Scotland Yard believes two-man hit team led Salisbury nerve agent attack on behalf of the Kremlin
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A TWO-man hit team led the Salisbury nerve agent attack on Sergei and Yulia Skripal, Scotland Yard believes.
The pair are thought to have left the UK the next morning after carrying out the attempted assassination on behalf of the Kremlin.
They are now thought to be back in Russia and under the protection of President Vladimir Putin. Met anti-terror cops and spooks have spent weeks hunting the hitmen who targeted ex-Russian double agent Skripal and his daughter Yulia with deadly Novichok nerve agent.
And they are now convinced they have made a huge breakthrough.
The inquiry is thought to be focusing on at least two key "persons of interest" - almost certainly with close ties to Russia.
But both are believed to have fled the UK within 24 hours of the bungled assassination on March 4.
Sources last night said investigators were determined to bring a criminal case against those responsible.
One said: "The ultimate aim has always been to bring them to justice.
"Obviously if they're no longer in the UK, it makes it much more challenging." It is thought highly unlikely officials will make any major announcement in the coming days about the fast-moving probe.
Earlier this month Scotland Yard set out the scale of their investigation, revealing how 2,300 exhibits had been seized and 4,000 hours of CCTV scanned.
But there was no mention of any suspects in the force's 879-word statement.
In April reports suggested key suspects had been identified.
Yet the authorities quickly played those down.
Sergei, 66, and Yulia, 33, were left fighting for their lives after being poisoned by Novichok smeared on to the front door of Mr Skripal's home.
Incredibly, both survived and are now being guarded round-the-clock as they recover.
Officials managed to identify two key suspects in the murder of Alexander Litvinenko, the former Russian agent poisoned with polonium-210 at a London hotel in 2006.
Police identified Andrey Lugovoy and Dmitry Kovtun thanks to Litvinenko's death-bed account and a radiation trail leading back to Russia.
But Russia refused all extradition requests for the pair.
Both men have always denied wrongdoing and Lugovoy was given diplomatic immunity after becoming a Russian MP.