No, in general the Hasse principle does not hold. I consider the question in the form of GH from MO. I give a counter-example with a non-normal extension $K/\mathbb{Q}$ of degree 6. It suffices to take the concrete Galois extension $L/\mathbb{Q}$ of degree 12 with Galois group $G=A_4$ and with cyclic decomposition groups from the answer of Jeremy Rouse, and to take $K=L^H$, where $H$ is a subgroup of $G$ of order 2.
Let $T=R_{K/\mathbb{Q}}\mathbb{G}_{m,K}/\mathbb{G}_{m,\mathbb{Q}}$. By the answer of user42024 it suffices to show that $Ш^1(\mathbb{Q},T[2])\neq 0$. Write $M=T[2]$. We have a reduction $Ш^1(\mathbb{Q},M)= Ш^1(L/\mathbb{Q},M)$. Since all the decomposition groups of $L/\mathbb{Q}$ are cyclic, we have $Ш^1(L/\mathbb{Q},M)=Ш^1_\omega(G,M)$. By the answer of Kasper Andersen $Ш^1_\omega(G,M)\ne 0$. Thus $Ш^1(\mathbb{Q},T[2])\neq 0$, and our extension $K/Q$ is a counter-example to the Hasse principle.
It would be interesting to construct explicitly an element $a\in K$ for which the Hasse principle fails.