Russian military’s chemical weapons chief killed in Moscow blast

The head of the Russian army’s chemical weapons division was killed on Tuesday in a brazen attack in Moscow claimed by Kyiv — the most senior military figure assassinated in Russia yet as the Kremlin’s campaign in Ukraine drags on. Igor Kirillov was killed along with his assistant when an explosive device attached to a scooter went off outside an apartment building in southeastern Moscow, Russian and Ukrainian officials said. The attack took place in a residential area in the capital a day after President Vladimir Putin boasted of Russian troop successes in Ukraine, nearly three years on from the Kremlin’s full-scale invasion of its pro-Western neighbour. Kirillov, 54, was the head of the Russian army’s chemical, biological and radiological weapons unit and was recently sanctioned by Britain over the alleged use of chemical weapons in Ukraine.A source in Ukraine’s SBU security service told AFP it was behind the early morning explosion in what it called a “special operation”, calling Kirillov a “war criminal.”  Russia’s Investigative Committee said an “explosive device planted in a scooter parked near the entrance of a residential building was activated on the morning of December 17 on Ryazansky Avenue in Moscow”.The blast shattered several windows of the building and severely damaged the front door, according to an AFP reporter on the scene. Russian authorities said they were probing the attack as “terrorism”.But the SBU source told AFP: “Kirillov was a war criminal and an absolutely legitimate target, as he gave orders to use banned chemical weapons against the Ukrainian military.”Such an inglorious end awaits all those who kill Ukrainians. Retribution for war crimes is inevitable.”- ‘Banned chemical weapons’ -By Tuesday evening, the Kremlin had not commented on the attack, even after the authorities named Kirillov as the victim.Ex-president Dmitry Medvedev said Russia must do everything it can to “destroy” Ukraine’s political and military leadership who ordered the attack.AFP was unable to verify video footage shared by an SBU source which showed a scooter exploding seconds after two men left a residential building.Residents said they had initially assumed the loud noise they heard came from a nearby construction site. Student Mikhail Mashkov, who lives in the building next door, said he was woken up by a “very loud explosion noise”, thinking “something fell at the construction site”, before looking outside. There have been assassinations on Russian territory before but such attacks in Moscow — where fighting in Ukraine often feels distant — are rare. Previous targets included nationalist writer Darya Dugina — killed in a car bomb attack outside Moscow in 2022 — and pro-conflict military correspondent Maxim Fomin — blown up in a Saint Petersburg cafe in 2023.Kirillov, who had been in his role since 2017, is the most senior Russian military official to be killed. His unit does not oversee Russia’s nuclear weapons.Kyiv had a day earlier charged Kirillov in absentia on allegations of committing “war crimes” against Ukraine.The SBU on Monday alleged more than 4,800 cases of Russia using chemical munitions since the start of the conflict in February 2022.- ‘Won’t mourn’ -Britain and the United States have accused Russia of using the toxic agent chloropicrin — a choking agent used widely in World War I — in violation of the Chemical Weapons Convention (CWC).The UK government in October slapped sanctions on Kirillov and his unit “for helping deploy these barbaric weapons” — charges that Moscow has denied.On Tuesday a spokesman for British Prime Minister Keir Starmer said London was “not going to mourn” Kirillov’s death, saying he had “imposed suffering and death on the Ukrainian people”.A US official said Tuesday on condition of anonymity that “the US was not aware of the operation in advance and we do not support or enable these kind of activities”.White House spokesman John Kirby earlier told CNN it was “without question” that the Russian military had “used chemical weapons and other agents to kill, to maim, to hurt the Ukrainian people and Ukrainian soldiers”.Russia has said it no longer possesses a military chemical arsenal.In lengthy televised briefings, Kirillov had regularly accused Kyiv and the West of running secret networks of bio-labs that were developing banned chemical agents across Ukraine — claims rejected by the West and independent fact-checking organisations.
Tue, 17 Dec 2024 18:13:36 GMT