EU leaders have agreed with the UK government that it is "highly likely" Russia is responsible for the nerve agent attack in the UK.

In a statement following an evening of talks in Brussels, the European Council of EU leaders agreed "there is no plausible alternative explanation".

The EU has now recalled its ambassador to Moscow "for consultations".

PM Theresa May had said the Salisbury poisoning was "part of a pattern of Russian aggression against Europe".

Moscow denies responsibility for the attack on former spy Sergei Skripal and his daughter on 4 March.

The European Council statement added: "We stand in unqualified solidarity with the United Kingdom in the face of this grave challenge to our shared security."

BBC political editor Laura Kuenssberg said the prime minister had "succeeded in getting them to toughen up" their language on the attack from earlier in the week.

But she said it did not seem likely that she will persuade other leaders to take the same kind of action she has against Russia by Friday - although some have not ruled out expelling Russian diplomats.

Mrs May briefed her counterparts on Thursday on the poisoning of the Skripals in Salisbury, who remain in a critical but stable condition in hospital after they were found unconscious on a bench.

Detective Sergeant Nick Bailey, who became ill after responding to the incident, is no longer in a serious condition and has been discharged from hospital.

The prime minister set out the evidence the UK has against Russia - including the positive identification of the chemical used as a type of Novichok nerve agent and the knowledge that Russia has produced this agent within the last 10 years.

Lithuanian President Dalia Grybauskaite has said she is considering following Britain's lead by expelling Russian spies from her country.

But Greek PM Alexis Tsipras said while he wanted to "express solidarity" with Britain "we also need to be responsible on that issue".

Arriving in Brussels earlier, Mrs May said: "Russia staged a brazen and reckless attack against the United Kingdom.

"It's clear that the Russian threat does not respect borders and indeed the incident in (the town of) Salisbury was a pattern of Russian aggression against Europe and its near neighbours from the Western Balkans to the Middle East."

She added that, as the leaders remembered the victims of terrorist attacks in Westminster and Brussels, she would be "stressing the UK's unconditional commitment to the future security of Europe".

'Totally irresponsible'
But the Russian ambassador to the UK, Alexander Yakovenko, said Britain had blamed Russia for the poisoning "without any evidence" and his country "cannot accept that".

He also described as "totally irresponsible" the comments by Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson on Wednesday that likened the public relations gains to President Putin from this summer's Football World Cup in Russia to Adolf Hitler's use of the 1936 Berlin Olympics.

"Nobody has the right to insult the Russian people, who defeated Nazism and lost more than 25 million people, by comparing our country to Nazi Germany," said Mr Yakovenko.

'Strategic enemy'
Meanwhile, a senior Whitehall official said Russia had "shown itself to be a strategic enemy not a strategic partner".

The official stressed that the UK's response to the Salisbury attack had been carefully calibrated to remain within the law, and that the UK was "not looking for some big confrontation with Russia or regime change".

Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn repeated his calls for a "robust and serious dialogue" with Russia, and hoped for a statement of support for the UK from the EU after the summit.

"We live in one continent " he said.

"We have to have a process where difficulties can be dealt with."

But Mr Corbyn questioned statements by some members of government, adding: "I'm not sure the language used by some of our ministers is particularly helpful or sensible."