Oman Daily Observer

Nato joins two dozen nations in Russian expulsions over spy attack

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LONDON: Nato joined two dozen government­s around the world on Tuesday 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 Us-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 behaviour,” 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 Sovietdesi­gned 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 fiercely 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 organisati­on — and on Tuesday promised it would hit back against the coordinate­d moves.

“We’ll respond, have no doubt! No one wants to put up with such loutish behaviour 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 United States.

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

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”.

This will send a clear message to Russia that there are costs and consequenc­es for their unacceptab­le pattern of behaviour JENS STOLTENBER­G

Nato chief

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