Foto: Peter
Rigaud / DER SPIEGEL
It's six
o'clock in the morning on Wednesday when Alexei Navalny shows up at the Berlin
editorial office of DER SPIEGEL for an interview. The office is located a few
hundred meters from Charité University Hospital, where Navalny spent a month
receiving treatment, hovering between life and death.
Russian Opposition Leader Alexei Navalny on His
Poisoning
"I Assert that Putin Was Behind the
Crime"
For the first time after his poisoning, Russian
opposition leader Alexei Navalny discusses his near-death experience, Putin's
alleged responsibility and Merkel's visit with him in the hospital.
Interview
Conducted by Benjamin Bidder und Christian Esch
01.10.2020, 13.01 Uhr
Navalny,
who was poisoned with the nerve agent Novichok, was only released from the
hospital last week.
Four agents
from the State Office of Criminal Investigation (LKA) accompanied him during
his visit. Navalny, who wasn't able to walk not long ago, took the stairs to
the office rather than the elevator.
Alexei
Navalny, 44, is Russia's most prominent opposition politician. Following the
attempt on his life on August 20 in the Siberian city of Tomsk, however, he is
now squarely in the international spotlight. German Chancellor Angela Merkel
intervened for him to be allowed to leave Russia for treatment in Germany.
Because he was poisoned with a substance that can essentially only come from
state-run laboratories in Russia, the question of Russian President Vladimir
Putin’s personal responsibility is one that many around the world are asking.
It’s not the first time that a Russian opposition politician was to be killed,
but it is the first time that the circumstances seem to so clearly point at the
Kremlin.
The
interview with DER SPIEGEL is the first that Navalny has given since the
attack. He is alert at the meeting and he remembers many things - and yet the
impact of the poisoning is still clear. Scars on his neck show where he was
hooked up to a ventilator. When he pours water from the bottle into his glass,
it is obvious that it requires effort and he has to use both hands. But he
refuses assistance. "My physical therapist says I should try to do
everything myself," he says
Navalny
seems more nervous than he did at previous meetings. His face is gaunter and
his figure more angular after losing 12 kilos. But his voice is the same as it
has always been, as is his humor, his irony. Sitting next to him is his
spokeswoman, Kira Yarmysh, who was with him on the plane on August 20 when he
first began showing signs of having been poisoned.
Before the
interview begins, he has something he wants to say.
Navalny: It
is important to me that this interview appears in the German press. I have
never been closely associated with Germany. I don't know anyone here. I didn't
know a single politician. And yet it turned out - you see, my voice is
trembling, I have become so emotional - that German politicians and Angela
Merkel have taken an interest in my fate and saved my life. The doctors at
Charité saved my life a second time and, more importantly, they gave me back my
personality. So, the first thing I want to say is: I feel a tremendous
gratitude to all Germans. I know it sounds a bit overblown, but Germany has
become a special country for me. I had few connections here before and only
visited Berlin for the first time three years ago! And then so much human
compassion from so many people.
DER
SPIEGEL: Our readers will be happy to hear that. How are you doing Mr. Navalny?
Navalny:
Much better than three weeks ago, and it is getting better each day. Not long
ago, I could only climb 10 steps, but now I can make it up to the 5th floor.
The most important thing for me is that my mental abilities have returned.
Well, maybe we will find the opposite to be true during this interview
(laughs).
DER
SPIEGEL: You wrote on Instagram that you are no longer able to stand on one
foot.
Navalny:
Now I can again. My next challenge is to stand on one leg and stretch the other
leg forward, which I practice every day. These are actually exercises that
ninety-year-olds do in the park.
DER
SPIEGEL: Are you able to sleep well?
Navalny:
That's my biggest problem. I used to laugh about people with sleep problems
because I never had them myself. But then came the coma, the anesthesia, the
weaning off of the sedatives, that long hovering state when I was neither
asleep nor awake. I haven’t been able to sleep without sleeping pills since.
DER
SPIEGEL: When you lost consciousness, you were a figure in Russian politics.
When you woke from the coma, you were a global political figure. Chancellor
Merkel even visited you at your bedside. What did you talk about?
