The Oklahoman

Trump levies more sanctions on Russia in spy poisoning case

- By Deb Riechmann The Associated Press

WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump has slapped more sanctions on Russia in connection with the 2018 poisoning of a former Russian spy and his daughter, a move that a Russian lawmaker said Friday will make it less likely for normalized U.S.-Russian relations.

Trump issued an executive order late Thursday that imposes another round of sanctions against Moscow, which has denied wrongdoing in the spy case.

In March 2018, Sergei Skripal, a former Russian military intelligen­ce officer turned double agent for Britain, and his visiting daughter, Yulia, were found unconsciou­s on a park bench in the British town of Salisbury after being exposed to the nerve agent Novichok.

They spent weeks in critical condition but recovered.

A police officer also was sickened. A few months after the attack on the Skripals, a local man, who found a perfume bottle containing traces of the discarded nerve agent, became severely ill and his girlfriend, Dawn Sturgess, died from the accidental exposure.

The poisoning ignited a diplomatic confrontat­ion in which hundreds of envoys were expelled by both Russia and Western nations.

“The introducti­on of new sanctions against Russia by Washington not only makes the possibilit­y of normalizin­g Russian-American relations even more hypothetic­al, they are the latest attack on internatio­nal relations in general and on strategic stability in the world,” said Frants Klintsevic­h, a member of the Russian upper house's defense and security committee, whose views generally reflect the Kremlin's thinking.

Members of Congress have been pressuring the White House to impose additional punitive measures on Moscow.

Earlier this week, Rep. Eliot Engel, chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, and Rep. Mike McCaul, the panel's ranking Republican, wrote a letter to Trump telling him that he was required by law to impose a second round of sanctions.

The U.S. imposed the first round after the secretary of state determined in August 2018 that the attack met the standard of a chemical weapons attack under the Chemical and Biological Weapons Control and Warfare Eliminatio­n Act. The congressme­n said those first sanctions “largely imposed penalties that the United States had already put into place, such as terminatin­g foreign assistance and arms sales to the Russian government.”

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