Deutsche Welle (English edition)

Russia suspends its mission to NATO

- js/rt (AP, Reuters, AFP)

The Kremlin is also closing the alliance's liaison mission in Moscow. The announceme­nt comes after NATO expelled eight members of the Russian mission to the military alliance.

Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov said Monday that his country is suspending its mission to NATO.

What did Lavrov say?

He said the move was a response to the expulsion of eight Russian staff at the military alliance's mission last week. NATO said the individual­s expelled were in fact "undeclared Russian intelligen­ce officers." The expulsions meant that half of the Moscow team were prohibited from working at NATO's Brussels headquarte­rs.

"As a result of NATO's deliberate moves, we have practicall­y no conditions for elementary diplomatic work and in response to NATO's actions we suspend the work of our permanent mission to NATO, including the work of the chief military envoy," said the foreign minister.

Lavrov, who complained that "NATO is neither interested in an equal dialogue nor in cooperatio­n," said staff at Russia's NATO military mission in Moscow would also be stripped of their accreditat­ion from November 1. If needed, he said, NATO could interact with Russia via its embassy in Brussels, Russian news agencies reported.

In response to the Monday announceme­nt, a NATO spokespers­on said: "We have taken note of Minister Lavrov's comments to the media, however, we have not received any official communicat­ion on the issues he raised."

German Foreign Minister Heiko Maas told DW that Russia's decision to shutter its NATO mission make relations with Moscow more difficult. "We must acknowledg­e more and more that Russia no longer seems to be [willing to cooperate]," said Maas, who called the decision "more than just regrettabl­e ... It will seriously damage the relationsh­ip."

In assessing the situation, former senior NATO official Jamie Shea told DW: "Of course, it's easier if there are people in Brussels that they [NATO] could talk to. But given the poor state of the relationsh­ip, this does not make a major difference.

Shea, who served as deputy assistant secretary general for emerging security challenges at NATO until retiring in 2018, added: "These are two sides that haven't really been talking to each other very much — certainly not at the working level. And of course, as Russia shows no sign of withdrawin­g from Crimea anytime soon — which was NATO's condition to return to normal relations — this situation is likely to continue for a long time to come."

What is the current state of NATO-Russia ties?

Practical cooperatio­n between Russia and NATO was suspended in 2014, in response to Moscow's annexation of the Crimean Peninsula. Neverthele­ss, the two have maintained open channels of communicat­ion to facilitate high-level military-tomilitary coordinati­on.

The so-called NATO-Russia Council, too, has seldom met since relations between Russia and the West soured in the wake of Russian provocatio­ns, including its activities in Ukraine, its nuclear missile deployment, regular encroachme­nts into NATO airspace and the harassment of NATO ships at sea.

 ?? ?? Russia's decision to suspend its NATO mission is the latest escalation between Moscow and the trans-Atlantic alliance
Russia's decision to suspend its NATO mission is the latest escalation between Moscow and the trans-Atlantic alliance

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