British opposition leader wants dialogue with Moscow

The British opposition leader Jeremy Corbyn has doubts about evidence from the government against the Kremlin about the assassination attempt in Salisbury, southern England.

But he stressed that it was premature to blame Moscow on the basis of what intelligence services claim. The attack on Iraq in 2003 was also because those services argued that there were demonstrable weapons of mass destruction. That turned out to be nonsense, according to Corbyn.

'There is a history of problems by misinterpreting what is presented as evidence. 'With this in mind, Corbyn finds the attitude of Prime Minister May's government towards Russia' problematic. '