State-sponsored Assassination Attempts
Jonathan Freedland takes The Long View of attempted state assassinations.
Jonathan Freedland takes The Long View of attempted state assassinations.
Russia claimed it foiled an attack by Ukrainian drones on the Kremlin just last week, calling it an unsuccessful assassination attempt against President Vladimir Putin. The Ukrainian president, Volodymyr Zelenskyy, denied it, saying: βWe donβt attack Putin or Moscow.β The Russian authorities said the purported attack occurred overnight but there was no independent verification of it and no evidence has been presented to support it. Questions have arisen as to why it took the Kremlin hours to report the incident and why videos of it also surfaced so late in the day. Yet accusations abound in the Kremlin as to which state was the perpetrator - Ukraine or the US. As the threat of Russian retaliation for what it termed a βterroristβ act hangs in the air, Jonathan is joined by two historians. Professor Rory Cormac, Professor of International Relations at University of Nottingham, looks back to the United States' Central Intelligence Agencyβs (CIA) many and varied unsuccessful attempts to assassinate Cuban leader Fidel Castro in the 1960s. And Dr Elizabeth Norton, who specialises in the queens of England and the Tudor period, takes us back to 1586 and the Babington Plot to assassinate Queen Elizabeth I, a Protestant, and put Mary, Queen of Scots, her Catholic cousin, on the English throne. The facts of the plot are far from straightforward, and very much tied up with the extensive spy networks created by Sir Francis Walsingham, arguably the first state spymaster. In both cases espionage and politicking lie just below the surface.
The Readers are Leah Marks and Ewan Bailey
The Producer is Mohini Patel
Last on
Broadcasts
- Tue 16 May 2023 09:00ΒιΆΉΤΌΕΔ Radio 4
- Tue 16 May 2023 21:30ΒιΆΉΤΌΕΔ Radio 4
Podcast
-
The Long View
History series in which stories from the past shed light on current events