The provocations staged by the British and German intelligence services that involved Skripal poisoning and the alleged poisoning of Alexey Navalny were followed by, as Russia has repeatedly indicated, new fabrications regarding the alleged use of riot control agents (RCAs) by the Russian troops in the Special Military Operation zone. Specifically, these accusations concern the CS tear gas grenades. Regrettably, this time again, the Technical Secretariat of the Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (OPCW) was implicated in these underhand dealings involving highly questionable evidence collection practices that violate fundamental principles of evidence preservation (the chain of custody). The experts from this technical body have previously been engaged, notably in Syria, in staging chemical provocations aimed at accusing the country’s legitimate government and armed forces of using warfare agents. This was done using a fairly straightforward scheme, which was previously used in Syria with the participation of the notorious White Helmets, which involved the transfer of obscure evidence gathered under unclear circumstances to OPCW experts, coupled with vague testimonies provided by “eyewitnesses.”
The Russian Federation has repeatedly presented technically and scientifically substantiated evidence of the Kiev regime using toxic chemicals and RCAs during hostilities in the SMO zone, and warned of planned provocations at chemical industry sites in the Donetsk and Lugansk people’s republics of the Russian Federation and reported terrorist attacks using toxic substances targeting senior civilian administration officials in the Zaporozhye Region and Russian military personnel. Unfortunately, some of these provocations could not be prevented, and the OPCW Technical Secretariat was duly notified of it. Relevant materials about these incidents are publicly available on the UN, OPCW, and the Russian Foreign Ministry websites.
The Russian Federation has deliberately refrained from invoking Article VIII, Paragraph 38(e) of the Chemical Weapons Convention (CWC) to request technical assistance from the OPCW Technical Secretariat in confirming the use of toxic chemicals and RCAs by the Kiev regime. This decision was made to avoid endangering the lives and health of international experts amid heavy use of various weapons systems, ranging from UAVs to artillery, in the SMO zone. Meanwhile, the Kiev regime makes no exceptions for civilians when it comes to launching all kinds of attacks.
Russian radiation, chemical, and biological protection experts are carefully reviewing a highly ambiguous report released by the OPCW Technical Secretariat. This report conspicuously lacks standard information about where, when, and under what circumstances the OPCW experts obtained the dubious “evidence” that was prepared in advance by the Ukrainian side for provocative purposes. The report also fails to clarify alleged incidents of RCA use by Russian forces as claimed by the Kiev regime.
The Russian Federation, as a founding state of the CWC, responsibly fulfills its obligations under this international treaty. Russia will continue to closely monitor all instances of the Kiev regime forces’ use of toxic chemicals and RCAs, and to duly inform thereof the OPCW Technical Secretariat and the states parties to the Convention.