In total, 145 people were killed and another 550 were injured in the shooting and the ensuing inferno that engulfed the venue’s upper floor as the shooting continued, with several explosions reported before the roof eventually collapsed.
However, a full year later, the authorities are yet to address many important questions — from Moscow’s decision to ignore Western intelligence warnings that were shared weeks before the attack took place, to the full hour it took for the security forces to arrive on the scene after the shooting began.
Unheeded warnings
The American Embassy in Moscow issued an alert to US citizens in the city on 7 March, over two weeks ahead of the attack, in which it warned that extremists were planning an attack on a large crowd of people in Moscow in the following 48 hours. The UK, Germany, Canada, Latvia, Sweden, Czechia and South Korea all issued similar warnings via their embassies.
That same day, Russia’s Federal Security Service (FSB) reported neutralising terrorists from a Russian Islamic State cell, and on 19 March, just four days before the attack, Vladimir Putin dismissed the embassy warnings as “blatant blackmail” by the West aimed at intimidating Muscovites.
While the authorities largely kept quiet about the Western warnings after the attack had taken place, a TASS report published the following day cited a source in the secret services who confirmed that intelligence about an impending terror attack had indeed been received, “but without specific detail”.
On 25 March, Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov refused to confirm whether the US had passed on any intelligence concerning the impending terror attacks when asked by TASS, stressing that Russia was investigating the attack without outside help.