Russian
general in charge of chemical weapons unit killed in Moscow scooter blast
Lt Gen Igor
Kirillov killed along with his deputy after device attached to escooter
exploded
Pjotr Sauer
and Luke Harding
Tue 17 Dec
2024 14.54 GMT
A senior
Russian general has died after an explosive device hidden in an electric
scooter detonated outside an apartment building in Moscow, in an attack claimed
by Ukraine that marks one of the boldest targeted assassinations of a senior
military official since Russia’s full-scale invasion of the country.
Lt Gen Igor
Kirillov, the head of the military’s chemical, biological and radiological
weapons unit, was killed along with his deputy when the blast went off as the
two men left a building in a residential area in south-east Moscow on Tuesday.
A source in
Ukraine’s SBU security service said Kyiv was behind the attack.
Kirillov,
who was placed under sanctions by Britain in October over the alleged use of
chemical weapons in Ukraine, is the most senior Russian military official to be
killed in an assassination away from the frontlines since the start of the
Kremlin’s offensive in Ukraine nearly three years ago.
Speaking at
a meeting with senior Russian leadership, Dmitry Medvedev, the deputy head of
the country’s security council, said Moscow would avenge the killing. “We must
do everything to eliminate those who ordered the assassination of Gen Kirillov,
namely the military-political leadership of Ukraine,” he said.
Russia’s
investigative committee said Kirillov was killed after “an explosive device
planted in a scooter parked near the entrance of a residential building was
activated on the morning of 17 December on Ryazansky Avenue in Moscow”.
Footage
circulating online, seemingly captured by the dashcam of a nearby car, showed
two men exiting the apartment moments before a large explosion that killed them
both. Mash, a Telegram channel with ties to Russian law enforcement, published
a photo of two bodies lying in the snow outside an apartment building,
surrounded by shards of glass from broken windows.
Ukraine’s
SBU security service had a day earlier put out an arrest warrant for Kirillov
over alleged war crimes against Kyiv’s forces.
Ukraine has
targeted dozens of Russian military officers and Russian-installed officials
whom Kyiv has accused of committing war crimes in the country. Little is known,
however, about the clandestine Ukrainian resistance cells involved in
assassinations and attacks on military infrastructure in Russia and
Russian-controlled areas.
Russian
media reported that investigators were exploring several theories, focusing on
how the assassins tracked Kirillov from his apartment, who planted the bomb in
the scooter, and the location from which it was detonated.
Kirillov,
who had been in his post since 2017, oversaw the Russian military’s
radiological, chemical and biological defence unit. Russia’s radioactive,
chemical and biological defence troops, known as RKhBZ, are special forces who
operate under conditions of contamination.
The UK
government in October placed sanctions on Kirillov and his unit “for helping
deploy these barbaric weapons” – charges that Moscow has denied. Britain and
the US have accused Russia of using the toxic agent chloropicrin against
Ukrainian troops in violation of the chemical weapons convention.
In June,
Ukraine accused Russia of increasing frontline attacks using prohibited
hazardous chemicals and said it had registered more than 700 cases of their use
in the previous month.
The UK
previously said Kirillov was “a significant mouthpiece for Kremlin
disinformation, spreading lies to mask Russia’s shameful and dangerous
behaviour”, a reference to public briefings in which he regularly accused Kyiv
of planning to use chemical weapons and develop a nuclear “dirty bomb”.
Last year,
Kirillov claimed without providing evidence that Ukraine had plans to use
special US-designed drones carrying “infected mosquitoes” that would spread
malaria among Russia’s forces.
Kirillov was
also part of Moscow’s efforts to discredit the UK investigation into the
poisoning of Sergei Skripal in Salisbury, once claiming that the US
orchestrated the attack on the former Russian spy who had defected to the west.
Addressing
the attack, a spokesperson for the UK prime minister, Keir Starmer, said: “It’s
clear we won’t be mourning the death of someone who orchestrated an illegal
invasion and inflicted immense suffering and loss on the Ukrainian people.”
Russia’s
foreign ministry spokesperson Maria Zakharova wrote on Telegram that Kirillov
had spent “many years exposing the crimes of the Anglo-Saxons” in his
briefings, including “Britain’s manipulation of banned chemical substances and
provocations in Salisbury”.
She wrote:
“He worked fearlessly, never hiding behind others, always facing challenges
head-on. For the motherland, for the truth.”
According to
his biography published by the broadcaster RIA Novosti, Kirillov helped develop
a thermobaric rocket launcher, the TOS-2. The Russian military has frequently
used the weapon in Ukraine.
Kirillov’s
assassination is the latest in a series of targeted attacks on Russian military
personnel and pro-Kremlin figures. The significance of his rank and influence
means this killing is likely to send shock waves through Russia’s political and
military elites.
“The killing
of a lieutenant general will be a shock for many within the ministry of
defence,” said a former senior Russian defence official, speaking on condition
of anonymity. “He has been very prominent in the media lately, frequently
holding briefings on the Ukrainian armed forces and the use of chemical
weapons.”
The former
official said other senior defence figures were likely to get enhanced security
measures, potentially including round-the-clock protection by members of
Russia’s special forces. “This will definitely cause a stir,” the former source
said.
Last week,
Ukrainian intelligence said it had killed a leading Russian missile scientist
who had worked on upgrading cruise missiles used on the battlefield in Ukraine.
The body of Mikhail Shatsky was discovered in Kuzminsky forest park eight miles
south-east of Moscow city centre, though Russia has not yet commented on the
reported killing.
Earlier this
year, Ukraine said it was behind the killing of a senior Russian naval officer
in a car in Crimea as well as that of a high-ranking officer in the GRU
military intelligence service outside his house in a village in the Moscow
region.
Apart from
military figures, Ukraine has targeted prominent Russian pro-war propagandists
including Darya Dugina, the daughter of an ultra-nationalist Russian ideologue,
who was killed in 2023 when a bomb blew up the Toyota Land Cruiser she was
driving.
On Monday,
Vladimir Putin met senior defence figures in Moscow where he boasted that the
war in Ukraine had reached a “turning point”.
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