by Marcus Papadopoulos
“Agreeing to disagree” summed up the outcome of this week’s meeting in Moscow between Foreign Secretary David Miliband and his Russian counterpart Sergei Lavrov.
In what was the first visit to Russia by a British Foreign Secretary in five years, both London and Moscow were under no illusions that Anglo-Russian relations could be significantly improved during Mr Miliband’s two-day visit.
Before the visit, Mr Miliband said that he did not expect “the key problems in the UK’s bilateral relationship with Russia” to be resolved during his trip to the Russian capital.
Overshadowing the meeting between Britain and Russia’s most senior diplomats was the ongoing saga concerning the murder in London three years ago of the former KGB officer and defector Alexander Litvinenko.
British police believe the killing was carried out by Andrei Lugovoi, a former KGB officer, who is alleged to have been acting on behalf of the Russian security service.
The Kremlin has continued to refuse British requests to extradite Mr Lugovoi. It should be noted, however, that Russia does not have an extradition treaty with Britain or any other country.
During what was a frosty press conference following their discussions, both foreign ministers were candid in voicing their opposing views on the Litvinenko affair. Referring to London’s extradition request, Mr Lavrov said: “Our position has not changed. I believe our British colleagues understand their demands that we amend our constitution are absolutely unrealistic.”
But Mr Miliband reiterated the British Government’s call for Mr Lugovoi to be extradited to Britain, adding that the murder of Mr Litvinenko had been “horrific”.
Responding to Mr Miliband’s call for his extradition, Mr Lugovoi, now a member of the Russian parliament, said that if the case into the murder of Mr Litvinenko was heard in a Russian court, which the Russian government has said it is prepared to see happen, Britain would be “afraid that the true criminals will be revealed” – a veiled reference to Russian accusations that the exiled Russian oligarch in London, Boris Berezovsky, was the man behind the killing.
The meeting between Mr Miliband and Mr Lavrov failed to add much warmth to relations between London and Moscow.
Indeed, their declaration of support for the Non-Proliferation Treaty, of concern over Iran’s use of uranium and of the need to achieve lasting stability in Afghanistan, could have been said during the course of a telephone conversation.

