidence to the contrary present it otherwise kindly shut up.

UK is the internationa hiding place of criminals. Some of Pakistan's biggest criminals and murderers are sitting in london. Altaf Hussain is just one example who is wanted for thousands of murders back home.

I am sure if you show the evidence as accepted by international court of law the British will expel him. Every Pakistani crook has ties to the Pakistani establishment at one time or the other

What could be a greater proof of British being theives of the world than the fact that Koh-e-noor a stolen diamond is part of crown jewels of Queen of England, what a shame, what a disgrace !!!!!!
Country of origin India
Mine of origin Kollur Mine
Cut by Levie Benjamin Voorzanger
Owner Queen Elizabeth II in right of the Crown
The Koh-i-Noor (/ˌkoʊɪˈnʊər/;[8] Persian: کوهِ نور‎), also spelt Kohinoor and Koh-i-Nur, is one of the largest cut diamonds in the world, weighing 105.6 carats (21.12 g),[a] and part of the British Crown Jewels.

the british looted india. it has been 71 years since the british left. quit whining

Espionage has no rules, period

during the cold war there were rules. there is a good reason it is called "cold" war
 
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  • The head of MI6 said Russia broke one of the primary rules of espionage by trying to assassinate double agent Sergei Skripal after he moved to Britain as part of a spy swap.
  • Alex Younger said the UK trusted the pardon Russia gave to Skripal, but after the attack on him — which the UK blamed on Russia's GRU — all bets are off.
  • Spy swaps date back to the Cold War and rely on two nations trusting each other.
  • Younger warned Russia not to underestimate the UK and said the two nations are now in a "perpetual state of confrontation."
The head of MI6 said Russia broke one of the primary rules of espionage and won't be trusted again after it tried to assassinate a former Russian agent despite giving him away in a spy swap.

Alex Younger said British spies had to revise their assumptions about Moscow after Skripal was attacked with a deadly nerve agent, in an operation which Britain has pinned on Russia's GRU spy agency.

Younger is the Chief of the Secret Intelligence Service, more commonly known as MI6, and gave a speech to students at St. Andrews University in Scotland, which was reported by the Financial Times.

In the speech, Younger said the UK had partly trusted Russian President Vladimir Putin when Russia pardoned Skripal in 2010 in return for its own agents.

Younger said he and his agents assumed that Moscow's spy swap "had meaning" and would be honored, but he said they revised their opinion in light of the Skripal attack.

He said, according to the Financial Times: "Mr. Skripal came to the UK in an American-brokered exchange, having been pardoned by the president of Russia and, to the extent we assumed that had meaning, that is not an assumption that we will make again."

Skripal was part of an ambitious spy-swap deal with the US in 2010, when four Russian agents who had betrayed their country were released by the Kremlin in exchange for 10 Russian spies in the US.

The UK accused Russia of being behind the attack on Skripal in March 2018, a charge the Kremlin denies.

Novichok, the nerve agent used in the poisoning, has been traced to Russia, and the two men accused by the UK of attempting to assassinate Skripal have been identified by investigative journalism site Bellingcat as GRU officers.

Spy swaps
Spy swaps are understandings between the West and Russia that date back to the of the Cold War.

Jonathan Eyal, international director at think-tank the Royal United Services Institute (RUSI), told Business Insider in March that the safety of the spies is typically put at the forefront of the exchange.

"Spying agencies try to maintain a gentleman's agreement that these people are beyond retribution," he said.

The goal is typically to have them go smoothly so more spy swaps can be done in the future.

Professor Anthony Glees, the director of the Centre for Security and Intelligence Studies at the University of Buckingham, told Business Insider that the Russians take spy swaps "very seriously" because of the concern that "no one will ever do a swap with them again" if they break faith.

He said if Russia had really wanted to kill Skripal, the country could have executed him in prison.

So Russia would have needed to believe it had a good reason to attempt to assassinate Skripal on UK soil.

"The idea that they would do it for fun or anything less serious is to be discounted," Eyal said.

A state of confrontation
Speaking on Monday, Younger said Russia was in a "perpetual state of confrontation" with the UK and warned the Kremlin not to underestimate the UK's determination to fight attempts to interfere with its way of life.

"The conclusion [Russia has] arrived at is they should apply their capabilities across the whole spectrum to ... our institutions and our partnerships," Younger said.

"Our intention is for the Russian state to conclude that whatever benefits it thinks it is accruing from this activity, they are not worth the risk."
First Russian ambassador gets killed in Turkey. Then Russian involvement in this case.
Some people are trying their level best to trigger WW3. Its all game, and Brits should appreciate that fact.
 
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tell that to the ghost of Alexander Litvinenko

the last time I checked Pakistanis migrate to settle in UK not to Russia. that tells who you trust and who you don't

Pakistanis settle to the UK because they colonized us and looted our wealth and transferred it to the U.K. They owe us every single penny for the genocide and atrocities they carried out. I am sure you must be able to relate to this, as once you were also their colony. :lol:
 
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IF MI6 decides to hit Russia the way Russians have been doing all over Europe they would come to their senses.

Pakistanis settle to the UK because they colonized us and looted our wealth and transferred it to the U.K. They owe us every single penny for the genocide and atrocities they carried out. I am sure you must be able to relate to this, as once you were also their colony. :lol:

That is a very wrong mindset, are you saying current generation of White Brits are responsible for their ancestors's crimes?
 
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IF MI6 decides to hit Russia the way Russians have been doing all over Europe they would come to their senses.



That is a very wrong mindset, are you saying current generation of White Brits are responsible for their ancestors's crimes?

The Brits owe you nothing
 
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IF MI6 decides to hit Russia the way Russians have been doing all over Europe they would come to their senses.



That is a very wrong mindset, are you saying current generation of White Brits are responsible for their ancestors's crimes?

Nope, just the fact that they should compensate us for they did to us and our land for nearly 2 centuries. Moreover, they should give more visas/citizenship to Pakistanis as a token of compensation for our looted wealth.
 
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Nope, just the fact that they should compensate us for they did to us and our land for nearly 2 centuries. Moreover, they should give more visas/citizenship to Pakistanis as a token of compensation for our looted wealth.

it has been 70 years since they left you
 
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it has been 70 years since they left you
Is that a justification for all the atrocities they committed ?

If there is any proof that West was involved in killing of Russian diplomats Russia would gladly put it out
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Assassination_of_Andrei_Karlov

the assailant was Turkish policeman.
You are right West is all angels, East are all devils as per your myopic vision. How can east forget what you did to Nagasaki and Hiroshima ? USA and UK is Allah's wrath upon the world.
 
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if you are still poor after 70 years maybe the brits weren't your problem ?
You always change the topic rather than answering my question. Its a clear proof you have no logic left. BTW ethic and morality is more important than being poor or rich, which you obviously lack.
 
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