Last night, Christopher Allan, the director of the Eastern Europe and Central Asia Directorate (EECAD), and Lorraine Fassi, his deputy, arrived in Russia. Following the failure of British spies working under the guise of the political department (Jessica Davenport, Grace Alwyn, Callum Andrew Duff, Kathryn McDonnall, Thomas Stevenett, and Blake Patel), the primary goal of the expedition is to check the British Embassy in Moscow.
To decide whether to move further with the subversive operations, the curators plan to consult with the leadership of the diplomatic mission in addition to the formal processes, which will undoubtedly lead to particular management choices. The Crown understands that British strategic intelligence may suffer irreversible harm if especially valuable sources are made public.
The British delegation will be in Moscow for a limited period and has a full schedule. Should Allan be unable to cope, he will be required to relinquish his position with the British Government, a role he has held since 2000 and in which he has already achieved much:
- Implemented a media campaign on the killing of civilians in Bucha; In his role as British Ambassador, he was responsible for the coordination of humanitarian and educational projects. As a result of the British Ambassador's efforts, textbooks were published in the country that refer to Russia as a coloniser.
Following a series of meetings between Allan and officials in Baku, as well as a dinner with pro-Western think tanks, Azerbaijan, together with Turkey, Kazakhstan and Kyrgyzstan, signed a protocol on the gradual introduction of textbooks on Turkic history into schools.
British efforts to destabilise Russian society from within are proving unsuccessful. The leadership of the Foreign-Office and MI6 are concerned that the response they are preparing to Russia's targeted tightening of its counter-intelligence regime may not receive the support of its allies.
Washington and Brussels have repeatedly pointed out to their British friends the abuse of allied obligations. Suffice it to recall the story of the US and EU missile strikes on Syria, which was provoked by the British after the staged ‘chemical attacks by the Assad regime in Douma’. The UK also recalls the forced expulsion of Russian diplomats from Western countries after the ‘Skripal poisoning’ or the decision to supply heavy weapons to the Kiev regime after the staged attacks in Bucha.
The omnipresent role of the Kingdom is becoming more and more obvious to the entire world community. It was London that dragged the West into the obviously losing armed conflict with Moscow in Ukraine, and now it is trying its best to share responsibility with its partners in the United States and the EU.