Russia Says New US Sanctions Forced It to Respond
Even as it sought to punish the United States for imposing
new sanctions by forcing the mass dismissal of employees from American
diplomatic posts in Russia, the Kremlin left the door open on Monday for
President Trump to avoid further escalation.
Without mentioning the American president directly, Moscow
seemed to be appealing to him to resurrect his campaign promise to try to
improve Russian-American relations.
“The will to normalize these relations should be placed on
the record,” Dmitri S. Peskov, the spokesman for President Vladimir V. Putin,
told reporters on Monday, and the “attempt at sanctions diktat” should be
abandoned.
The breadth of the dismissals demanded — 755 people, most of
whom will be Russian employees — was stunning even by the standards of the Cold
War playbook from which the move seemed copied. But Mr. Peskov suggested that
Russia had been forced to respond to Congress, and that it was not the Kremlin
that was making matters worse.
“Of course we’re not interested in those relations being
subject to erosion,” Mr. Peskov said. “We’re interested in sustainable
development of our relations and can only regret that, for now, we are far from
this ideal.”
Mr. Putin, in the television interview during which he
announced the retaliatory move, said that Russian patience with waiting for
relations to improve was at an end.
It was a major shift in tone from the beginning of this
month, when Mr. Putin metPresident Trump for the first time at the Group of 20 summit meeting
in Hamburg, Germany.
Mr. Trump had talked during his campaign of improving ties
with Russia and had praised Mr. Putin, and the Kremlin had expected the
face-to-face meeting of the presidents to mark the start of a new era. The
immediate assessmentin Moscow was that the two had set the stage for better relations.
But then, in quick succession, came the expanded sanctions
passed by Congress, Mr. Trump’s indication that hewould sign them into law and Moscow’s forceful retaliation.
In Washington, the State Department issued a statement
saying that it was assessing the impact of the Russian measures and how it
would respond. The United States Embassy in Moscow declined to comment.
Just as in 2014, when Russia reacted to the first Western
sanctions imposed over the Ukraine crisis by banning many Western food imports,
it seems that ordinary Russians will bear the brunt of the latest decision. The bulk of the 755 people dismissed are likely to be
Russian employees from the embassy in Moscow, as well as from the American
consulates in St. Petersburg, Yekaterinburg and Vladivostok. It is not clear
how many Americans might be expelled, if any.
A State Department inspector general’s report in 2013, the
last concrete numbers publicly available, said there were 934 “locally
employed” staff members at the Moscow Embassy and three consulates, out of a
total staff of 1,279. That would leave roughly 345 Americans, many of whom
report regular harassment by Russian officials.
In Moscow, locally hired staff members reached at the
embassy said the mood inside the walls of the large compound on the Garden
Ring, one of Moscow’s main thoroughfares, was stunned confusion.
“Everyone is worried, and there is no information,” said
one. “There are so many rumors and no facts yet.” The measures were the harshest such diplomatic moves since
a similarrupture in 1986, in the waning years of the Soviet Union. At that time,
Moscow forced 261 local staff members to quit, leaving the Embassy mostly
devoid of secretaries, drivers and other support staff.
“I heard from people who were here when that happened and
how devastating it was at that time,” said the staff member, who spoke on
condition of anonymity because embassy personnel are not authorized to talk to
the news media.
Mr. Peskov said it was up to the Americans to decide how to
reduce their staff to 455, matching the size of Russia’s diplomatic staff in
the United States, including those at the Russian Mission to the United Nations
in New York.
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