あらすじ
Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 44. Chapters: Alexander Litvinenko assassination theories, All Russian Co-operative Society, Anglo-Russian Entente, Anglo-Russian War (1807-1812), Anglo-Soviet Trade Agreement, British campaign in the Baltic (1918-1919), British responses to the anti-Jewish pogroms in the Russian Empire, Embassy of the United Kingdom in Moscow, Imperial International Exhibition, Incident at Pristina airport, Mike Hancock (British politician), Mission of the Vixen, Panjdeh Incident, Poisoning of Alexander Litvinenko, Project Juno, Russians in Hong Kong, Russians in the United Kingdom, Russian Cultural Centre (London), The Great Game, Triple Entente, Zinoviev letter. Excerpt: Alexander Litvinenko was a former officer of the Russian Federal Security Service, FSB and KGB, who fled from court prosecution in Russia and received political asylum in the United Kingdom. According to his wife and father, he was working for MI6 and MI5 after receiving the asylum. Upon his arrival to London, he continued to support the Russian oligarch in exile, Boris Berezovsky, in his media campaign against the Russian government. In the UK, Litvinenko became a journalist for a Chechen separatist site, Chechenpress. Litvinenko wrote two books, Blowing up Russia: Terror from within and Lubyanka Criminal Group, where he accused the Russian secret services of staging Russian apartment bombings and other terrorism acts to bring Vladimir Putin to power. On 1 November 2006, Litvinenko suddenly fell ill and was hospitalized. He died three weeks later, becoming the first confirmed victim of lethal polonium-210-induced acute radiation syndrome. According to doctors, "Litvinenko's murder represents an ominous landmark: the beginning of an era of nuclear terrorism." Litvinenko's allegations about the misdeeds of the FSB and his public deathbed accusations that Russian president...