Close Menu
The Financial News 247The Financial News 247
  • Home
  • News
  • Business
  • Finance
  • Companies
  • Investing
  • Markets
  • Lifestyle
  • Tech
  • More
    • Opinion
    • Climate
    • Web Stories
    • Spotlight
    • Press Release
What's On

How AI Is Tracking Illegal Wildlife Trade Hidden In Online Marketplaces

March 15, 2026
Restaurant Le Colonial returning to NYC’s midtown — switching sides

Restaurant Le Colonial returning to NYC’s midtown — switching sides

March 15, 2026

Naval Ravikant’s AI Thesis Is Playing Out In Public Markets

March 15, 2026
Landlord Charles Cohen lands cafe at Decoration & Design Building amid Fortress dispute

Landlord Charles Cohen lands cafe at Decoration & Design Building amid Fortress dispute

March 15, 2026
Airline CEOs urge Congress to end standoff, pay airport security officers

Airline CEOs urge Congress to end standoff, pay airport security officers

March 15, 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
The Financial News 247The Financial News 247
Demo
  • Home
  • News
  • Business
  • Finance
  • Companies
  • Investing
  • Markets
  • Lifestyle
  • Tech
  • More
    • Opinion
    • Climate
    • Web Stories
    • Spotlight
    • Press Release
The Financial News 247The Financial News 247
Home » “Putin’s Poisons” Used In UK Attacks Portend Chemical War On NATO

“Putin’s Poisons” Used In UK Attacks Portend Chemical War On NATO

By News RoomFebruary 28, 2026No Comments5 Mins Read
Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn WhatsApp Telegram Reddit Email Tumblr
“Putin’s Poisons” Used In UK Attacks Portend Chemical War On NATO
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

Russia’s “theatrical assassinations” of Vladimir Putin’s critics, even those who made it to seeming sanctuary in the United Kingdom, via exotic state-concocted poisons could presage the mass deployment of chemical weapons by Putin’s armies in a future war with NATO, says an eminent scholar at King’s College London.

Elena Grossfeld, a world-leading expert on Russia’s shadow war on the West, including the killing of democrats and defectors stretching from Siberian prison camps to the British capital by Moscow’s intelligence operatives, says these ongoing attacks could one day morph into chemical assaults on NATO troops.

A scholar at the prestigious King’s Centre for the Study of Intelligence, Grossfeld told me in an interview that across the blogs of fervent Kremlin nationalists and “Russian propagandists, they are already in a war with NATO.”

The recent joint finding by five European governments, of the United Kingdom, Germany, France, Sweden, and the Netherlands, that Russian democratic torchbearer Alexei Navalny was assassinated via a poison banned under the Chemical Weapons Convention underscores Moscow’s contempt for international treaties constraining its weapons of war or its macabre statecraft of extrajudicial killings.

The assassination of Putin’s foes, whether in Britain or inside Russia, via internationally prohibited chemical weaponry, “is a form of statecraft, conducted by intelligence organizations on behalf of the state,” Grossfeld says.

Russia’s use of banned chemical weapons along Ukraine battlefronts, and dispatch of poison-armed hit squads transnationally, all continue the Kremlin’s assaults on the UN-backed world order based on rule of law.

Russia’s flouting of treaties like the Chemical Weapons Convention could escalate ahead, during any full-scale war with the West.

“I don’t believe that in case of full on war with NATO Russia will care about conventions it repeatedly ignored before,” Grossfeld says.

“In case of war with NATO,” she adds, Russian deployment of chemical munitions could explode.

In a doctoral dissertation titled “The Strategic Culture of KGB and its Legacy,” Grossfeld traced a century of Russian state-ordered assassinations, starting after the communist revolution of 1917, spiking first under Joseph Stalin, and then again during Putin’s reign.

Stalin orchestrated the macabre murder of his onetime rival, the Bolshevik leader Leon Trotsky, a continent away in Mexico, while executing his fellow revolutionaries across the Soviet Union.

These days, while Kremlin-dispatched assassins still sometimes use pistols to target “enemies of the state” like political reformists and journalists calling for a post-Putin democracy, the most prominent critics of Russia’s Neo-Tsar are subjected to poisons that are held only inside the highest rings of power, including the president and his closest military and security lieutenants.

Using specialized state-perfected poisons, like the extreme toxin Novichok developed by Soviet weapons designers, or the radioactive polonium that can only be produced inside a nuclear reactor, sends out a powerful message that the Kremlin has hand-crafted this instrument of terror to Russian dissidents, and to government leaders around the world.

“Poisoning in general is a particularly frightening and intimidating form of assassination,” Grossfeld says.

“I think the majority of Russians are terrified of joining protests regardless of the method of assassination, and repression within Russia is quite effective, but of course those theatrics add on.”

“Russian, and before that the Soviet intelligence in certain periods, did indeed carry out assassinations worldwide.”

