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Tillerson rips Russia’s ‘malicious tactics’

- By Tracy Wilkinson Washington Bureau

WASHINGTON — In some of the toughest criticism of Russia to come out of the Trump administra­tion, Secretary of State Rex Tillerson slammed Moscow on Tuesday for what he called a campaign of force, intimidati­on and subterfuge in an attempt to overpower neighbors and reassert a position of dominance on the world stage.

Tillerson said the United States and its European allies would like to have better relations with Russia, but that its behavior under President Vladimir Putin made that impossible, citing Moscow’s 2014 “invasion of the largest country in Europe,” Ukraine.

“We will not stand for this violation of internatio­nal norms,” Tillerson said.

He said he has told Moscow that until it withdraws its forces from neighborin­g Ukraine, relations with Washington will never be normal.

Tillerson’s comments at the nonpartisa­n Wilson Center think tank in Washington in some ways confirmed the obvious — that President Donald Trump’s repeated calls for warmer relations with Moscow, and his unstinting praise for Putin, have failed to produce tangible results.

Most members of Congress remain highly skeptical of Russian intentions, and the White House remains mired in the special counsel investigat­ion of whether the Trump presidenti­al campaign actively assisted Russian efforts to interfere in the 2016 election. Trump has called those allegation­s a hoax.

In his speech, Tillerson addressed U.S. relations with Europe ahead of his visit next week to several European cities to meet with North Atlantic Treaty Organizati­on allies.

His comments seemed aimed in part at reassuring them about Trump’s continued commitment to security on the continent, especially in the face of what they see as Russian aggression in Ukraine and elsewhere.

“Russia has shown it seeks to define a new postSoviet global balance of power,” Tillerson said.

He said Moscow, “by virtue of its nuclear arsenal, seeks to impose its will on others by force,” or by partnering with military regimes that have brutalized their citizens, like the Syrian government of President Bashar Assad.

Tillerson cited a long list of “malicious tactics” employed by Russia, from using disinforma­tion campaigns and cyberattac­ks to undermine U.S. and European democracie­s, to the “serial” harassing of diplomatic personnel, including U.S. Embassy employees in Moscow.

“Russia can continue to isolate and impoverish itself by sowing disorder abroad and impeding liberty at home, or it can become a force that will advance the freedom of Russians and the stability of Eurasia,” Tillerson said.

He also pushed back on published reports that his management of the State Department has led to an exodus of scores of senior foreign service officers, a decline in morale and a weakening of U.S. diplomatic muscle.

“There is no hollowing out,” he said, insisting that staffing remains more or less in line with last year and that the administra­tion’s proposed 30 percent budget cut for the State Department would pare spending back to historic levels.

“I’m offended on [staffers’] behalf when people say somehow we don’t have a State Department that functions,” he said.

In the latest criticism of Tillerson’s performanc­e, two former senior State Department officials, Nicholas Burns and Ryan Crocker, said Tuesday that the loss of so many veteran diplomats was putting the United States in peril.

“We are witnessing the most significan­t departure of diplomatic talent in generation­s,” Burns, former U.S. ambassador to NATO, and Crocker, former U.S. ambassador to Iraq and Afghanista­n, wrote in an oped in the New York Times.

 ?? SAIT SERKAN GURBUZ/AP ?? Secretary of State Rex Tillerson said U.S.-Russia relations won’t improve until Moscow withdraws from Ukraine.
SAIT SERKAN GURBUZ/AP Secretary of State Rex Tillerson said U.S.-Russia relations won’t improve until Moscow withdraws from Ukraine.

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