Penticton Herald

Allies band together over Russia spy case

- By JOSH LEDERMAN

WASHINGTON — From Washington to Warsaw, Western nations banded together Monday to expel more than 100 Russian diplomats they accused of being spies, punishing Moscow for its alleged poisoning of an ex-intelligen­ce officer in Britain.

President Donald Trump, under constant political heat for his reluctance to challenge Russia, ordered 60 of its diplomats out of the U.S. — all of them spies, the White House said. The U.S. called it the largest expulsion of Russian spies in American history, and also shuttered Russia’s consulate in Seattle, deeming it a counterint­elligence threat.

All told, at least 21 countries have ousted more than 135 Russians, including 23 kicked out earlier by the U.K.

“Together we have sent a message that we will not tolerate Russia’s continued attempts to flout internatio­nal law and undermine our values,” British Prime Minister Theresa May told Parliament.

The American moves illustrate­d an increased willingnes­s by Trump’s administra­tion to push back on the Kremlin, even as the president himself steadfastl­y avoids challengin­g Russian President Vladimir Putin personally or directly. Less than a week ago, Trump congratula­ted Putin for his re-election but didn’t raise the March 4 spy poisoning, Russia’s alleged election-meddling in the U.S. or its own tainted voting process, prompting dismayed critiques even from Trump’s fellow Republican­s.

In a choreograp­hed show of trans-Atlantic unity, the U.S. and European allies carefully timed their announceme­nts for maximum effect.

Within a few hours, at least 16 European Union nations expelled Russians, with more likely to follow. Germany, Poland and France each said it planned to boot four Russian diplomats, the Czech Republic and Lithuania ousted three and Italy, two. Canada also took action, kicking out four Russians and denying three who have applied to enter the country.

The list included nations in Russia’s backyard that have perhaps the most at stake. Ukraine, a non-EU country with its own conflicts with Moscow, was expelling 13 Russians. All three Baltic states said they would make diplomats leave.

Almost all of the countries said publicly that those being expelled were actually Russians intelligen­ce operatives working under diplomatic cover.

Moscow threatened retaliatio­n of the titfor-tat variety, suggesting it would kick out an equal number of foreign diplomats. Russia’s Embassy in Washington responded to the Seattle consulate closure by asking its Twitter followers to “vote” which U.S. consulate should be shuttered in turn: St. Petersburg, Yekaterinb­urg or Vladivosto­k.

“This is an attempt on the lives of Russian citizens on the territory of Great Britain,” Russia’s Foreign Ministry said. “It goes without saying that this unfriendly move by this group of countries will not go unnoticed.”

Yet it was unclear whether the expulsions, which may be inconvenie­nt for Moscow but don’t take aim at its economy, would be enough to alter Putin’s behaviour.

“There is no actual deterrence and squeeze,” said James Nixey, head of the Russia program at think-tank Chatham House. “There is, so far, no cyber-response, no financial response.”

Still, the dueling allegation­s added to a serious escalation of tension and distrust between Russia and the West, intensifie­d most recently by a bizarre poisoning this month that evoked the spy-vs.-spy rivalries of the Cold War.

Britain has accused Moscow of using the Soviet-developed nerve agent Novichok to poison Sergei Skripal, a former Russian military intelligen­ce officer convicted of spying for the U.K., and his daughter, Yulia, on British soil.

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