Navalny:
That was last week. It was totally unexpected. The door opened, my doctor came
in - and Merkel. It was a private meeting with my family - my wife Julia and my
son Zahar were there. I can't tell you the details, but we didn't discuss
anything secret or sensational. The visit was a gesture. I was impressed by how
precisely she knows Russia and my case. She knows some of the details better
than I do. She really has a deep understanding of what is going on in Russia.
And when you talk to her, you understand why she has been at the top in Germany
for so long. I thanked her for her efforts and she said: "I only did my
duty."
DER
SPIEGEL: What has daily life been like for you since you left the hospital?
Where are you living?
Navalny: I
live with my wife and my son here. My daughter has returned to Stanford
University. We've rented an apartment. My everyday life is monotonous. I
exercise daily - that's all I do. In the morning, I take a walk in the park -
that's my job. Then I do the exercises with the doctor. In the evening, I go
for another walk. During the day, I try to work on the computer. The doctors
say I can be restored to 90 percent of my former self, maybe even 100 percent,
but nobody really knows for sure. Basically, I'm a bit of a guinea pig. After all,
there aren’t many people you can observe who are still alive after being
poisoned with a nerve agent. At some point, I will probably be written about in
medical journals. And I am happy to share my experiences. Seriously: The
Russian leadership has developed such a penchant for poisoning that it is not
going to stop doing so anytime soon. My medical history will be instructive.
DER
SPIEGEL: Going by your posts on social media, it appears that you left your bed
in the hospital often.
Navalny:
The doctors and nurses at Charité are the most tolerant people in the world. I
was a difficult patient. I would get up at night in the intensive care unit,
and one time I tore all the tubes out of my body and started bleeding. Later,
when I was already conscious and could recognize and talk to the people around
me, I had hysterical fits. I said I was healthy and wanted to go to a hotel.
Weeks later, I understood that this strange behavior was a consequence of the
poisoning.
DER
SPIEGEL: Let's go over what happened to you, and we'll start with your last
memory before you lost consciousness. It’s August 20, at eight o’clock in the
morning. You're sitting in a plane from Tomsk to Moscow. You had spent a few
days in Siberia. What was going through your head?
Navalny: It
was a wonderful day. I'm on my way home, with a strenuous and successful
business trip behind me. We shot videos for the regional election campaign, and
everything had gone according to plan. I'm sitting comfortably in my seat and
I'm looking forward to a quiet flight during which I can watch a series. Once I
get back to Moscow, I am looking forward to recording my weekly YouTube show
and then spending the weekend with my family. I feel good, as I did at the airport.
And then… it's hard to describe because there is nothing to compare it with.
Organophosphorus compounds attack your nervous system like a DDos attack
attacks the computer - it's an overload that breaks you. You can no longer
concentrate. I can feel that something is wrong. I break out in a cold sweat. I
ask Kira beside me for a tissue. Then I say to her: Speak to me. I need to hear
a voice - something's wrong with me. She looks at me like I'm crazy and starts
talking.
DER
SPIEGEL: What happened then?
Navalny: I
don't understand what is happening to me. The stewards come by with the
trolley. I first want to ask them for water, but I then say: No, let me by, I'm
going to the bathroom. I wash myself with cold water, sit down and wait and
then wash myself again. And then I think: If I don't get out now, I'll never
get out. The most important feeling was: You are feeling no pain, but you know
you're dying. And I mean, right now, yet nothing hurts. I leave the toilet,
turn to the steward - and instead of asking for help, I say, to my own
surprise: "I've been poisoned. I'm dying." And then I lay down on the
ground in front of him to die. He’s the last thing I see - a face that looks at
me with slight astonishment and a light smile. He says: "Poisoned?"
and by that he probably means I was served bad chicken.
And the
last thing I hear, already on the floor is: Do you have heart problems? But my
heart doesn't hurt. Nothing hurts. All I know is that I am dying. Then I hear
voices growing ever quieter, and a woman calling: "Don't leave us! Don't
leave us!" Then it's over. I know I'm dead. Only later would it turn out
that I was wrong.
DER
SPIEGEL: There's a video shot by a passenger in which your screams can be heard
on the plane. It sounds horrible, almost like the cries of an animal.
