правдивая западная пресса продолжает писать
правдивые статьи о смелом разведчике.....
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/17332541/
In London, Alexander, his wife, and their son were taken under the wing of a Russian tycoon who set them up with a modest home in the suburbs and supported Alexander’s freelance writing career. Marina, a ballroom dance
£500,000 house, скромнее просто некуда.
McGrory: The police said, “We interviewed him for three hours” if you ask them how much they got out of that three hours - maybe 5-10 minutes of useful information. He needed to rest, he couldn’t speak for long.
да, нигуста.
It was a testament to his excellent physical shape that this freelance writer survived so long, or else his story might have died with him—the secret of his poisoning taken to his grave.
what secret?
Alexander Litvinenko grew up in a small town in the south of the Soviet Union. He was such an accomplished soldier he was called to enlist in the KGB. In the 1980s, he built his reputation as a counter intelligence-officer investigating fraud and busting groups considered anti-Soviet.
anti-Soviet groups ... вот веть
At the news conference, while his comrades tried to mask their identities, Alexander did not.
Curry: How exposed did he make himself?
Joyal: I thought that the man was out of his mind—being so bold in doing something like this in Moscow to expose himself to—
Curry: Death.
Joyal: Death.
но по непонятным причинам крававая гебня решила
подождать семь лет ...
Soon after that bold move, Alexander was discharged from the FSB and jailed for nine months. But after her husband was released from jail, says his wife Marina, the FSB made death threats that were all too real.
... посадить в тюрьму, выпустить, и снова death threat,
теперь уже for real.
Curry: You’re saying there were warnings that not only was his life in danger, but—
Marina Litvinenko: Exactly.
Curry: --your life was in danger?
Marina Litvinenko: Exactly.
Curry: And your son’s life was in danger?
Litvinenko: Exactly.
-And your uncle's life was in danger?
-Exactly!
-And your grandmather's life was in danger?
-Exactly!
...
etc, etc, etc.....
On a Russian Special Forces firing range, Alexander’s face became the target. And he was worried that others were taking aim at him.
польские товарищи тут помогли немного,
но кто об этом помнит теперь?
But just after 3 p.m., when he came to this sushi restaurant, the polonium trail suddenly lit up. There is where Litvinenko had lunch with a well-connected Italian contact.
??? hello?
Lugovoi, via a translator: He put me in contact with serious companies with good reputations around the world. He was the middle man and was interested in picking up a big commission…
BS
But there were reportedly no traces discovered at the table where he and Litvinenko had lunch. So Scaramella was dismissed as a suspect.
Mario Scaramella: Absolutely not. He was a friend.
case dismissed!
As for a motive, Berezovsky said there was no bad blood between him and Litvinenko. What’s more, they were allies against the Kremlin, and Berezovsky apparently had no reason to have Litvinenko murdered.
no bad blood? case dismissed!
In fact, Lugovoi and his partner didn’t try to leave London after Litvinenko was rushed to the hospital; they say they contacted British authorities when they heard he was poisoned; and they say they too are victims of polonium contamination and had to be treated at a Moscow hospital.
контрольный выстрел?
We deeply regret that Dan McGrory sadly passed away in February. And in another (much more) mysterious incident, four days after our story first aired, another interviewee, Paul Joyal, was shot just outside his home in Maryland. The crime remains unsolved.
and shit goes on, and on.........