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Russian embassy asks Britain to confirm if article about Salisbury affair in NYT is true

New York Times claims photos of hospitalized children and dead ducks allegedly poisoned in Salisbury influenced Donald Trump’s decision to expel 60 Russian diplomats

LONDON, April 17. /TASS/. The Russian embassy in London has dismissed as not true New York Times claims to the effect photos of hospitalized children and dead ducks allegedly poisoned in Salisbury influenced Donald Trump’s decision to expel 60 Russian diplomats.

"The article claims the photographs had been handed to the United States by the British government. For this reason the embassy has lodged a formal query with the Foreign Office asking it to either confirm or deny this report," the Russian embassy’s spokesman told the media on Wednesday.

"As there has been no such evidence so far, we proceed from the assumption that neither is true. If The New York Times is to be believed, it has to be stated that US special services - possibly, on advice from their British counterparts - started a new spiral of a common western anti-Russian campaign over Salisbury by presenting flagrant fakes to their head of state," the Russian diplomat said.

He recalled that the same had happened in a number of other cases involving the alleged use of chemical weapons in Syria and, much earlier, the ostensible "discovery" of weapons of mass destruction in Iraq.