Navalny:
I've watched it - it's circulating on the internet under the title:
"Navalny screaming in pain." But it wasn't pain. It was something
else, worse. Pain makes you feel like you’re alive. But in this case, you
sense: This is the end.
DER SPIEGEL:
How long did the whole thing last?
Navalny:
Perhaps 30 minutes passed from the point where I thought something was off to
unconsciousness. That was all after we took off.
DER
SPIEGEL: You had spent the night at the Hotel Xander in Tomsk, which is where
you likely came into contact with the poison. Do you remember what you touched
there?
Navalny:
Traces of the poison were found on a water bottle. Apparently I touched a
contaminated surface, then reached for the water bottle, drank something from
it, put it back and then left the hotel room. So I assume that I absorbed the
poison through my skin. There are many objects that you touch in a hotel before
you leave - the shower, the toilet, the clothes rack, the handle of your bag -
you are sure to touch something. That's why it is so important to examine my
clothes. The poison can be applied to any item of personal clothing.
DER
SPIEGEL: The clothes were taken after you were admitted to the hospital in Omsk
and they were never returned.
Navalny: I
have no doubt that my clothes have been simmering in a large tank of bleach for
a month! So that the traces are removed (laughs). If it hadn’t been for this
chain of fortunate circumstances - the pilots making an emergency landing in
Omsk, with the ambulance already waiting at the Omsk airport, and the fact that
I was given atropine within an hour and a half - I would have died. The plan
was smart: I would have taken off, died in flight and wound up in a morgue in
Omsk or Moscow. And then nobody would have found Novichok, because morgues
don't have mass spectrometers. Besides, they could have waited a bit before
performing the analysis. I would have just been a suspicious death.
He also
posted an image of himself as he practiced walking up and down stairs.
He also posted
an image of himself as he practiced walking up and down stairs. Foto: AFP
DER
SPIEGEL: You could have died in the hotel.
Navalny:
Some people suspect that the plan was to have me die in my sleep. Honestly,
though, after going through the poisoning, I think I would have woken up. It
would have been an amusing sight for the hotel security cameras: Me crawling
across the hallway in my underwear with these symptoms. I guarantee that with
these symptoms, I would have used the last of my strength to crawl out. Having
me die in that hotel would have been a risky plan. The staff still could have
called the ambulance.
DER
SPIEGEL: What is your explanation for the fact that nobody else was harmed by
the poison? Others were injured in Salisbury, in Britain, where former agent
Sergei Skripal was poisoned.
Navalny: I
think they learned their lessons from the Skripal case when 48 people were
contaminated and one woman died. That's why you can't apply the poison to an
object such as the sink or the shower, which I might not even use. Or to my
mobile phone, which I might have given Kira - in which case, instead of one
suspicious death, you would have had two. Like I said: I’m just speculating
here. Obviously we're looking at a more sophisticated means, and it was applied
to an object that only I touch.
DER
SPIEGEL: What about the traces you left on the water bottle?
Navalny: They
were harmless. It was a minimal amount of poison. Anyone could have touched it
without suffering any harm.
DER
SPIEGEL: The fact that the water bottle could be examined at all in Germany is
thanks to members of your staff, who removed it from the hotel room along with
other objects.
Navalny:
They were still sitting in the same hotel at breakfast when they received a
text message from Kira in Omsk that I had been poisoned. The scenario of me
getting killed was, of course, always present, although more as a joke. But
their first thought was that they needed to get to my room to secure what they
could. It was more out of desperation, because everyone thought I had been
poisoned by tea at the airport. No one was thinking about a nerve agent. I
could hardly believe it myself. It's like dropping a nuclear bomb on a single
person. There are a million more effective methods. When my wife Yulia and our
staff member Maria Pevchikh brought the items to Germany, they weren't thinking
about evidence, but simply about learning what I had been poisoned with. They
handed the things over to the doctors, not some secret agents in dark
sunglasses with ear pieces.
DER
SPIEGEL: You were apparently already being followed at every turn in Tomsk, at
least according to a leak from Russian security forces to a Moscow newspaper.
Did you know?
