Russian officials pledge tough, measured answer to U.S. order
NATALIYA VASILYEVA and JOSH LEDERMAN
MOSCOW — Russia wrestled Friday with how to respond to the United States’ order to shut its San Francisco consulate and trade offices in Washington and New York without going overboard and aggravating the already tense situation.
Russia needs to “think carefully about how we could respond,” to one of the thorniest diplomatic confrontations between Washington and Moscow in decades, said Russian President Vladimir Putin’s foreign policy adviser, Yuri Ushakov.
“One does not want to go into a frenzy, because someone has to be reasonable and stop,” Ushakov added.
The Trump administration said the Thursday order was in retaliation for the Kremlin’s “unwarranted and detrimental” demand last month that the U.S. substantially reduce the size of its diplomatic staff in Russia.
For its part, Russia justified its call for cuts to U.S. embassy and consular personnel that took effect Friday as a reaction to new sanctions the U.S. congress approved in July.
The U.S. gave Russia 48 hours, or until Saturday, to comply with the order for the San Francisco consulate and the East Coast offices. Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov said Friday that Moscow would reply with firmness, but needs time to study Washington’s directive and to decide on a response.
“We will have a tough response to the things that come totally out of the blue to hurt us and are driven solely by the desire to spoil our relations with the United States,” Lavrov said in a televised meeting with students at Russia’s top diplomacy school.
The closures on both U.S. coasts marked perhaps the most drastic diplomatic measure by the United States against Russia since 1986, near the end of the Cold War, when the nuclear-armed powers expelled dozens of each other’s diplomats.
American officials argued that Russia had no cause for retribution now, noting that Moscow’s ordering of U.S. diplomatic cuts last month was premised on bringing the two countries’ diplomatic pres- ences into “parity.”
Both countries now maintain three consulates in each other’s territory and ostensibly similar numbers of diplomats. Exact numbers are difficult to independently verify.
Several hours after the U.S. announcement, new Russian Ambassador Anatoly Antonov arrived in Washington to start his posting.
At the airport, Antonov cited a maxim of former Soviet leader Vladimir Lenin as he urged caution and professionalism.
“We don’t need hysterical impulses,” Russian news agencies quoted Antonov as saying.
In assessing Washington’s order, Russian officials and lawmakers said Friday that U.S. President Donald Trump might be getting tough on Russia against his will.
The new package of sanctions against Russia that Congress adopted last month not only hits Russia, but is designed to “tie Trump’s hands, not let him use his constitutional powers to the full to make foreign policy,” Lavrov said.
Under by the Trump administration order, the Russians must close their consulate in San Francisco and an official residence there. Russia is being allowed to keep its New York consulate and Washington embassy, but trade missions housed in satellite offices in both of those cities must shut down, a senior Trump administration official said. The official briefed reporters on a conference call on condition of anonymity.
American counterintelligence officials have long kept a watchful eye on Russia’s outpost in San Francisco, concerned that people posted to the consulate as diplomats were engaged in espionage. The U.S. late last year kicked out several Russians posted there, calling it a response to election interference.
The forced closures are the latest in an intensifying exchange of diplomatic broadsides.
In December, then U.S. President Barack Obama kicked out dozens of Russian officials, closed two Russian recreational compounds. Putin withheld from retaliating. The next month, Trump took office after campaigning on promises to improve U.S.-Russia ties.
NASHVILLE — A bid by Tennessee’s governor to remove a bust of Confederate cavalry general, slave trader and early Ku Klux Klan leader Nathan Bedford Forrest from the state capitol building was rejected Friday.
The state capitol Commission voted 7-5 against issuing a petition to moving the bust from the Capitol to the new state museum being built nearby. It would have been the first step in a lengthy process laid out by Tennessee’s “Heritage Protection Act” that limits the removal or changing of historical memorials on public property.
Republican Gov. Bill Haslam called for the removal after last month’s deadly white nationalist rally in Charlottesville, Va., He had previously called for removing it after the 2015 slayings of nine black churchgoers in Charleston, South Carolina.
Finance Commissioner Larry Martin sponsored the proposal to move the bust.
“The Civil War, and Tennessee’s role in it, is part of our history. It needs to be recognized and understood, but not celebrated,” he said. “The Tennessee state capitol building should be a place that represents a united Tennessee rather than a divided one.”
Haslam spokeswoman Jennifer Donnals said the governor was “very disappointed” by Friday’s decision.
Forrest amassed a fortune as a plantation owner and slave trader in Memphis before enlisting. State lawmakers voted to place his bust in the Capitol more than a century after the Civil War ended.
Comptroller Justin Wilson spoke out against the unelected panel overruling the Legislature’s vote in 1973 to place the bust in the Capitol.
“That resolution very clearly showed an intent from the General Assembly to have Gen. Forrest placed where he is now,” said Wilson, who was elected by the GOP-controlled Legislature. “I am concerned about this commission — while we have the power to reverse the action of the General Assembly — exercising that power.”