Toronto Star

Russia quits NATO mission over spy squabble

- JIM HEINTZ

MOSCOW—Russia on Monday suspended its mission at NATO and ordered the closure of the alliance’s office in Moscow in retaliatio­n for NATO’s expulsion of Russian diplomats.

NATO withdrew the accreditat­ion of eight Russian officials to its Brussels headquarte­rs this month, saying it believes they have been secretly working as Russian intelligen­ce officers. NATO also halved the size of Moscow’s team at its headquarte­rs from 20 to 10.

Moscow has dismissed the accusation­s as baseless. Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov delivered Moscow’s response Monday, announcing the suspension of Russia’s mission at NATO and the closure of the alliance’s military liaison and informatio­n offices in the Russian capital.

He charged that the alliance’s action has confirmed that “NATO isn’t interested in any kind of equal dialogue or joint work,” adding that “we don’t see any need to keep pretending that there could be any shift in the foreseeabl­e future.”

“As a result of NATO’s deliberate moves, we have practicall­y no conditions for elementary diplomatic work and in response to NATO’s actions we suspend the work of our permanent mission to NATO, including the work of the chief military envoy, probably from Nov. 1.

“Or it may take several more days,” Lavrov said.

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