Navalny: I
have been followed nonstop since 2012 - often very openly. When I travel to the
regions, there is usually a whole horde - agents from the Center for Combating
Extremism, the FSB domestic intelligence agency, and so on. But we didn't
notice anything beyond the usual. I heard about the article. It seems to me
that elements of the secret services, which were responsible for surveillance,
were seeking to publicly absolve themselves - saying we are not to blame for
the poisoning! Surely, no order was issued to the entire FSB to kill Navalny.
It was limited to the highest level. And those who were responsible for tailing
me were themselves surprised by the act.
DER
SPIEGEL: Have the German authorities told you more than they have shared with
the public?
Navalny:
No. What I know, I have gotten from the German media. What we know for sure is
that I already had contact with the poison in the hotel. That it was Novichok -
or, to be more precise, a new version of it. And that this poison is only
available to a small circle of people.
DER SPIEGEL: You have many enemies. Who do you think is behind your poisoning?
Navalny: I
assert that Putin was behind the crime, and I have no other explanation for
what happened. I'm not saying this out of self-flattery, but based on the
facts. The most important fact is Novichok. The order to use or produce it can
only come from two men - the head of the FSB or the head of SWR, the foreign
intelligence service.
DER
SPIEGEL: What about the military intelligence agency GRU, which has been linked
to the attack on Sergei Skripal?
Navalny:
Probably also the GRU. When Putin claims that I myself produced Novichok and
poisoned myself with it, it's an impossibility. We can assume that only three
people can give the order to initiate "active measures" and deploy
Novichok. If you're familiar with the Russian reality, then you also know that
FSB head Alexander Bortnikov, SVR head Naryshkin or the head of the GRU cannot
make a decision like that without being instructed by Putin. They report to
him.
DER
SPIEGEL: But if Putin is behind it, why did he let you out of the country?
Navalny: I
think they were determined not to let me leave the country, so they declared
publicly that I was not fit to be transported. They were waiting for me to die.
But thanks to the support for me and thanks to the efforts of my wife, the
whole thing threatened to turn into a kind of online reality show called:
"Navalny Dies in Omsk." And an enormous amount of people, to whom I
am very grateful, said: We don't want to watch that show. It's important to
Putin’s people that they don’t give their opponent martyr status, that they
don't give him - whether dead or alive - any political capital. If I had died
in Omsk or suffered permanent harm there, it clearly would have been their
responsibility. It might not have been possible to prove the use of Novichok in
that case, but it clearly would have been their fault that I was not allowed to
leave the country. Besides, they did wait 48 hours, likely hoping that the
poison could no longer be proven after that.
DER
SPIEGEL: Putin is known for dividing his opponents into two categories:
"enemies" and "traitors." All means are permitted against
traitors, a group to which ex-agent Skripal belonged. You, though, are in the
"enemies" category. So, why did they use Novichok?
Navalny: If
someone had told me a month and a half ago that I would be poisoned with
Novichok, I would have laughed at them. After all, we know how Putin fights the
opposition. We have 20 years of experience. You can be arrested, beaten up,
sprayed with disinfectants or shot on a bridge like Boris Nemtsov. But chemical
warfare agents were considered the domain of the intelligence services.
DER
SPIEGEL: Did Putin upgrade your status from enemy to traitor? Or do we have the
wrong image of Putin's system?
Navalny: I
believe the image was correct but that the reality has changed. And something
in Putin's head has changed. Putin knows everything about me. I live under
total surveillance. He knows that I am neither an oligarch nor a secret agent,
that I'm a politician. But there have been changes: The protests against
Lukashenko in Belarus, the protests in the Khabarovsk region against the
Kremlin party. And the fact that our regional offices still exist …
DER
SPIEGEL: ... the local offices of your organization, with which you run a de
facto national party, even though it officially isn't allowed to be one.
Navalny:
For two years, we have been subjected to unprecedented pressure: Several
searches a week, the confiscation of office equipment, the freezing of accounts
and attempts to force people out of Russia. But our organization still exists.
We have 40 regional offices. I am speculating here, but perhaps they decided:
We've done all we can, but if these methods don't work, then it's time to
resort to extreme means.
DER
SPIEGEL: And what if it wasn't Putin?
