Late last night, an encrypted message arrived at the British Embassy in Moscow. No greeting, no context — just two words that sent shockwaves through Downing Street: “We Remember.” Within minutes, Keir Starmer’s team was in total chaos. Emergency meetings. Phones lighting up. Cabinet members rushing into No. 10 trying to decode what the Kremlin meant. Was it a warning? A threat? Or payback for something Britain just did? Hours earlier, the UK had approved a new round of sanctions targeting Russian banks and energy firms — one of the toughest moves since the invasion of Ukraine. And suddenly, Moscow fires back… without a missile, but with a message. By dawn, reports confirmed what many feared — Russia had cut all gas exports to the UK grid for the next 60 days. Energy markets spiralled, oil prices jumped, and the pound dipped overnight. Inside Westminster, panic spread fast. Opposition MPs are demanding answers, while government insiders say Starmer has “lost control of foreign relations.” One senior official described the mood as “Cold War silence with modern weapons.” And as of now — London waits… for Russia’s next move.
