Austin American-Statesman

23 Russian diplomats expelled from Britain

- By William Booth and Matthew Bodner

Prime Minister Theresa May orders evictions after nerve-gas attack against ex-double agent.

Britain ordered the expulsion of 23 Russian diplomats believed involved in espionage-related activities, British Prime Minister Theresa May announced Wednesday, in the first wave of measures against Moscow for a nerve-gas attack against a former double agent.

May, speaking to Parliament, also outlined a range of other steps, including a halt to high-level meetings with Russian officials and calling off a planned visit to Britain by Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov.

May repeated the conclusion of British investigat­ors that Russia had either deployed or lost control of dangerous nerve agents used in the attack — targeting the former spy and his daughter — and said Russia’s defiant response has “demonstrat­ed complete disdain for the gravity of these events.”

“Instead they have treated the use of a military grade nerve agent in Europe with sarcasm, contempt and defiance,” she told lawmakers while announcing the reprisal measures.

She gave no further details on the Russian diplomats ordered expelled, but said they were deemed “undeclared intelligen­ce officers.” She called it the largest expulsion of Russian diplomats from Britain since Cold Warera retributio­n in the 1970s.

May said more countermea­sures were being considered. She said Britain sought support from the United States, European Union and NATO, but did not outline any requests she made from allies to join in the reprisals.

Lawmakers in Parliament asked May pointedly what Britain’s allies were willing to do — and she mostly evaded the question, except to say that they had offered Britain support.

Earlier, Britain’s Foreign Ministry also called for an urgent meeting of the U.N. Security Council to update members on the investigat­ion into the nerve agent attack. Russia, as part of the permanent five nations on the council, holds veto power over any possible U.N. moves to come.

“It is not in our national interest to break off all dialogue between the United Kingdom and the Russian federation. But in the aftermath of this appalling act against our country this relationsh­ip cannot be the same,” May said in Parliament.

On Monday, May asserted that it was “highly likely” that Russia was behind a poison attackandg­avetheRuss­iangovernm­ent a deadline to explain itself and where the rare and powerful “weapons-grade” nerve agent came from.

As expected, May’s deadline passed on Wednesday and Russia did not respond or did not respond with the details or explanatio­ns that Britain sought.

Instead, Russian officials and state media assailed the British for whipping up “anti-Russia hysteria.” The Kremlin rejected the “unfounded accusation­s” and shrugged off British demands.

British politician­s and commentato­rs said May could employ a range of diplomatic and financial sanctions - from clamping down on Russian oligarchs’ property-buying binge in London to tossing out embassy staff.

May could also ask the European Union, or even NATO, to join in a response to what she described as a “reckless” and “indiscrimi­nate” attack, which not only endangered the lives of its two principal victims, the former Russian spy Sergei Skripal, 66, and his daughter, Yulia, 33, but also potentiall­y exposed scores of others to the nerve agent, including a police officer who remains hospitaliz­ed.

Skripal was jailed in Russia in 2006 for selling state secrets to British intelligen­ce for 10 years, but he was released in 2010 as part of a high-profile spy swap. He and his daughter remain in critical condition at a Salisbury hospital.

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 ?? CHRISTOPHE­R FURLONG / GETTY IMAGES ?? Forensic teams work at an address in Gillingham, Dorset as they remove a recovery truck used following the Salisbury nerve agent attack. British Prime Minister Theresa May is expected to announce a series of measures against Russia.
CHRISTOPHE­R FURLONG / GETTY IMAGES Forensic teams work at an address in Gillingham, Dorset as they remove a recovery truck used following the Salisbury nerve agent attack. British Prime Minister Theresa May is expected to announce a series of measures against Russia.

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