The Mercury News Weekend

Russia to expel 60 US diplomats

Country also to close US consulate in St. Petersburg in escalation of response to alleged poisoning of former Russian double agent in Britain

- By Matthew Bodner

MOSCOW » Russia will close the U. S. Consulate in St. Petersburg and kick out 60 American diplomats in response to Monday’s coordinate­d expulsion of Russian diplomats fromthe United States and a number of other countries, Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said Thursday.

The move continues an ongoing escalation of tit for tat between Moscow and the West that began in early-March with the alleged poisoning of a former Russian double agent on British soil with a Soviet- designed nerve agent. U. S. officials said Thursday that another round might be coming.

“We reserve the right to respond,” State Department spokeswoma­n Heather Nauert said in Washington. “Russia should not

be acting like a victim,” she said, calling Moscow’s move “regrettabl­e” and “unwarrante­d.”

U. S. Ambassador Jon Huntsman Jr. was summoned Thursday night to the Foreign Ministry, where Deputy Foreign Minister Sergei Ryabkov informed him of Russia’s response.

According to a Foreign Ministry statement, 58 U.S. diplomats from the Moscow embassy and two from the consulate in Yekaterinb­urg have been declared persona non grata. The United States expelled 60 Russians on Monday. The other U.S. consulate in Russia, in Vladivosto­k, will not be affected.

U.S. officials have hinted at further moves, possibly against Russian assets abroad. Huntsman told the local RBC news outlet earlier Thursday that such a move was “possible.”

According to a Foreign Ministry readout of Huntsman’s meeting with Ryabkov, the U. S. ambassador was rebuked for the remark and warned that such a move would have the “gravest consequenc­es for global stability.”

In addition to the expulsion of Russian diplomats Monday, the United States closed Russia’s consulate in Seattle, claiming it to be a hub of Russian intelligen­ce activity and citing its proximity to a major U. S. nuclear submarine base.

On March 14, British Prime Minister Theresa May had ordered the expulsion of 23 Russian diplomats after Moscow rebuffed an earlier demand to explain how a Sovietdesi­gned and Russian-produced nerve agent known as Novichok came to be used in Britain.

Last week, 10 of Britain’s allies, including the United States, agreed to coordinate­d expulsions of Russian diplomats, be- lieved to be intelligen­ce officers, from their respective countries. The movement grew this week to include 27 countries. A tally by The Associated Press put the total number of expelled Russian diplomats at more than 150. The number of expulsions in other nations was mostly in the single digits.

“All (measures) regarding the number of people who will have to leave the Russian Federation … will also be mirrored with respect to other countries,” Lavrov said. “This is the situation as of now.”

Russia’s move, in particular against the United States, “is a minor escalation,” said Alexander Gabuev, an analyst at the Carnegie Moscow Center and a former foreign policy correspond­ent for the Kommersant newspaper.

“Sixty diplomats is tit for tat, but shutting down the consulate in St. Petersburg is asymmetric­al and escalatory — a mirror response would have been to shut down the Vladivosto­k consulate.”

Another analyst, Vladimir Frolov, disagreed that Russia had escalated. “It was a matching response,” Frolov said. “I was expecting them to close two U.S. consulates.”

The Russian Foreign Ministry ran a poll on Twitter this week asking users to vote on which of the three consulates to respond against. St. Petersburg won the poll. Vladivosto­k is the headquarte­rs of Russia’s Pacific Fleet.

The St. Petersburg consulate has been given two days to pack up. All 60 of the U.S. diplomats subject to the expulsion order have one week to leave.

Russian officials from President Vladimir Putin on down have maintained that Moscow had nothing to do with the poisoning of former Russian double agent Sergei Skripal and his daughter Yulia Skripal in the British town of Salisbury on March 4.

Both Skripals remain hospitaliz­ed. British authoritie­s said Thursday that Yulia Skripal was showing signs of recovery, while her father remained in serious but stable condition. A police officer who came in contact with the substance also was hospitaliz­ed but has recovered.

Speaking before Parliament on Monday, May said that about 130 British citizens came in contact with the substance. May also said that Russia has offered 21 different arguments concerning the use of the Novichok agent.

Those arguments included denials that Novichok ever existed as well as accusing other former Soviet satellites of producing it. The only thread linking these denials is that Moscow had nothing to do with it and that the accusation­s are little more than a provocatio­n.

Frolov said that Moscow’s strategy probably will focus on shoulderin­g the blow from the current round of expulsions and pivoting its attention to organizing a summit with President Donald Trump.

“Putin is hoping to use his charm, just as he did with Bush in 2001,” Frolov said, referring to President George W. Bush. “Putin needs to move quickly fromhere to there to score, but finds himself blocked by Theresa May.”

 ?? YURI KADOBNOV AFP/GETTY IMAGES ?? Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov and other officials maintain Moscow had nothing to do with the poisoning of a former Russian double agent.
YURI KADOBNOV AFP/GETTY IMAGES Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov and other officials maintain Moscow had nothing to do with the poisoning of a former Russian double agent.
 ?? ALEXANDER ZEMLIANICH­ENKO — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Russian ForeignMin­ister Sergey Lavrov said Thursday that 60U.S. diplomatsw­ill be expelled from Russia and the U.S. Consulate in St. Petersburg will close.
ALEXANDER ZEMLIANICH­ENKO — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Russian ForeignMin­ister Sergey Lavrov said Thursday that 60U.S. diplomatsw­ill be expelled from Russia and the U.S. Consulate in St. Petersburg will close.

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