UK Imposes Sanctions on Russian GRU After Inquiry Finds Putin Personally Responsible for 2018 Novichok Attack
Britain sanctions entire GRU and summons Moscow’s ambassador after inquiry holds President Putin morally accountable for Salisbury nerve-agent poisonings
Britain has announced a sweeping sanctions package against GRU, Russia’s military intelligence agency, in response to the findings of a public inquiry that held Russian President Vladimir Putin responsible for the 2018 nerve-agent attack in Salisbury.
The inquiry concluded that the poisoning of former double agent Sergei Skripal and the subsequent death of British civilian Dawn Sturgess were the result of a state-sanctioned assassination operation.
The same inquiry described the deployment and disposal of the nerve agent as “reckless” and declared Putin morally responsible for ordering the attack.
The decision triggered immediate diplomatic action: the UK government summoned Russia’s ambassador to demand an explanation and imposed sanctions on the GRU in its entirety.
In addition, a number of individual cyber- and military-intelligence officers were placed under sanction for their alleged involvement not only in the Salisbury poisoning but also in a broader campaign of hostile and destabilizing operations across Europe and Ukraine.
The poisoning operation exploited a discarded perfume bottle laden with the banned nerve agent Novichok — a weapon which, upon discovery by Sturgess, led to her fatal exposure; her partner was seriously injured but survived alongside surviving victims Skripal and his daughter.
The inquiry’s findings include sharp criticism of the Kremlin’s disregard for innocent life and highlight grave failures in protecting the public.
A senior former judge leading the inquiry described the attack as deliberately authorised at the highest level of the Russian state.
The sanctions draw a firm red line: Britain insists it will hold state actors accountable when chemical weapons are deployed on its soil, underscoring its commitment to security, rule of law, and the prohibition of chemical warfare in the modern era.