House panel calls for Trump to investigate Russia’s role in Navalny poisoning
The Democratic and GOP leadership of the House Foreign Affairs Committee on Tuesday called on President Trump to investigate Russia’s use of chemical weapons related to the poisoning of leading Russian opposition figure Alexei Navalny.
Reps. Eliot Engel (D-N.Y.) and Michael McCaul (R-Texas), respectively the chairman and ranking member of the committee, wrote in a letter to the president that such an investigation is required under U.S. law and will set the stage for possible sanctions against Moscow.
The call by bipartisan lawmakers joins international outrage over the findings by Germany that Navalny was poisoned in Russia with the Soviet-era chemical nerve agent Novichok.
The attack on Navalny, a noted critic of Russian President Vladimir Putin, echoed the use of Novichok in 2018 against the Russian double-agent Sergei Skripal and his daughter Yulia in the English town of Salisbury.
In that instance, the U.K. determined that Moscow was responsible and allied nations joined London in expelling Russian diplomats in response. The U.S. also closed a Russian consulate in Seattle and imposed sanctions.
“If the Russian government is once again determined to have used a chemical weapon against one of its own nationals, additional sanctions should be imposed,” the lawmakers wrote in the letter to the president.
“Those responsible for this despicable attack must be held accountable, and Russian President Vladimir Putin must know that he and his cronies will not be allowed to violate international law with impunity,” they added.
The lawmakers also called for the U.S. to demand Russia cooperate with an international investigation led by the Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons.
Navalny is currently recovering in a German hospital after being evacuated from Russia following the poisoning on Sept. 2, with his staff saying he had ingested tea laced with the substance before boarding a flight leaving Siberia.
President Trump said last week that he was awaiting the evidence from German officials concluding that Novichok was used against Navalny, saying “We haven’t had any proof yet.”
Yet administration officials have condemned the use of a chemical weapon against Navalny, called the attack a poisoning and joined international calls for an investigation to find those responsible.
The Kremlin has rejected that Russia is responsible for the attack on Navalny.
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