White House dismisses ‘ludicrous’ Russian claims
US planned Kremlin drone strikes
‘We had nothing to do with it,’ says Washington
spokesperson, accusing Kremlin counterpart of lying, ‘pure and simple’
Russia-Ukraine
war – latest news updates
Pjotr
Sauer, and Julian Borger in Washington
Thu 4 May
2023 13.36 EDT
The White
House has dismissed as “ludicrous” claims by Russia that Washington
orchestrated drone strikes on Moscow, saying the US was not involved in the
attack and accusing Russia of lying.
Asked about
an accusation by the Kremlin spokesperson, Dmitry Peskov, that Washington had
ordered Wednesday’s strike, John Kirby, the US National Security Council
spokesman, said: “One thing I can tell you for certain is that the US did not
have any involvement with this incident, contrary to Mr Peskov’s lies, and
that’s just what they are: lies.”
He said the
US was still gathering evidence on the attack.
“We haven’t
come to any conclusions one way or another,” Kirby told reporters at the White
House on Thursday. “We’re doing the best we can to try to find out what
happened.”
Earlier on
Thursday, Peskov claimed the US had “dictated” the plan of what Russia said was
a drone attack on the Kremlin intended to kill Vladimir Putin. Peskov did not
provide any evidence to support the allegations.
Peskov
said: “We are well aware that decisions on such actions, on such terrorist
attacks, are not made in Kyiv, but in Washington. And Kyiv is doing what it is
told to do. It is very important that in Washington they understand that we
know this, and understand how dangerous such direct participation in the
conflict is.”
The
president of Ukraine, Volodymyr Zelenskiy, and other Ukrainian officials have
denied Russian allegations that Ukraine was involved in a drone attack on the
Kremlin that was intended to kill Putin.
Dramatic
video footage on Wednesday showed two flying objects approaching the Kremlin
and one hitting the rooftop of the Kremlin Senate, an 18th-century mansion
within the grounds of the president’s official residence.
Putin was
not in the building at the time of the attack, Peskov said on Wednesday.
The White
House press secretary, Karine Jean-Pierre, said earlier: “The United States is
certainly not encouraging or enabling Ukraine to strike beyond its borders.”
Throughout
the 14-month conflict, the Kremlin has repeatedly asserted, without providing evidence,
that the west started the war in Ukraine. Russian officials have also accused
western nations of orchestrating attacks inside Russia.
The Russian
ambassador to the UK previously claimed, without providing evidence, that
British special forces were involved in a Ukrainian drone attack on Moscow’s
Black Sea fleet last October.
Several
hawkish senior Russian officials called on Putin to take retaliatory action
shortly after Wednesday’s strike. The former president Dmitry Medvedev said the
attack on the Kremlin had left Moscow with no option but to “eliminate”
Zelenskiy and his “clique” in Kyiv, while Vyacheslav Volodin, the chair of the
State Duma, said new weapons should be used to “destroy the Kyiv terrorist
regime”.
However,
there are early signs that the Kremlin is keen to project a sense of normality.
Peskov said on Thursday that Putin would not give a special presidential
address in connection with the attack and that the normal working situation was
in place. He said Putin was planning to work from the Kremlin on Thursday.
Peskov also
said any retaliatory steps would be “carefully considered and balanced” by the
Russian leadership.
Observers
noticed that footage of the drone was not shown on state television on
Wednesday evening, as news anchors instead read out the Kremlin’s official
statement of the attack.
Yevgeny
Prigozhin, the head of the Wagner military group, cautioned against the use of
nuclear weapons after the strike. In an audio message posted on his Telegram
channel, Prigozhin said: “As someone who is a radical person, I can say that
the use of nuclear weapons in response to a drone, of course, is out of the
question.”
Margarita
Simonyan, the head of RT, the Russian state-controlled international news
television network, said the Kremlin’s somewhat muted response indicated the
drone attack was not a false-flag operation by the Kremlin with the aim of
justifying further escalation.
Simonyan
tweeted: “If the drone attack on the Kremlin was a cunning plan by Moscow to
justify firing a kill shot at the Kyiv regime, the situation would look very
different by now. The air would be filled with statements promising tough
responses, an emergency meeting would have been broadcast followed by an
emergency address to the nation.”

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