Analysis
Medical reports and multiple news investigations confirm that Vladimir Kara‑Murza was poisoned in 2015 and again in 2017, surviving both incidents. There are documented cases of other victims of alleged Russian‑state poisonings, some of whom died (e.g., Alexander Litvinenko). However, the statement that “the Russian state has become a threat not only to its own people but to the world” is a political judgment rather than an empirically testable claim, so it cannot be classified as true or false.
Background
Kara‑Murza, a Russian opposition activist, has publicly described two separate poisoning incidents, both linked by investigators to nerve agents associated with the Russian security services. His experiences are part of a broader pattern of alleged state‑sponsored attacks on dissidents. Assessments of whether a state poses a global threat involve subjective analysis of foreign policy and security actions, which goes beyond factual verification.
Verdict summary
Kara‑Murza’s claim that he survived two poisonings is verified, but his broader assertion that the Russian state is a threat to the world is an opinion, not a verifiable fact.