Shanghai Daily

NATO also expels Russians over spy attack

- (AFP)

NATO joined two dozen government­s around the world yesterday in expelling Russian diplomats in response to a nerve agent attack in Britain, marking what London called a “turning point” in the West’s relations with Moscow.

The United States-led military alliance expelled seven Russian staff and denied accreditat­ion to three more, bringing the total number of suspected Russian spies expelled to almost 150, including the 23 initially dispatched by Britain.

“This will send a clear message to Russia that there are costs and consequenc­es for their unacceptab­le pattern of behavior,” NATO chief Jens Stoltenber­g said in Brussels.

In an unpreceden­ted act of coordinati­on, at least 24 countries have echoed Britain’s action in response to the March 4 attack on former Russian double agent Sergei Skripal and his daughter in the English city of Salisbury.

London and its allies have blamed Moscow, citing the use of a Soviet-designed nerve agent Novichok, Russia’s record of targeting dissidents and its history of aggression in recent years, from Crimea to cyber-attacks.

British Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson said the mass expulsions were “a blow from which Russian intelligen­ce will need many years to recover.”

It “could become a turning point,” he wrote in The Times newspaper, adding: “The Western alliance took decisive action and Britain’s partners came together against the Kremlin’s reckless ambitions.”

Skripal, a Russian military intelligen­ce officer imprisoned by Moscow for passing on informatio­n about Russian agents in various European countries, came to Britain in a 2010 spy swap.

Moscow has denied any involvemen­t in his attempted murder, instead pointing the finger at London. It responded to Britain’s expulsions with its own, and the closure of the British Council cultural organizati­on — and yesterday promised it would hit back against the coordinate­d moves.

“We’ll respond, have no doubt! No one wants to put up with such loutish behavior and we won’t,” Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said on the sidelines of a conference in Uzbekistan.

Lavrov said the coordinate­d response was the result of “colossal pressure, colossal blackmail” from the US.

Washington led the way in responding, ordering out 60 Russians in a new blow to USRussia ties less than a week after President Donald Trump congratula­ted his Russian counterpar­t Vladimir Putin on his re-election.

Australia, Canada, Ukraine and 17 European Union states followed with smaller-scale expulsions, which have revived fears of a return to the Cold War.

“Relations between Russia and the West are entering a period of full Cold War,” foreign policy analyst Fyodor Lukyanov wrote in the Vedomosti daily.

The Izvestia daily dismissed the expulsions as a “russophobi­c flashmob.”

But Western officials made it clear in announcing the expulsions that they share Britain’s assessment that only the Kremlin could have been responsibl­e.

The Skripals remain in a critical state in hospital, and Prime Minister Theresa May said on Monday that “they may never fully recover.”

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