Kremlin says Britain was involved in Ukraine's missile strike on Russia


Smoke rises amid explosions from a Ukrainian strike on a Russian missile plant, in the course of the Russia-Ukraine conflict, in Bryansk, Russia March 10, 2026 in this screen grab from handout video. General Staff of Ukraine Armed Forces/Handout via REUTERS

MOSCOW, March 11 (Reuters) - The ⁠Kremlin on Wednesday accused British specialists of involvement in a ⁠deadly Ukrainian strike on the Russian city of Bryansk that ‌used British Storm Shadow missiles and said it would take Britain's role "into account".

The Bryansk regional governor said Tuesday's strike killed at least six civilians and injured 37 in ​what he called a "terrorist missile attack", without saying ⁠what was hit. Ukraine said ⁠it had struck a key plant producing missile components. Moscow accused it ⁠of ‌deliberately targeting civilians.

Asked by Reuters if there would be a military response to the use of British missiles against sovereign ⁠Russian territory, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said Russia ​would take into ‌account the British involvement.

"It is obvious that the launch of these ⁠missiles was ​impossible without British specialists," Peskov told reporters. "We are aware of this, we know it well, and we naturally take it into account."

"In order to prevent ⁠such barbaric actions by the Kyiv regime from ​continuing, the special military operation is being conducted," he said, adding that one of the goals of the operation was to demilitarise Ukraine.

There was ⁠no immediate comment from London, though Russia has repeatedly said that Ukraine needs Western expertise and Western-supplied targeting data and satellite imagery to fire advanced missiles deep into Russia.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy said that Kyiv ​had struck one of the most important ⁠military factories in Bryansk that produced electronics for Russian missiles.

Russian Foreign Ministry ​spokeswoman Maria Zakharova said the strike was ‌premeditated and directed against civilians, and challenged ​the U.N. to assess what had occurred.

(Reporting by Dmitry AntonovWriting by Maxim Rodionov; editing by Guy Faulconbridge and Philippa Fletcher)

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