Chemical weapons used by Ukraine likely of Western origin – Moscow
An investigation into a reported chemical weapons attack by Ukraine in Kursk Region has found that the munitions used likely originated in the West, a senior Russian military official has said.
On Monday, acting Governor Aleksey Smirnov reported that a Russian repair crew had come under fire from Ukrainian forces and suffered from poisoning. Lieutenant General Igor Kirillov, who heads the chemical and biological defense forces, shared the preliminary results of an investigation conducted by his troops.
”Those were smoke munitions. The smoke-producing agent is typical for munitions used by the US and Germany in terms of its composition… It is based on hexachloroethane and zinc oxide,” he told the news outlet Zvezda TV.
White smoke produced by the mixture of the two compounds is mildly toxic and has a range of military and public-order applications.
Kirillov said the military and the Health Ministry had organized the collection of samples at the site of the reported attack in line with the requirements of the Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (OPCW). A Russian lab accredited by the international watchdog is studying them, he said.
Russian officials have some unanswered questions regarding the additives used in the munitions, the general said, “but we have time and we are not revealing those yet.”
The force commanded by Kirillov, which is responsible for protecting troops and civilians from weapons of mass destruction, has identified around 400 incidents in which chemical weapons were used by Ukraine since hostilities with Russia started in 2022. Most cases involved chemical agents typically used by police, but some posed a lethal threat.
”There were cases in which toxins were used, which could only have been synthesized in the US, because no other nation’s industry can produce them,” he said.
Kirillov said the OPCW had not taken action in response to Russian complaints beyond its obligation to share the allegations with the public. There were “no investigations, no inquiries, nothing was done.”
He also addressed Russian concerns that Kiev could build a so-called ‘dirty bomb’ – a chemical explosive device with a shell of radioactive material, which is designed to contaminate a large area. “I believe they have one,” he said.