After the attack by two drones on the Kremlin on Wednesday night, “Moscow”, according to the Welt newspaper, “is talking about a terrorist assassination attempt by Ukraine against President Vladimir Putin”.

Ukraine denies the claim. “My country has nothing to do with it, said Mykhailo Podoliak, adviser to Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelesny,” according to the newspaper. “Such a move would give Ukraine no advantage on the battlefield and would only provoke Russia to take more radical measures.”

Some observers suspect, according to Welt, “that it could to be a provocation by the Russians to justify further escalation in Ukraine or even attacks on the Ukrainian president.” “It is strange,” notes the paper, “that one of the videos shows two people climbing a ladder to the dome before the drone explodes. This process fuels the suspicion that these individuals were waiting for the drone, and possibly wanted to prevent a fire from starting.”

Other observers say Moscow is unlikely to have organized such an operation, “as the incident renders the Russian military incapacitated, and reinforces the impression that the regime is no longer in full control of the situation,” the newspaper said.

In the meantime, Russia today accused the USA that they are behind the attackas he described it, with an unmanned aircraft (drone) against him Kremlin to target the assassination of President Vladimir Putin, with Washington calling these claims false.

A day after accusing Ukraine of what it described as a terrorist attack, the Kremlin turned its attention to the US, offering no evidence to back up its charge.

Russian claims that the US was behind the drone strike against the Kremlin are false, White House national security spokesman John Kirby said today. He also told MSNBC that the US does not encourage or enable Ukraine to carry out strikes outside its borders.