
Litvinenko and Scaramella were a match made in heaven.
Mario, the consummate
conman, meets Sasha, dirt-peddler
de-luxe.
If only they had known, as they sat down for lunch at a London sushi nosherie,
that their meeting would launch the biggest propaganda hit on Russia since the
1980 boycott of the Moscow Olympic Games.
Actually, I didn’t mind that boycott at all, since the most beautiful East
German girls ever to wear swimsuits won a trunk of Olympic medals. A breast stroke
on steroids was something to behold. But
there’s nothing pretty about the Litvinenko case. And now, for an encore, the
amazing duo have launched an Italian black
op-eretta.
In Italy,
the dirty tricks of Berlusconi’s Mitrokhin Commission
are currently the mama of all scandals. Beleaguered Senator Paolo Guzzanti
has had to set up his own blog
to bat back the flack. So you can all follow, a quick historia della
intrigue.
1. On that fateful day, Litvinenko meets Scaramella for lunch, reportedly
to discuss an e-mail from Russian Exile, Yevgeny
Limarev. The e-mail, it is claimed, is a hit list and
Litvinenko’s name is on it.
2. Litvinenko falls ill. He first accuses Scaramella of the poisoning. But
Russian Exiles quickly hire a PR firm
to accuse Putin instead. They then feed the story that the ‘hit list’ is of
people who know too much about the murder of Anna
Politkovskaya. But . . .
3. An article appears in the Italian newspaper, La Republica. It is an
interview with Limarev about his work with Scaramella for the Mitrokhin
Commission. The Commission, headed by Senator Guzzanti, aims to discredit
Romano Prodi by linking the politician to the
KGB.
There is an interview with Limarev today
(Nov 26) in la
Republica. It is a devastating attack on Guzzanti, Scaramella
and their Mitrokhin commission.
Limarev was involved in the Scaramella scams at the behest of Litvinenko. His
opinion of both Guzzanti and Scaramella is blunt: a fraudulent caper to smear
prominent opposition figures. Limarev names names (published) and declares that
Scaramella’s security company was run in tandem with Americans. The author of
the article asserts that Limarev showed him the names of the American security
companies but does not publish them. Scaramella recently asserted that he had
received the notorious emails he took to London
from Limarev. Limarev categorically denies any involvement with the emails.
4. We learn that, prior to the
elections, Litivinenko, Limarev and Gordievsky meet in London to supply evidence of Prodi’s KGB
links to Scaramella and Guzzanti. British MEP Gerald Batten
is present and repeats the slander in the European Parliament.
The Italian right makes capital of Prodi’s smear in the election but it fails
to save Berlusconi from defeat.
5. Transcripts of tapped telephone calls are published in Corriere Della
Sera which appear to suggest that Scaramella will even fabricate evidence to
frame Prodi to the satisfaction of Guzzanti and a suspected CIA
controller called Perry.
Scaramella then sought to create bogus financial transactions
through San Marino
that would have linked the Nomisma, a company founded by a group of people that
included Prodi, to the Soviet Secret Services.
A conversation with Guzzanti and Mario is bugged three
days after the call between Perry and Scaramella. Mario says that Romani Prodi
was ‘cultivated by the KGB’ and cites ex-KGB Colonel Oleg
Gordievsky (MI6) as his source. Guzzanti responds,
‘in that case he is our man?’ ‘Yes,’ replies Scaramella. ‘That’s enough. I
don’t want to know anything else’, Guzzanti replies.
6. Scaramella is arrested
the minute he returns from London.
The prosecution’s case centres on Scaramella’s
accounts to police of a plot against his life by an ex-Ukrainian KGB agent,
Alexander Talik. Prosecutors suspect Scaramella may have made it all up to
pressure the ex-agent to give him information, or possibly to make himself seem
more credible as a parliamentary consultant. Talik, however, was convicted.
After stepping off the plane in Naples
on Christmas Eve, Mario is taken to jail in Rome
and refused bail. No one
is allowed to speak to him and the Judge declares him ‘dangerous’. His offices
in Naples are
raided.
But the fun is only just starting.
It transpires that the sensational interview with Limarev, published after the
poisoning, actually took place a year before. Hmmm. Next up for
interview in La Republica, Gordievsky calls Scaramella a ‘mental case’ and a
‘flthy liar’ and denies Mario’s version of the meeting with Gerald Batten.
Prodi is already threatening to sue
anyone who repeats Batten’s slander and Guzzanti is outraged by the tapped
telephone transcripts while claiming that his words have been twisted.
Litvinenko’s brother, Maxim (who has Italian residence thanks to Scaramella)
now calls into question what Sasha really knew. Then Limarev suddenly
retracts everything he said in the interview of the year before.
Unbelievably, Limarev now denies ever meeting Senator Guzzanti. ‘It must have
been someone else with a false beard’ he claims. ‘And whatever statements I
signed were in Italian so I couldn’t read them’. Like Guzzanti, he also sets up a blog
with a new, revised version of the ‘truth’. Since whatever Limarev says changes
from one day to the next, a blog is a good idea for him.
In short, everyone is denying everything and calling everyone else a liar.
By now, the campaign in the Italian press is unstoppable and Paolo Guzzanti is
being pilloried. The Rome
court even throws the press some of the dossiers seized under warrant from
Scaramella’s office. Naughty! But it’s Left mafia versus Right mafia and no
quarter given.
Most of all, people want to know how Scaramella was ever co-opted on the
Mitrokhin commission in the first place. But according to
the IHT, Mario has already scammed everyone from the
United Nations to NATO.
So. What’s all this got to do with Polonium 210? Absoutely nothing. Except that
if you wanted to create a false trail to bury the real crimes, it would be just
the stuff.
Source: Atlantic Free Press