There are fears Vladimir Putin could resort to using “chemical or biological weapons of mass destruction” on Ukraine should the war continue or reach a stalemate.
The Time reported that Russia used chemical weapons 6,540 time in 2025 and since the start of the war on 24 February 2022 they have been used more than 9,000 times.
European and Ukrainian officials have said Russia has used chloropicrin which is a choking agent, this has not been used since World War I.
The Time reported, “The concern, voiced quietly in allied capitals, is that a prolonged or stalemated war in Ukraine could tempt the Kremlin to resort to more dangerous battlefield weapons.
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“President Putin has repeatedly rattled the nuclear sabre while remaining conspicuously silent about chemical or biological weapons of mass destruction.”
There is also fears that Russia could use the deadly nerve agent Novichok which was used in Salisbury to poison Sergei and Yulia Skripal in a failed assassination attempt.
Sergei Skripal is a former Russian double agent for the British intelligence agencies, also a police office Nick Bailey was also taken into intensive care after he attended the incident, on 4 March 2018.
Hamish de Bretton-Gordon, a former British army officer warned, “It is fair to assume that Russia’s chemical weapons programme is still extant. If Novichok were used on a wider scale, it could have a massive impact.”
Former Commander of the UK Joint Forces Command, General Sir Richard Barrons said that should the Kremlin use “chemical or biological weapons of mass destruction” it will provide very little military benefit and will have high costs for both sides.
General Sir Richard said, “You attract attention for a war crime, you run the risk of reciprocation, and there’s a double-edged sword — you may introduce your own forces to risk.”
He warned that wind direction always turns and should Moscow use such weapons, the chemicals could easily be blown on to Russia affecting their very own citizens.
