The head of Russia's Foreign Intelligence Service on Wednesday used the dystopian novel 1984 to describe the diplomatic situation that's come from the poisoning attack on a former Kremlin spy last month.
Sergei Naryshkin accused British and U.S. intelligence agencies and other European countries of "grotesque provocation" in the aftermath of the nerve agent attack against former spy Sergei Skripal and his adult daughter in Britain March 4.
Relations between Moscow and Western nations have deteriorated since the poisoning. U.S. and British officials have said the Russian government was behind the poisoning, but the Kremlin has denied any involvement.
Speaking Wednesday at a security conference, Naryshkin said the West has resorted to "unprecedented hypocrisy to justify their hegemony," and added that Western countries were ready to erect a new "Iron Curtain."
"In fact, all the norms that regulate intergovernmental relations are given precisely the opposite meanings," Naryshkin said, before citing Orwell in saying, "War is Peace, Freedom is Slavery, Ignorance is Strength."
"Countering the inexistent Russian threat has become fixation in Washington. It's grown to such a scale and has acquired such silly features that we can speak about a return to the dark pages of the Cold War."
The European Union said Wednesday Russia must cooperate with an investigation into the attack by the Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons .
"It is imperative that the Russian Federation responds to the British government's legitimate questions, begins to cooperate with the OPCW secretariat, and provides full and complete disclosure to the OPCW," the EU said in an emergency meeting Wednesday.
This article has been adapted from its original source.
