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Quick question to what appears a fairy knowledgeable crowd: do we have any past exemple of a swapped agent latter kild by ex colleagues? I would think that there muss be some sort of tacit agreement not to do this?!In the past there seems to be a tacit agreement not to go after swapped agents, but what seems more powerful, in terms of the law, is that in this case Sergei Skripal was pardoned of his crimes against Russia and once exchanged was granted UK citizenship. Legally I would guess this wipes the slate clean of anything he was found guilty of in the past, and comes down to the attempted murder of a UK citizen, on UK soil, using a potential weapon of mass destruction in a public place. I'm not sure if his daughter holds UK or Russian citizenship. Any state that engages in, aids and abets, or by inaction allows, such an attack should be subject to a harsher charge than just attempted murder, in my view, but I really have no idea how international law deals with what seems to be such an unusual, perhaps unique, set of circumstances. Pity we don't seem to have anyone participating in this thread that has in-depth knowledge as to how international law would classify such an attack, or even if there is an provision in it for dealing with attacks on individuals like this. There seems to be an argument that using this type of internationally prohibited weapon breached certain agreements, but whether such breaches carry any significant enforceable penalty I don't know.
I doubt they do, solely on the basis that there was virtually no real action taken over the use of Polonium 210 against Alexander Litvinenko. In that case there was proof that the attack was undertaken by the Russian state, yet still very little was done about it.