Saturday, July 29, 2017

Russia Orders Hundreds of U.S. Staff Out in Sanctions Reprisal

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Russia ordered the U.S. to slash hundreds of embassy and other personnel in the country in a dramatic and sweeping retaliation to the passage of a new sanctions bill in the U.S. Congress.

Read more: Russia Sanctions Pass Senate With Limits on Trump’s Power

The order means the U.S. would have to cut “hundreds” of personnel at its embassy and consulates in Russia, according to a diplomat familiar with the situation who spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss details that aren’t yet public. U.S. officials didn’t immediately comment on how many would be affected.

Late Thursday, the Senate voted 98-2 for a bill passed earlier by the House that strengthens existing sanctions on Russia and gives Congress the power to block President Donald Trump from lifting them. The White House has given mixed messages about whether Trump will sign the legislation at a time when his presidential campaign is under investigation over possible collusion with Moscow.

Read More: Details of the bill to impose sanctions on Russia, Iran, N. Korea

The Russian reaction was swifter and harsher than many officials had signaled. It threatened to cast the two nuclear-armed powers into a new spiral of tensions even as relations are already at their lowest point since the Cold War. For Trump, the worsening conflict poses a dilemma between his oft-stated desire to build ties with Russia and mounting congressional opposition to that effort.

“We don’t exclude any measures to bring the out-of-control Russophobes who are now setting the tone on Capitol Hill to their senses,” Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Sergei Ryabkov told reporters, threatening further retaliation if the U.S. took new steps to punish Russia for the latest moves.

Harsh Response

The U.S. embassy denounced the move but didn’t comment further. Russian officials said it would be far more than the 35 Russian diplomats the U.S. ordered out in December in protest of alleged Russian meddling in the election last year.

The Foreign Ministry said in a website statement that the U.S. had until Sept. 1 to bring the total number of diplomatic and technical personnel in Russia to 455, the same number as it said Russia has in the U.S.

“There are far more American diplomats in our country than Russian diplomats in America,” said Vyacheslav Nikonov, a senior member of the lower house of parliament, according to Tass. “The U.S. will have to send out of our country far more than 30 diplomats.”

In the wake of the announcement, Russia’s benchmark Micex Index extended declines, retreating as much as 1.6 percent, the biggest intraday drop in six weeks.

Russia had originally threatened the ouster of diplomats and seizure of property in December after the U.S. moves at the time. But President Vladimir Putin delayed the retaliatory steps in what officials said was an olive branch to the incoming Trump administration.

Dashed Hopes

But the Kremlin’s hopes for better relations under Trump haven’t materialized as the probes of alleged Russian meddling in the U.S. vote have widened in recent months. The first face-to-face meeting between Trump and Putin, in Hamburg, Germany, earlier this month, failed to yield a breakthrough.

Spokesman Dmitry Peskov said Putin didn’t wait for Trump’s reaction to the sanctions bill because “the form in which it emerged from the Senate had greater significance.” In effect, he said, it’s “almost final.”

“We did everything we could to save relations from collapse but the Americans did just the opposite,” Konstantin Kosachyov, chairman of the International Affairs Committee in the upper house of parliament, wrote in Facebook.

U.S. Ambassador John Tefft “expressed his strong disappointment and protest” at the Russian move, the embassy said in an emailed statement, noting that the notification has been forwarded to Washington for review.

In addition to the ouster of personnel, the ministry also suspended U.S. access to a recreation retreat and warehouse in Moscow, effective Aug. 1. Russia said it reserved the right to take further measures if the U.S. retaliates.

“In the current circumstances, any attempt to improve ties with the U.S. is a waste of time,” said Sergei Karaganov, a foreign-policy analyst. “The U.S. has become a totally hostile power and Russia is acting accordingly. This was aimed not at Trump, but at America.”

‘Asymmetric’ Responses

Andrei Klimov, deputy chairman of the International Affairs Committee in the upper house of Russia’s parliament, said that further “asymmetric” responses to the U.S. move are possible. “Sometimes it’s not necessary to announce sanctions, but you can move in such a way that everyone understands without loud words,” he said in a telephone interview.

For a look at Russia’s other retaliation options, click here.

The U.S. bill, which also imposes new sanctions on Iran and North Korea, had been delayed while lawmakers resolved procedural issues and revised language that energy companies said would prevent many overseas deals.

The Russia sanctions in H.R. 3364 are an unusual signal of disapproval of Trump from congressional Republicans. Lawmakers say they want to prevent the president from acting on his own to lift penalties imposed by the previous administration for meddling in last year’s U.S. election and for aggression in Ukraine. House and Senate committees and the Federal Bureau of Investigation are examining possible ties between the Trump campaign and Russia.

The legislation puts Trump in a difficult position. Signing the measure would dilute his power. But rejecting it could lead to an embarrassing veto override, as the bill cleared both chambers by wide margins, and lead to criticism that he’s seeking to protect Russia.

An official in the White House wouldn’t say whether Trump would sign it, saying only that they are reviewing the bill and that the administration supports sanctions against the three countries.

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