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IPFS News Link • Hoax?

Selected Articles: Novichok Myth Debunked;

• globalresearch.ca

Raging US/UK Political Assault on Russia

By Stephen Lendman, April 05, 2018

Despite no evidence suggesting Russian involvement, the official hostile narrative continues – supported by Western media.

During an OPCW Executive Council Wednesday special session, Moscow's proposed joint investigation was rejected by Washington and Britain.

Doubts About Novichok

By Professor Paul MckeigueProfessor Piers Robinson, and Jake Mason, April 05, 2018

Official statements from the UK government claim that the "military grade nerve agent" detected in Salisbury was "part of a group of nerve agents known as Novichok" that the Russian chemist Vil Mirzayanov alleged had been developed in the Soviet Union in a secret programme.  The structures of these compounds, labelled A-230, A-232, A-234, A-242 and A-262, were published by Mirzayanov in a book in 2008, twelve years after he emigrated to the US.

Skripal-Novichok Case: Hiding UK-U.S. Lies Gets Top Priority

By Eric Zuesse, April 05, 2018

The U.S. and its allies have been successful in hiding the basis on which Russian diplomats were expelled from their countries — expelled on still-undocumented accusations that Russia's Government was behind the poisoning of Sergei and Yulia Skripal in Salisbury England on March 4th. On Wednesday April 4th, the Executive Council of the Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (OPCW) said no to Russia's proposal for an OPCW investigation into the source of the toxin that was used in the attack.

The Skripal Affair is a Hoax. If Russia is "No Longer to Blame", What Next?

By Prof Michel Chossudovsky, April 05, 2018

The British government has acknowledged that there is no evidence that Russia was the source of the nerve gas agent, while still sticking to the story that the "Kremlin was behind the attack".

Russia Claims Skripal Poisoning Was Staged by the UK Intelligence

By Zero Hedge, April 03, 2018

Russia's Ambassador to the UK, Alexander Yakovenko, says that London's reluctance to share information on the March 4 poisoning of former double agent Sergei Skripal has led Moscow to suggest that London authorities actually perpetrated the crime.

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