Was the notorious Chinese intelligence service interested in assassinating former KGB-FSB spy, Alexander Litvinenko?
If so, perhaps only for money. Warsaw-Poland:The case of Alexander Litvinenko is probably not the first of its kind. A former KGB and FSB covert agent, specially sent to Britain to kill a Russian billionaire and Putin’s opponent, Boris Berezovsky, did not carry out his secret mission and defected six years ago. Just a month ago, he became a British subject. Protected by MI5 and the Police, he became known as a fervent opponent of President Vladimir Putin and of his KGB-derived establishment, presently ruling over Russia. A price for granting him political asylum in Britain must have been his voluntarily sharing of FSB secrets with the British counter-intelligence and intelligence services. Just enough to be rewarded by a death-sentence in Russia, according to a new bill passed in 2006 and allowing the Russian secret services to execute their “traitors” abroad. Oleg Gordievski, a former KGB “station-chief” in Britain, who defected in 1985, and a well-known critic of the Soviet’s and Rus