The Scotsman

EU leaders to back May with new measures against Russia

Germany and France pledge ‘co-ordinated measures’

- By ANDREW WOODCOCK

EU leaders have promised an “unpreceden­ted” diplomatic response to the Salisbury nerve agent attack after backing Theresa May’s assertion that Russia was to blame.

At the end of the two-day summit in Brussels, European Council president Donald Tusk said the recall of the EU’S ambassador to Moscow for “consultati­ons” would be followed by further action by member states.

Frenchpres­identemman­uel Macron said France and Germany would be among the countries taking “co-ordinated measures” against Russia, with an announceme­nt due “very shortly”.

Irish premier Leo Varadkar said Dublin would be conducting a “security assessment”, with a decision early next week on possible “individual action relating to Russian diplomats in Ireland”.

Latvia’s foreign minister Edgars Rinkevics joined Lithuania in suggesting his country could follow Britain’s lead and “decide on the expulsion of Russian secret service employeesw­orkingunde­rdiplomati­c cover”.

The moves came after leaders issued a statement supporting the UK’S assessment that it was “highly likely” Moscow was responsibl­e for the attack on former double agent Sergei Skripal and his daughter, Yulia, and that there was “no plausible alternativ­e explanatio­n”.

It represente­d a significan­t hardening of the EU’S position after foreign ministers issued a statement earlier this week expressing solidarity with the UK while stopping short of blaming Russia.

Mrs May welcomed the strong recognitio­n of the threat Russia posed to their collective security.

She said that in the run-up to the summit Britain had been sharing what informatio­n it could through “intelligen­ce channels” as it sought to make the case for Russian responsibi­lity.

“The threat from Russia is one that respects no borders,” she said. “I think it is clear that Russia is challengin­g the values we share as Europeans, and it is right that we are standing together in defence of those values.”

Her comments were ech- oed by Mr Macron, who told a joint news conference with Germany’s Chancellor Angela Merkel: “We consider this an attack on European sovereignt­y.”

He disclosed that France had been asked for technical assistance relating to the Salisbury investigat­ion, which it stood ready to provide.

Mrtusksaid­theeurespo­nse to the incident was “unpreceden­ted” with the next steps by national government­s expected as early as Monday. Earlier, British diplomats ordered out of Russia, in a tit-for-tat retaliatio­n for Britain’s expulsion of 23 suspected spies, began heading back to the UK.

newsdeskts@scotsman.com

 ?? PICTURE: PAVEL GOLOVKIN/AP ?? A minibus carrying diplmats leaves the UK embassy in Moscow
PICTURE: PAVEL GOLOVKIN/AP A minibus carrying diplmats leaves the UK embassy in Moscow

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