Maybe I'm too skeptical, but this seems a bit too obvious to me. Why would you try to poison someone with no real threat to you and risk him becoming a martyr, using a method that immediately brings you to mind, with a nerve agent that is also strongly linked to you?
ardy42|5 years ago
Russia assassinates even unimportant people for revenge and intimidation. For instance: they hired assassins to kill a bunch of nobodies in Ukraine in 2016 because they'd helped supply Georgia with Ukraine-made antiaircraft weapons that had been used against Russia when they invaded in 2008.
https://www.nytimes.com/2019/03/31/world/europe/russian-assa...:
> Russia Ordered a Killing That Made No Sense. Then the Assassin Started Talking.
> ...The war lasted only five days and ended with a crushing victory for Moscow. But in many ways, the conflict was an embarrassment for Russia’s intelligence services. Years earlier, Ukraine had secretly sold sophisticated antiaircraft systems to Georgia, allowing for the effective defense that I had seen....
> For Mr. Putin — who has described Russians and Ukrainians as “one people” — it was an act of bloody treachery.
> “We don’t know who decided to deliver equipment and weapons from Ukraine during the conflict, but whoever it was, that person made a huge mistake,” Mr. Putin said at a news conference shortly after the war.
drran|5 years ago
gruez|5 years ago
austinjp|5 years ago
https://www.google.com/search?q=alexander+litvinenko
unknown|5 years ago
[deleted]
mc32|5 years ago
This method lets people know what tools they are willing to use on an adversary. And it’s also a signature “we did it” so you don’t have to guess who’s after you. It serves as a warning to any upstarts as well.
It’s not all that different from the Ndraghetta bombings up and down Italy in the late XX cent.
andai|5 years ago
acephal|5 years ago
agent008t|5 years ago
We haven't seen any of that. Your version of events seems highly unlikely.
hexfaker|5 years ago
There is at least "Smart vote" (aka умное голосование) initiative, that helped to beat government on some regional elections earlier.
Oh, and it's big election day in less than two weeks, so there is definetely a motivation for poisoning.
occamrazor|5 years ago
Paradigma11|5 years ago
Sometimes you get steak and sometimes you get chocolate.
auganov|5 years ago
Not fair to call it a "false flag" though as there's no obvious "flag" attached to this event. It's not like anybody has claimed the attack. There's a whole world of possibilities beyond "Putin ordered it" and "false flag". But whoever did it, it does seem like Kremlin is covering for them so at least partially morally responsible.
sam_lowry_|5 years ago
aphextron|5 years ago
They want everyone to know they did it. That's Putin's MO. Everyone knows he did it, and he knows everyone knows he did it. But there's still enough plausible deniability that it would be hard to conclusively prove. And ultimately he has his finger on the world's largest arsenal of nuclear ICBMs, so he knows there's absolutely nothing anyone can do about it. It's the same as the mafia leaving a severed horse head in your bed. It sends a message.
JoeAltmaier|5 years ago
tanyatik|5 years ago
drran|5 years ago
sschueller|5 years ago
And no, I am not a Russian troll nor do I have any connections to Russia. Check my comment history. I am just sceptical that one would do this and not just shot someone they wanted to get rid of them.
Is Putin really that stupid or was it someone else?
BrianOnHN|5 years ago
The uncertainty you're trying to sow is in no way reasonable.
In other words, just apply occam's razor to the problem https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Occam%27s_razor
krick|5 years ago
But I cannot imagine why would anyone do that to Navalny. First of (and this is very much arguable, but I'm just saying what is my opinion), I don't think he is any threat to Putin&friends. He has some supporters, but "opposition leader" is waay too generous, he isn't even treated very seriously by people who are against Putin, much less by Putin. So, some mundane harassment like police raids to his office... sure, why not? But assassinating him very publicly like that, when he wasn't even "in the news" (figuratively speaking) for some time? I have no idea, why would "the government" want it. He isn't anything new, he has no real power. And unlike Litvinenko or Skripal he isn't ex-GRU/FSB, so he isn't a "traitor" to any "interesting" agencies. Basically, I don't see why would his "enemies" (i.e. Putin&friends) even care about him.
mikeyouse|5 years ago
His constantly embarrassing exposes where he demonstrates how much money they've fleeced from the Russian people don't count? e.g.:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rE1iw4seYt0&list=PLuBu40P6jU...
Or his videos demonstrating widespread voting fraud that's keeping "Putin and Friends" in power?
toxik|5 years ago
Putin & co. is the simplest explanation. Why question it? Who else would stand to gain from this? Because they do gain from it: intimidating the opposition is the name of the game in a dictatorship.