Navalny: If
it wasn't him, things would be a lot worse. One cup of Novichok would be enough
to poison all passengers in a large Berlin subway station. If access to the
agent isn't restricted to three people, but actually 30, then it's a global
threat. That would be terrible.
DER
SPIEGEL: Is Putin really that interested in you? He's very preoccupied with his
foreign policy ambitions.
Navalny: It
is often claimed that his sole focus anymore is geopolitics, that he doesn't
care about anything else. But that's not true. He saw what happened in
Khabarovsk, where people have been taking to the streets in protest for 80 days
now and the Kremlin still has no idea what to do with them. The Kremlin
realized they had to take extreme measures to prevent a "Belarusian
scenario." The system is fighting for survival and we have felt the
consequences.
DER
SPIEGEL: You were poisoned during a trip to Siberia for the regional elections
or, more precisely, to prepare for your "smart voting" strategy, the
aim of which is to throw the Kremlin party United Russia out of local
parliaments across the country by helping protest voters find the most promising
opponent by way of an app. This strategy has had mixed success. "Smart
voting" worked well in Tomsk, less so in Novosibirsk.
Navalny:
The elections showed how political reality had changed. A candidate for
election in a major Russian city is listed on the ballot as "Coordinator
of the Navalny Staff" and he gets 50 percent of the vote against Tomsk's
most important oligarch. In Novosibirsk, our candidate got 45 percent. Tomsk
was a victory and Novosibirsk was a success, even if some mandates were stolen
from us.
DER
SPIEGEL: What is your next step?
Navalny:
The most important is preparations for Duma elections in 2021. "Smart
voting" isn't an easy strategy. It involves supporting unpleasant
candidates as well - communists, for example. This has consumed the greatest
share of my work for two years: explaining to people why we also support people
like that. It worked well in Moscow years ago. We elected communists, and now
Putin’s mayor, Sergey Sobyanin, is afraid to appear before the city parliament.
United Russia lost its majority in Tomsk.
DER
SPIEGEL: It is a strategy of pure opposition. What is your own actual agenda?
Navalny: Of
course we are working in opposition to something. We have to destroy the power
monopoly enjoyed by United Russia. We do that by tactically organizing votes in
a political environment that usually doesn't even permit truly independent
candidates.
DER
SPIEGEL: Is United Russia important? The party is really just an appendage of
Putin's system.
Navalny:
There is a basic infrastructure with which Putin controls the country. It
includes several key elements: In the past, it was his personal popularity,
then TV propaganda, the controlled courts - and then United Russia. Targeting
the party is important. Destroying its monopoly is the prerequisite for us to
have any opportunity to formulate a positive agenda. The Kremlin's frustration
stems from the fact that we have found effective methods in the struggle, even
though we ourselves have been thrown out of the system.
DER
SPIEGEL: Where do you stand politically yourself? To the right? To the left?
Navalny:
The political spectrum has never been as clear in Russia as it is in the West.
Right, left, this division doesn't work in Russia. Take the Russian communists:
Are they a leftist party? The reality is that they pursue a more right-wing,
conservative course. Our leftists in Russia go to church and cross themselves.
The template of German or American politics doesn't fit.
DER
SPIEGEL: Where, then, do the political dividing lines run in Russia?
Navalny:
Part of society echoes Putin's rhetoric that Russia must follow its own special
path. That means the establishment of a kind of super leadership similar to a
monarchy, which should be based on some kind of spiritual values. On the other
side, there are people like me who believe this amounts to lies and hypocrisy
and who are convinced that Russia can only develop according to the European
model.
DER
SPIEGEL: You have been in politics for two decades and have come a long way.
For a time, you relied heavily on nationalist rhetoric, but you later shifted
to the left.
Navalny:
Hello? I got my start in the social-liberal Yabloko party!
DER
SPIEGEL: A party from which you were expelled because of your appearances at
the nationalist Russian March in Moscow. Have your views changed?
