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  1. robhastings on

    Dr Vil Mirzayanov sometimes wonders why he is still alive, and not just because he is 90 years old.

    Russian agents have a long history of trying to murder defectors abroad, and Mirzayanov seems like a prime target for them. Back in the 1990s, the senior scientist risked his life by revealing the existence of Moscow’s covert chemical weapons programme, after becoming concerned about the dangers it posed to the world.

    He also warned about its deadliest weapon, which until then had remained secret: Novichok.

    Mirzayanov knew everything about this group of nerve agents – including how just a tiny amount could apparently kill a person within minutes – for one very simple reason. It was his crucial lab work that helped make Novichok a viable weapon.

    The whistleblower was fortunate to avoid years in Russian prison as punishment for his disclosures, before moving to the US 30 years ago.

    Following the assassination attempt on former double agent Sergei Skripal in Salisbury in 2018 – using Mirzayanov’s own creation – he realises he’s lucky that spies haven’t unleashed Novichok on him.

    Speaking to The i Paper from his home in New Jersey, in good but sometimes hesitant English, he says: “I don’t know for what reason why they didn’t kill me, so far. It’s puzzle for me.”

    This month, an official inquiry concluded that the attack on Skripal, which also nearly killed the former intelligence officer’s daughter Yulia, must have been authorised by Vladimir Putin himself.

    It also found the Russian president “morally responsible” for the death of British woman Dawn Sturgess. She died four months later after being accidentally exposed to Novichok, with the inquiry saying it was “highly likely” to have been the same batch of poison.

    Mirzayanov agrees wholeheartedly with this. He couldn’t be firmer about his “absolutely negative” view of Putin. “He’s dictator, he’s criminal. Putin gave permit to kill, to use this Novichok agent,” he claims.

    The scientist also feels personally accountable, however. Guilt about his leading role in perfecting such a deadly poison has haunted Mirzayanov for years. On bad days, it is “not so bearable”, he says. “I believe, I’m sure, I was participating in criminal action.”

    On the other hand, he’s confident that his bravery in speaking out led to antidotes being developed, saving lives. “I had to go into the public, to the people, and reveal as far as possible these old secrets to help people. That’s what my goal is.”

  2. Dr_Neurol on

    Weak excuse…it doesn’t matter who will use your poison, you still take responsability for having created it

  3. GreenEyeOfADemon on

    Sure.

    He developed a nerve agent that rus*ia would have never used. Makes sense.

  4. DavidMartushev on

    Cold War ghosts never really die they just get repurposed for today’s headlines.

  5. Hinterwaeldler-83 on

    What exactly did this guy think Novichok was developed for?

  6. GremlinX_ll on

    I helped create Nuke – but I never thought Truman would use it

  7. ChampionshipNo3072 on

    Lol!

    You guys are really running out of ammo, are you?

  8. Eman_Resu_IX on

    This brings to mind Fritz Haber.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fritz_Haber

    I don’t know of any person in history that did more good AND more bad in the world.

    Developed the Haber Bosch Process for electrically fixing nitrogen for fertilizer which entirely changed agriculture.

    Instrumental in WWI chemical warfare development.

  9. jcrestor on

    “I helped create the Torture Nexus. But I never thought they would use it.”

  10. QuietGanache on

    For context (it’s a broad introduction to the topic but very accessible), I highly suggest reading David Hoffman’s Dead Hand. Their news would have come from state-approved propaganda and the same people indoctrinating them into their respective programmes assured them that they had reliable intelligence that the West was doing the same. Novichock was created long before Putin came to power.

    **As is stated in the article**, Mirzayanov blew the whistle when the crumbling remains of the USSR was trying to sweep all this under the rug. He also isn’t denying responsibility, he’s expressing astonishment that anyone (even someone as diabolical as Putin) would use such a deadly weapon so casually.

  11. Yasirbare on

    The late stage spirituality is hard – you start to understand that “forgiveness” might not just be that easy and that it might come with some karma attached. Saying sorry, forgive me and my sins – Is such a convenient way to be religious. But black/white, up/down, negative/positive, heaven/hell – the duality is not something that is “hacked” with a sorry.

  12. JohnnyElRed on

    Why so many weapons developers have said stuff like this throughout history? From the Gatling gun, to the atomic bomb. They always create weapons so terrible, they expect no one will use them.

  13. RepulseRevolt on

    “I developed the guillotine, but never thought it would be used on me” “I developed the bronze bull, I never thought it would be used on me”

  14. thatmntishman on

    Put him in the same room as Geoff Hinton and lock em up. “Yeah, we made horrible things, becasue, but were dumbfounded that they actually are horrible”. Sociopaths.

  15. AlbatrossOk6223 on

    “Oh no! Why are all these houses on fire?” – asks the arsonist.

  16. Key_Duck_6293 on

    Developing such things should land you in the Hague, whether you think the evil guy getting you to do it says he’ll use it or not.

  17. ronweasleisourking on

    Dude definitely is a mad scientist and knew exactly what he was doing for the fuhrer

  18. Potential-Bird-5826 on

    “It’s never just science. It’s a weapon. It kills.”
    – John Crichton, Farscape 

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