Poisoned Spy
plunged (v)- to bring suddenly or forcibly into some condition, situation, etc.: to plunge a country into war; to pull a switch and plunge a house into darkness.
crisis (n) - a stage in a sequence of events at which the trend of all future events, esp. for better or for worse, is determined; turning point.
investigation (n) - a searching inquiry for learning facts; detailed or careful examination.
diplomat (n) - One, such as an ambassador, who has been appointed to represent a government in its relations with other governments.
bugged (v) – fitted with a hidden microphone or other electronic listening device.
intercepted (v) - To stop, deflect, or interrupt the progress or intended course of: intercepted me with a message as I was leaving.
mockery (n) – Ridicule, teasing.
sponsored (adj) – Paid for by a supporter.
recruited (v) - To engage (persons) for military service.
successor (n) – A replacement.
amid (prep) – In the middle of something.
scapegoat (n) - a person or group made to bear the blame for others or to suffer in their place.
spats (n) – short and aggressive arguments.
espionage (n) - the act or practice of spying.
severe (adj) – very serious.
Task 1
Put some of the words above into your own sentences
The Times |
November 20, 2006 |


Alexander Litvinenko, right, in his days as an FSB colonel. As this press conference in 1998 he and a colleague accused their superiors of ordering assassinations (Sergei Kapilkin/EPA) |
|
|

|
Case of the poisoned spy puts Kremlin in the dock
Richard Beeston and Michael Evans
|

|
|
Britain will be plunged into its worst crisis with Russia since President Putin came to power if a Scotland Yard investigation into the poisoning of a former Russian security agent leads back to the Kremlin, diplomats said last night.
Alexander Litvinenko, said yesterday to look “like a ghost” in hospital, had been targeted and bugged for months by intelligence officers from the Russian Embassy in Kensington, his friends and associates said. His mobile phone calls and e-mails had been intercepted. The Kremlin was accused directly by his associates of being behind an apparent move to eliminate him.
He was poisoned because of his fierce and fearless mockery of President Putin, it was claimed. Oleg Gordievsky, the most senior KGB agent to defect to Britain, told The Times that the attempt to kill Mr Litvinenko was state-sponsored. He insisted that it was carried out by a Russian former colleague who had been recruited in prison by the FSB, the successor to the KGB.
Amid huge concern in diplomatic circles about the accusations of Kremlin involvement, the Foreign Office was awaiting anxiously the results of the police investigation on the apparent attack on a man who is now a British citizen. Scotland Yard said that it was investigating a “suspicious poisoning”.
Mr Litvinenko, 44, is under armed guard in hospital and has only a 50 per cent chance of survival, according to friends. Mr Litvinenko’s wife, Marina, also 44, said: “His bone marrow is destroyed. I may need a donor to save his life.” Doctors last night said that Mr Litvinenko’s bone marrow had failed and was not producing enough white blood cells to maintain his immune system.
He was apparently poisoned with thallium, a highly toxic chemical once used in rat killer, after a secret meeting with an associate in London. Professor John Henry, a leading toxicologist, who examined Mr Litvinenko on Saturday, said he believed that he had been given a potentially lethal dose.
Police want to question two people whom Mr Litvinenko met on the day of the alleged poisoning. One is a Russian man who talked to him over a cup of tea at an hotel and the other is Mario Scaramella, an Italian academic whom he met at a sushi bar.
It emerged last night that before becoming seriously ill, Mr Litvinenko told a journalist contact: “Mario said he wanted to sit down to talk to me so I suggested we go to a Japanese restaurant nearby.
“I ordered lunch but he ate nothing. He appeared to be very nervous. He handed me a four-page document which he said he wanted me to read straight away. The document was an e-mail. I could not understand why he had come all the way to London to give it to me. Several hours after the meeting I started to feel sick.”
Mr Scaramella visited the British Embassy in Rome a week ago and spoke to staff there once he realised that he was the last person to have seen Mr Litvinenko. Since then he is reported to have gone into hiding, fearing for his life. “Mario is very scared at the moment,” a friend who did not want to give his name said. “He is worried that the Russians and the Chechens are after him. He has obviously been made some sort of scapegoat.”
The Foreign Office said that it had not approached the Russian authorities yet, but was waiting for the outcome of the Scotland Yard investigation. “We will wait until the facts are known,” a spokesman said.
Britain has been involved in a number of diplomatic spats with Russia over the past decade, usually involving espionage. But sources close to the Foreign Office said last night that Mr Litvinenko’s case was far more severe and could lead to the most serious diplomatic incident with Moscow since Mr Putin came to power more than six years ago.
“We are not talking about a routine espionage dispute,” the source said. “This time we are dealing with the attempted murder of a foreign national in a foreign country using methods that we know the Russians are widely capable of. If we get something solid to link this with Moscow it would be taken very seriously. These are the sort of methods normally used by terrorists.” |
|
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,3-2461837_1,00.html
http://dictionary.reference.com
Task 2
Mark these questions true or false
1 Britain poisoned a former Russian security agent.
2 He was poisoned because of his mockery of President Putin.
3 Mr Litvinenko is now a British citizen.
4 He was poisoned with Lithium.
5 Police want to talk to three people about the crime.
6 Mr Litvenenko didn’t eat anything on the day he was poisoned.
7 Mr Scaramella was visiting the Italian Embassy in London.
8 The Foreign office will wait until the facts are known before talking to Russia.
9 Mr Putin came to power 5 years ago.
10 Terrorists are said to normally use this method.
Task 3
Look at the verbs taken from the article and decide which of the narrative tenses (past simple, past continuous, past perfect and past perfect continuous) they are. Say why each tense is used.
1. He was poisoned...
2. The Foreign Office was awaiting anxiously the results.
3. Scotland Yard said that it was investigating a “suspicious poisoning”.
4. Doctors last night said...
5. Mr Litvinenko’s bone marrow had failed...
6. I suggested we go to a Japanese restaurant nearby.
7. I could not understand why he had come all the way to London...
8. [The Foreign Office] was waiting for the outcome of the Scotland Yard investigation.