Navalny: I
have the same views that I held when I went into politics. I don't see a
problem in working together with all those who fundamentally represent
anti-authoritarian positions. That's why I don’t mind it if we now support
communists in elections. I'm not scandalized just because one of the candidates
we support wears a Lenin pin. You have a different system in Germany: You
already have democracy, and the right and the left are fighting within its
framework. We first have to create a coalition of all forces that stand for the
alternation of power and for the independence of the courts. That’s why, for a
while, I tried to unite the opposition’s liberal-nationalist camp. That brought
me many nasty commentaries, including some from DER SPIEGEL. Now they say I
have shifted to the left just because I support the trade union movement. My
only aim is that Russia should follow the European path of development. I see
no contradiction in promoting trade unions while at the same time demanding a visa
requirement for migrants from Central Asia.
DER
SPIEGEL: You are one of the leading opposition politicians in the country, you
run one of the few functioning parties in Russia, even if it's not called a
party, and with your anti-corruption research, you compensate for the lack of
investigative journalism in the country. Isn't it a bit too much?
Navalny: It
is a problem. I have been considered the most important opposition activist
since 2011 and I know: It's tiring for a lot of people. In a normal system, I
would run in elections; and if I won, I would be the leader of the opposition
or hold power myself. If I were to lose, then someone else would do it.
DER
SPIEGEL: You have said that you want to return to Russia despite the attack.
Why?
Navalny: I
was pleased that no one in my circles even thought that I wouldn't return. Not
going back would mean that Putin has won and achieved his goal. And my job now
is to remain the guy who isn’t afraid. And I'm not afraid! When my hands shake,
it's not from fear - it's from this stuff. I would not give Putin the gift of
not returning to Russia.
"I
know it sounds a bit overblown, but Germany has become a special country for
me."
DER
SPIEGEL: Aren't you worried about your wife and your two children?
Navalny:
That's a difficult question. They're not afraid. My wife fought the battle with
the doctors in Omsk and got me out of there. Of course, I worry about my family
and the people around me. I am under personal protection here today, and the
Berlin police told me: An attempt was made to kill you with a dangerous
substance and we do not want such a thing to happen again here and for other
people to be endangered. I am constantly cracking jokes about the whole
Novichok thing, or about the strange box in which they brought me to Germany.
But there are also unpleasant thoughts in-between. What would have happened if
someone had put the poison in my Moscow apartment where my wife and two
children live?
DER
SPIEGEL: Are you doing anything to ward off the danger?
Navalny: I
attract attacks, so there is a responsibility. At the same time, it's clear
that without this struggle, things will only get worse. They will kill many
more people and they will imprison many more people. In today's Russia, people
are convicted practically every day for some kind of postings on social media.
Not resisting would mean putting everyone at even greater risk in the long
term. That's just how it is: We are fighting again monstrous villains who are
prepared to commit the most heinous crimes.
DER
SPIEGEL: Will you change your behavior as a consequence of the attack?
Navalny: I
will continue traveling through Russia's regions, staying in hotels and
drinking the water that is in the rooms. What else can I do? In any case,
there’s not much that can be done to counter Putin's invisible murderers. From
a political perspective, not much has changed. What remains is the struggle
between those who stand for freedom and those who want to drive us back into
the past, into a strange orthodox imitation of the Soviet Union, adorned with
capitalism and oligarchs. They will use more sophisticated means against us,
and we will do what we can to survive. The use of Novichok is frightening - and
that is Putin’s strategy. Merkel and Macron tell him about "red lines,"
but he simply crosses them, yelling: "You have no idea of all I can
do."
"It
wasn't pain. It was something else, worse. Pain makes you feel like you're
alive. But in this case, you sense: This is the end."
DER
SPIEGEL: Do you feel hatred toward the representatives of this system?
Navalny: I
have a strong emotional connection to my work. I'm fighting against corruption.
Even though many criticize me for it: I see it as a strength that things are
personal for me. We're not just criticizing the system, we are documenting the
offenses of specific individuals, from Putin to officials in the provinces.
Take the doctors in Omsk, for example, who told my wife to her face that I
could of course be flown out, only to then turn around and say that I wasn’t
fit for transport. In my opinion, the chief physician at the hospital in Omsk
is worse than the secret service agents who kill people. At least for them,
killing is their profession. But he knows everything and tells the world
something about metabolic disorders and that I drank too much self-distilled
vodka. People who call themselves doctors but wanted to wait until I was dead.
