Kremlin says response to Britain’s spy poisoning allegations and diplomat expulsions could come ‘any minute’
But Vladimir Putin’s spokesman refused to say if such action would come before Sunday’s presidential elections
Moscow said on Friday it could hit back at Britain at “any minute” with its own raft of punitive measures after the West blamed Russia directly for a nerve agent attack on a former double agent.
President Vladimir Putin’s spokesman Dmitry Peskov said Russia’s sanctions could come “any minute” even though he declined to say whether Moscow would deliver its response before Sunday’s presidential election.
“All the steps will be well thought out,” he said.
In a rare joint statement, the leaders of Britain, France, Germany and the US on Thursday condemned the attack on former double agent Sergei Skripal and his daughter Yulia as an “assault on UK sovereignty”.
Moscow has vehemently denied it had a hand in the poisoning of its former spy in the cathedral city of Salisbury early this month.
