It was the eighth time that Russia has used its veto power at the UN Security Council to block action directed at its ally in Damascus.
Britain, France and the United States put forward the measure in response to the suspected sarin gas attack in Khan Sheikhun on April 4 that left 87 dead, including 31 children.
China, another veto-holding power at the council, abstained in the vote, as did Kazakhstan and Ethiopia.
Bolivia voted against the measure and 10 other council members supported it.
Russia imposed its veto as US Secretary of State Rex Tillerson said after talks in Moscow that there was a "low level of trust" between the United States and Russia.
The proposed resolution would have condemned the alleged attack and expressed the council's full backing to investigators from the Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (OPCW).
The draft specifically would have demanded that the Syrian government provide flight plans, flight logs and other information on its military operations on April 4, hand over the names of commanders of any aircraft and provide access to air bases to UN investigators.
British Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson said he was "dismayed" by Russia vetoing Wednesday a UN draft resolution on the suspected chemical attack in Syria.
"This puts Russia on the wrong side of the argument," Johnson said in a statement issued in London.
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