Do I hate them? Probably. Do I want to pick up a big sword and chop everyone’s
head off? No. I believe in the rule of law. These people belong in court for a
fair trial.
DER
SPIEGEL: Your case has triggered a crisis in German-Russian relations.
Navalny:
There has always been a special relationship between Germany and Russia. As
such, it was long considered out of the question that Putin would risk conflict
with Berlin. But that is over now, as is the time when it seemed impossible
that political murders would take place in Russia. The German government’s
surprisingly clear words probably have less to do with me as a person, and more
to do with the recognition of the dangerous path Russia is on. Once the Kremlin
has taken a liking to operations like this, why not take out a German
politician who is against Nord Stream 2, for example?
DER
SPIEGEL: What is your advice to German politicians?
Navalny: My
impression from the conversation with Angela Merkel is that she doesn't need
any advice from me. But any Russia strategy must account for the stage of
insanity that Putin has reached.
"The
use of Novichok is frightening - and that is Putin's strategy."
DER
SPIEGEL: Should Germany impose sanctions on Russia?
Navalny:
The best approach is to protect your own people and society from Russia's
criminal money. What Putin cares about is power and personal enrichment, and
the two are inseparably linked. How many billions can he give to his daughters,
his friends? It would hurt them if Europe were to finally set limits,
confiscate their assets and no longer allow them to travel. Despite all the
sanctions imposed so far, things are still quite comfortable for these people
in the West. Nothing will change as long as the Russian elite can use Europe’s
infrastructure.
DER
SPIEGEL: Should Germany stop construction of the Nord Stream 2 natural gas
pipeline?
Navalny:
That's Germany's business. Decide for yourself! Sanctions against Russia as a
whole will not help. What we need are sanctions against specific offenders, and
I'm telling you: They would be welcomed by 95 percent of the Russian people.
Then the beneficiaries of the corrupt system would no longer be able to enjoy
life in Berlin.
DER
SPIEGEL: There's a powerful man, who is visibly pleased about your condition
and who has been waging a private war against you for years: the businessman
Yevgeny Prigozhin, who controls a mercenary army and is known by the nickname
"Putin's chef." What role do you think he played?
Navalny:
We've gone up against quite a lot of people who have access to certain
resources, a number of generals in the intelligence agencies, for example.
Could I imagine that Prigozhin has access to Novichok? A man who had three
Russian journalists killed in Africa? No, because if he did, he probably would
have poisoned half the world by now.
"When
my hands shake, it's not from fear - it's from this stuff."
DER
SPIEGEL: When do you plan to return to Russia?
Navalny: My
job is to get back in shape as soon as possible so that I can go back. My
physiotherapist started practicing juggling with me yesterday to improve my
coordination so that my hands point in the same direction as my eyes.
DER
SPIEGEL: More than 4 million people have subscribed to your YouTube channel.
When is the next episode coming?
Navalny:
I’ve been thinking about that for quite a while. If I were to report from
Berlin, it would look as though Alexei Navalny wanted to talk about the
revolution but was sitting abroad himself. I have no desire for this emigrant
nonsense. I don't want to be the opposition leader in exile. I am a politician
who calls for concrete actions and who exposes himself to the risks. That’s why
I'll go back to YouTube once I return to Moscow.
DER
SPIEGEL: Has the Russian Embassy contacted you? You are, after all, a sick
citizen abroad.
Navalny: I
just read their statements in the media. They're demanding medical tests, blood
samples, though there should still be plenty of my blood in Omsk. They're
naturally not interested in dealing with the matter as such. All they care
about is painting the German government in the worst possible light. The next
thing they'll do surely is accuse Angela Merkel of having personally poisoned
me with Novichok.
DER
SPIEGEL: Has your view of the world changed?
Navalny:
There are so many people in Russia who turn their back on politics at some
point out of frustration. But my faith in people has grown stronger. Sure, we
have seen villains and murderers in this story, but there are also all the
people who fought and brought me here.
DER
SPIEGEL: You've been asked many times: If everything in Russia is as bad as you
say, why didn't Putin try to eliminate you long ago?
Navalny:
There has to be a silver lining for me in this story. Finally, people will stop
asking that question.
DER
SPIEGEL: Mr. Navalny, we thank you for this interview.
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