Moscow said it is expelling 60 U.S. diplomats and closing the American consulate in St. Petersburg, CNN reported. The Kremlin added it will retaliate in kind to other countries that expelled its envoys after the poisoning scandal in England.
Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said the measures against the U.S. “include the expulsion of the same number of diplomats” as the Russian envoys ordered out by President Donald Trump.
The measures came in a crisis over a nerve-agent attack on Sergei Skripal and his daughter that the UK government blames Russia for. While the Kremlin’s action underlines the tense relations between Washington and Moscow, the use of a customary tit-for-tat response suggests that President Vladimir Putin isn’t looking to escalate the situation.
However, the U.S. quickly dismissed the notion that Russia was entitled to take mirror-image action.
“There is no justification for this response” because Russia was “responsible for that horrific attack on the British citizen and his daughter,” State Department spokeswoman Heather Nauert said. “The Russian Federation is not interested in a dialogue on issues that matter to our two countries,” she added pointing out that the U.S. isn’t ruling out further action against Russia.
Moscow had vowed retaliation after the U.S., NATO and 25 allies including Germany and France expelled more than 150 Russian diplomats this week in support of the UK, which ousted 23 Kremlin envoys earlier this month.
Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Sergei Ryabkov met with U.S. Ambassador Jon Huntsman and handed him a note of protest against the “revolting and groundless” demands from the U.S. authorities for 60 Russian diplomats to leave the country, the Foreign Ministry said on its website. Fifty-eight U.S. diplomats will have to leave the Moscow embassy and two at the U.S. consulate in Ekaterinburg were declared persona non grata. They will have to leave Russia by April 5, according to the statement.
If further “hostile actions” against Russian diplomatic and consular offices in the U.S. continue, additional steps will be taken against its staff and facilities in Russia, the ministry said.
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