Killings by Kremlin operatives skyrocketed under Putin, who outdid all of his Soviet predecessors in lethally targeting his critics.

The most theatrical hits, with the most bizarre poisons, she says, are reserved for “those that are considered traitors,” like the former Russian intelligence agents Alexander Litvinenko and Sergei Skripal, who both found asylum in the UK.

Litvinenko died in agony after being poisoned in London with radioactive polonium, with the British government reporting, following a years-long investigation, that the Kremlin-orchestrated assassination was probably personally approved by President Putin, a former KGB mastermind.

The coalition of European nations that investigated Alexei Navalny’s death, via bio-samples smuggled out of Russia, stated two weeks ago that: “The UK, Sweden, France, Germany and The Netherlands are confident that Alexei Navalny was poisoned with a lethal toxin.”

“Navalny died while held in prison, meaning Russia had the means, motive and opportunity to administer this poison to him.”

“Russia’s repeated disregard for international law and the Chemical Weapons Convention is clear,” they added.

In the earlier Novichok poisonings of Navalny, and before him Sergei Skripal, they added, “only the Russian state had the combined means, motive and disregard for international law to carry out the attacks.”

“These latest findings once again underline the need to hold Russia accountable for its repeated violations of the Chemical Weapons Convention.”

“We and our partners,” they vowed, “will make use of all policy levers at our disposal to continue to hold Russia to account.”

During our interview, scholar Grossfeld told me “the operatives in charge of developing and executing the assassinations should be named and sanctioned.”

Yet she added that any prosecution of Vladimir Putin would depend on regime change in Russia.

Yulia Navalnaya, Alexei Navalny’s wife and now head of the Russian democracy movement in exile, said in a powerful video recorded on the sidelines of the just-ended Munich Security Conference that the leaders of the five-power European coalition had personally delivered their finding that her martyred husband had been murdered with a rare banned poison.

“I will do everything in my power to fight for change in Russia,” she vowed. “The rule of thieves and murderers must end.”

“Alexei devoted his life to this. He died fighting for the truth.”

“I promised that I would continue his fight. I promised that the truth would be revealed.”

“And I will do everything to ensure that Putin and everyone involved are held accountable.”

Meanwhile, the Netherlands-based International Criminal Court has already prepared an arrest warrant for Vladimir Putin on charges of crimes against humanity committed during his invasion of Ukraine.

One of the top American scholars on war crimes, and on the International Criminal Court, told me in an earlier interview that if Russia’s long-persecuted democrats somehow managed to gain power – perhaps the liberal coalition headed by Yulia Navalnaya – the Kremlin’s new leaders could hand Putin and his generals over to the ICC for trial.

Putin
Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email

Related News

How AI Is Tracking Illegal Wildlife Trade Hidden In Online Marketplaces

March 15, 2026

Naval Ravikant’s AI Thesis Is Playing Out In Public Markets

March 15, 2026

How AI Is Transforming Enterprise Software Into Living Systems

March 11, 2026

VC-Backed Style Brands That Are Reshaping Furniture And Home Decor

March 10, 2026

Venture Capital Is Discovering Fashion Tech

March 7, 2026

Will The Iran Conflict Reshape Venture Capital?

March 6, 2026
Add A Comment
Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Don't Miss
Restaurant Le Colonial returning to NYC’s midtown — switching sides

Restaurant Le Colonial returning to NYC’s midtown — switching sides

Business March 15, 2026

When restaurant Le Colonial returns to the city in the summer of 2027 at Vornado-…

Naval Ravikant’s AI Thesis Is Playing Out In Public Markets

March 15, 2026
Landlord Charles Cohen lands cafe at Decoration & Design Building amid Fortress dispute

Landlord Charles Cohen lands cafe at Decoration & Design Building amid Fortress dispute

March 15, 2026
Airline CEOs urge Congress to end standoff, pay airport security officers

Airline CEOs urge Congress to end standoff, pay airport security officers

March 15, 2026
Stay In Touch
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Pinterest
  • Instagram
  • YouTube
  • Vimeo
Our Picks
NYC’s office market rebounding from weak February behind jumbo deals

NYC’s office market rebounding from weak February behind jumbo deals

March 15, 2026
BXP signs tenants at 360 Park Ave. South

BXP signs tenants at 360 Park Ave. South

March 15, 2026
Oil prices will drop after Iran war ends ‘in the next few weeks,’ Energy Secretary Chris Wright says

Oil prices will drop after Iran war ends ‘in the next few weeks,’ Energy Secretary Chris Wright says

March 15, 2026
Mamdani’s tax-&-spend plans leave NYC bond investors leery

Mamdani’s tax-&-spend plans leave NYC bond investors leery

March 14, 2026
The Financial News 247
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of use
  • Advertise
  • Contact us
© 2026 The Financial 247. All Rights Reserved.

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.