Since the line became public, Russian pharmaceutical company R-Phurt announced that it had signed an agreement to provide a vaccine developed through Astra-Zeneca and Oxford University, TASS reported. Oxford was allegedly attacked by hackers, the Times of London reported.
Some in the UK have questioned the timing of accusations of piracy and interference, as they do so days before the planned publication of a long-delayed chronological report on Russian interference in British politics. The Times quoted “a former security officer” as saying, “This is all incredibly practical.”
Russia’s suspicion is now a Western policy
It was long speculated that the content of the report could be disgraceful to the ruling conservative party, led by British Prime Minister Boris Johnson.
Regardless of what the report contains, this is a reminder that no primary political crusade in the West is happening now without the suspicion of Russian attempts to influence the outcome.
This can be designed as the November presidential election approaches.
“The Russians are hunting sumpily to delegitimizing our electoral process. Done,” said alleged Democratic presidential candidate Joe Biden on July 17, informed comments through Reuters.
Russia: quintuple design in espionage cases
While attempts to reassert Western elections continue to interfere, Russia turns out to be stepping up its opposing moves to suspicious spies on its territory. The Times reported on July 11, by presenting the knowledge compiled through the Russian opposition’s website, MediaZona, that the diversity of russian criminal times applicable with counterintelligence has increased five-fold since 2009.
One of the last times of high registration is former journalist Ivan Safronov, accused of passing secrets to the Czech intelligence services. As AP reported, Safronov protested his innocence. His previous newspaper was consistent with accusations of “absurd.”
I am from “Moscow Assignment: Reports on Lenin to Putin Russia” (published in the United States and the United Kingdom in July 2020) and 3 other books on
I am from “Moscow Assignment: Reporting Lenin to Putin on Russia” (published in the United States and the United Kingdom in July 2020) and 3 other books on foreign affairs. I first visited the Soviet Union as a language student in the 1990s. Since then, I have been following changes in Russia’s political, social and economic life. I spent great years living and reporting in Moscow, where between 1ninenine1 and 200nine I published twice for the BBC and once for Reuters TV. My career as a correspondent also included assignments in Brussels and the Middle East. I am now an associate reader of foreign journalism at the City, University of London. I speak Russian and French fluently and some Danish.