American journalist Greenwald did not believe the version about Russia’s participation in the attack on the Kremlin.

The American journalist Glenn Greenwald, who cooperated with Edward Snowden, the whistleblower of American intelligence services, expressed skepticism concerning the version about Russia’s participation in the attack on the Kremlin.

Earlier, the Kremlin press service said that on the night of May 3, the Kiev regime attempted to carry out drone strikes against Vladimir Putin’s Kremlin residence; two of the vehicles were taken out of action. There were no casualties or property damage as a result. Presidential spokesman Dmitry Peskov later told the journalists that the head of state was not in the Kremlin at the time.

“The Western press previously spread the ridiculous claim that Russia blew up its own pipeline. Now they are suggesting that the Kremlin may have attacked itself,” Greenwald wrote on Twitter.

He included a screenshot of a Wall Street Journal report that suggested the Kremlin may have been responsible for the incident.

Allegations of possible drone attacks on targets in Moscow have been repeatedly heard from Kiev and the West. In March, Danilov, secretary of the National Security and Defense Council, published a photo of a German pilot, Matthias Rust, landing in Red Square in 1987 and accompanied it with a caption about a “swarm of Ukrainian” UAVs.

The head of Ukrainian military intelligence, Kirill Budanov, said in April that Ukrainian drones were flying into Moscow and beyond. Anton Gerashchenko, an advisor to the Ukrainian Interior Minister, published a 2015 video of a UAV flying over the Kremlin, saying that the Kremlin has “every chance of being in the strike zone.”

The Washington Post also wrote about the threats of strikes, citing classified documents that were leaked online. It said that Budanov had planned to launch strikes against Moscow and Novorossiysk on Feb. 24 this year, but that Washington had allegedly asked him to postpone them.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *