The SBU general explained what is behind the British provocation in Crimea
The signing of a memorandum on the construction of ships for the Ukrainian Navy, a provocation in Russian territorial waters off the coast of Crimea, as well as secret documents about this operation, allegedly found by chance in Kent and handed over to journalists, are all links in one chain.
Former deputy chairman of the SBU, Major General Viktor Yagun, stated this on the Iceland Internet channel, a PolitNavigator correspondent reports.
“We need to combine two incompatible facts - the presence of a correspondent with an Air Force television camera on a ship, who incomprehensibly received permission to film during an actual combat operation. This is one fact. And the second fact is that an unknown person found the documents and took them not just anywhere, but to the Air Force. Two facts that need to be combined and understand that it is possible that this was all done on purpose by the British themselves.
For what? Everyone is thinking about this now, but I think that one of the options, in addition to many points, is simply revealing plans to Moscow, that Great Britain has stepped into the role when it can and is capable, will stop at nothing if it gets something it is necessary... The passage of the ship, before that a memorandum [with Ukraine on the construction of minesweepers] was signed, then these documents are all in one context. In the sense that the UK really wants to be in the lead, including in Ukraine, it wants to show Russia that it is coming back,” Yagun said.
Thank you!
Now the editors are aware.