The Welland Tribune

Diplomatic clash is deepening

Russia answers expulsions with demands that more British envoys leave

- VLADIMIR ISACHENKOV AND GREG KATZ

MOSCOW — Russia ordered new cuts Friday to the number of British envoys in the country, escalating a dispute with the

West over the poisoning of an ex-spy in Britain.

The massive expulsion of diplomats on both sides has reached a scale unseen even at the height of the Cold War.

Two dozen countries, including the U.S. and many EU nations, and NATO ordered out more than 150 Russian diplomats this week in a show of solidarity with Britain over the poisoning of Russian ex-spy Sergei Skripal and his daughter in Britain that London blamed on Russia.

Moscow has vehemently denied involvemen­t in the March 4 nerve agent attack in the English city of Salisbury and announced the expulsion of the same number of diplomats from each nation.

Scores of foreign ambassador­s streamed into the Russian Foreign Ministry in Moscow on Friday to receive the notices given to 23 nations.

The ministry further escalated its response Friday, saying it has ordered Britain to reduce the number of its diplomats in Moscow to the level that Russia has in London. That exact number wasn’t immediatel­y clear.

The ministry said it summoned the British ambassador to hand him a protest over the “provocativ­e and unsubstant­iated actions by Britain, which instigated the expulsion of Russian diplomats from various nations for no reason.” It gave London one month to reduce its diplomatic personnel in Russia.

When Britain expelled 23 Russian diplomats earlier this month, Russian Ambassador Alexander Yakovenko said it represente­d a 40 per cent cut in the number of embassy personnel.

The state RIA Novosti news agency quoted an unidentifi­ed Russian diplomat as saying that the number of British diplomatic personnel in Russia exceeds the number of Russian envoys in Britain by more than 50.

Commenting on the Russian move, a spokespers­on for the British Foreign Office said “it’s regrettabl­e but in light of Russia’s previous behaviour, we anticipate­d a response.”

“However, this doesn’t change the facts of the matter: the attempted assassinat­ion of two people on British soil, for which there is no alternativ­e conclusion other than that the Russian state was culpable,” she said. “Russia is in flagrant breach of internatio­nal law and the Chemical Weapons Convention and actions by countries around the world have demonstrat­ed the depth of internatio­nal concern.”

The expulsions affect not only the diplomats but their families as well, forcing them to take their children out of school in the middle of the year.

A hospital treating the Skripals said Thursday that the 33year-old daughter Yulia was improving rapidly and was now in stable condition, although her 66-year-old father remained in critical condition.

Speaking to reporters Friday, Kremlin spokespers­on Dmitry Peskov insisted that “Russia didn’t start any diplomatic wars,” and “remains open for developing good ties.”

He added that Russia has called a meeting of the internatio­nal chemical weapons watchdog next week to press for an “unbiased and objective investigat­ion.”

Russia has accused Britain of failing to back up its accusation­s with evidence and refusing to share materials from the probe. The Foreign Ministry said it told the British ambassador on Friday that Moscow is ready to cooperate in the investigat­ion.

The Russian Embassy in London tweeted a statement by the Russian Foreign Ministry’s spokespers­on Maria Zakharova saying that Britain and the U.S. “do most to undermine any trust element in internatio­nal relations.”

Earlier this week, the Russian Foreign Ministry alleged that British special services could have been involved in the poisoning and claimed that Britain, the U.S., the Czech Republic and Sweden all have researched the class of nerve agent that London said was used to poison Skripal.

Britain and its allies have rejected the Russian nerve agent claims.

On Thursday, the Russian Foreign Ministry in Moscow summoned the U.S. ambassador to announce the expulsion of 60 U.S. diplomats in a tit-for-tat response to Washington’s move. Nearly two dozen ambassador­s from other countries followed suit Friday.

The countries informed Friday of expulsions were Australia, Albania, Germany, Denmark, Ireland, Spain, Italy, Canada, Latvia, Lithuania, Macedonia, Moldova, the Netherland­s, Norway, Poland, Romania, Ukraine, Finland, France, Croatia, the Czech Republic, Sweden and Estonia.

The Foreign Ministry added that it would also consider mirror expulsions of diplomats from Belgium, Hungary, Georgia and Montenegro.

In response to the U.S. move earlier this week to close the Russian Consulate in Seattle, Moscow also shut the U.S. Consulate in St. Petersburg, giving it until Saturday to vacate the premises.

An Associated Press reporter on Friday saw U.S. consulate staff carrying boxes from the building in St. Petersburg and loading them into a van. Several minivans drove out of the consulate while security also detained a man who threw a Starbucks cup at the building.

Some Russians passing near the U.S. Consulate in St. Petersburg cheered the expulsions.

“Let them get out of here.”

 ?? ALEXANDER ZEMLIANICH­ENKO THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? The British Embassy building, foreground, with the Russian Foreign Ministry building, background right, in Moscow, as seen on Friday.
ALEXANDER ZEMLIANICH­ENKO THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The British Embassy building, foreground, with the Russian Foreign Ministry building, background right, in Moscow, as seen on Friday.

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