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The Litvinenko Inquiry

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Part 4 | Chapters 1 to 6 | Why would anyone wish to kill Alexander <strong>Litvinenko</strong>?<br />

confirmation of the alleged activity. If the government were forced to depart from<br />

the NCND principle in one case, it would create a clear risk of serious harm to<br />

essential UK national security interests. It could, furthermore, potentially put lives<br />

at risk.” 64<br />

Later in the opening statement, Mr Garnham quoted a passage from the judgment of<br />

Lord Carswell in the Scappaticci case: 65<br />

“To state that a person is an agent would be likely to place him in immediate<br />

danger from terrorist organisations. To deny that he is an agent may in some<br />

cases endanger another person who may be under suspicion from terrorists. Most<br />

significant, once the government confirms in the case of one person that he is not<br />

an agent, a refusal to comment in the case of another person would then give rise<br />

to an immediate suspicion that the latter was in fact an agent, so possibly placing<br />

his life in grave danger.<br />

… If the government were to deny in all cases that persons named were agents,<br />

the denials would become meaningless and would carry no weight. Moreover,<br />

if agents became uneasy about the risk to themselves being increased through<br />

the effect of government statements, their willingness to give information and the<br />

supply of intelligence vital to the war against terrorism could be gravely reduced.<br />

<strong>The</strong>re is in my judgment substantial force in these propositions and they form<br />

powerful reasons for maintaining the NCND policy.” 66<br />

Mr Garnham concluded the statement by emphasising the consequence of the NCND<br />

approach that the Home Secretary was taking:<br />

“All that, sir, has an immediate consequence in the circumstances of these open<br />

hearings. <strong>The</strong> failure of the government either to confirm or deny an assertion or<br />

a suggestion about events under consideration in this <strong>Inquiry</strong> tells you precisely<br />

nothing about the truth or otherwise of that assertion or suggestion. It means, sir,<br />

you must look elsewhere to determine the truth or falsity of such allegations.” 67<br />

4.66 So much for the question of what relationship Mr <strong>Litvinenko</strong> may actually<br />

have had with the agencies, and what his family and friends understood<br />

to be the position at the time. As I indicated above, for the purposes of this<br />

<strong>Inquiry</strong> it is at least as important, perhaps more important, to assess what Mr <strong>Litvinenko</strong>’s<br />

enemies thought he was doing. Did, for example, the FSB believe that Mr <strong>Litvinenko</strong><br />

was or may have been working with the UK intelligence agencies?<br />

4.67 <strong>The</strong>re is some evidence before me to suggest that that is precisely what the FSB<br />

believed. <strong>The</strong> source of that evidence is Mr Lugovoy.<br />

4.68 In public statements and interviews that post-dated Mr <strong>Litvinenko</strong>’s death, Mr Lugovoy<br />

stated firmly not only that Mr <strong>Litvinenko</strong> had told him that he was working with MI6, but<br />

that Mr <strong>Litvinenko</strong> had tried to recruit him as an MI6 agent. For example, at the press<br />

conference that Mr Lugovoy gave (with Mr Kovtun) in Moscow on 31 May 2007, he<br />

stated that, during meetings that he had held in London during 2006, Mr <strong>Litvinenko</strong><br />

had been involved in an attempt, “to try and recruit me openly as an agent for British<br />

Intelligence.” Mr Lugovoy went on to describe what it was that, as he understood it,<br />

64<br />

Garnham 1/172-173<br />

65<br />

(2003) NIQB 56<br />

66<br />

Garnham 1/174-175<br />

67<br />

Garnham 1/178-179<br />

65

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