MOSCOW :
A SENIOR Russian General was
killed on Tuesday by
a bomb hidden in
a scooter outside his apartment building in
Moscow, a
day after
U k r a i n e ’ s
security service
levelled criminal
charges against
him. A Ukrainian official
said the service carried out the
attack.
Lieutenant General Igor
Kirillov, the chief of the military’s
nuclear, biological and chemical
protection forces, was killed as
he left for his office. Kirillov’s
assistant also died in the attack.
Kirillov, 54, was under sanctions from several countries,
including the UK and Canada,
for his actions in Moscow’s war
in Ukraine. On Monday, Ukraine’s
Security Service, or SBU, opened
a criminal investigation against
him, accusing him of directing
the use of banned chemical
weapons.
An official with the SBU said
the agency was behind the attack.
The official, who spoke on condition of anonymity because they
were not authorised to release
the information, described
Kirillov as a “war criminal and
an entirely legitimate target.”
The SBU has said it recorded
more than 4,800 occasions when
Russia used chemical weapons
on the battlefield since its fullscale invasion in February 2022.
In May, the US State Department
said that it had recorded the use
of chloropicrin, a poison gas first
deployed in World War I, against
Ukrainian troops.
Russia has denied using any
chemical weapons in Ukraine and, in turn, has accused Kyiv of using toxic agents in combat. Kirillov, who took his current job in 2017, was one of the most high-profile figures to level those accusations. He held numerous briefings to accuse the Ukrainian military of using toxic agents and planning to launch attacks with radioactive substances — claims that Ukraine and its Western allies rejected as propaganda.
The bomb used in Tuesday’s attack was triggered remotely, according to Russian news reports. Images from the scene showed shattered windows and scorched brickwork.
Russia’s top state investigative agency said it’s investigating Kirillov’s death as a case of terrorism, and officials in Moscow vowed to punish Ukraine.
Dmitry Medvedev, Deputy head of Russia’s Security Council chaired by President Vladimir Putin, described the attack as an attempt by Kyiv to distract public attention away from its military failures and vowed that its “senior military-political leadership will face inevitable retribution.”
Over the past year, Russia has been on the front foot in the war in Ukraine, grinding deeper into the eastern region of Donetsk region despite heavy losses.
Ukraine tried to change the dynamic with an incursion into Russia’s Kursk region, but it has continued to slowly lose ground on its own territory.
Since Russia invaded, several prominent figures have been killed in targeted attacks believed to have been carried out by Ukraine.
Darya Dugina, a commentator on Russian TV channels and the daughter of Kremlin-linked nationalist ideologue Alexander Dugin, died in a 2022 car bombing that investigators suspected was aimed at her father.
Vladlen Tatarsky, a popular military blogger, died in April 2023, when a statuette given to him at a party in St. Petersburg exploded. A Russian woman, who said that she presented the figurine on orders of a contact in Ukraine, was convicted in the case and handed a 27-year sentence.
In December 2023, Illia Kiva, a former pro-Moscow Ukrainian lawmaker who fled to Russia, was shot and killed near Moscow. The Ukrainian military intelligence lauded the killing, warning that other “traitors of Ukraine” would share the same fate.
On December 9, an explosive device was placed under a car in the Russian-occupied Ukrainian city of Donetsk, reportedly targeting Sergei Yevsyukov, the former head of the Olenivka Prison where dozens of Ukrainian prisoners of war died in a missile strike in July 2022. One other was injured in the blast.