US diplomats begin exit from Russia

  • 02/08/2017
Kremlin
The United States has begun exit measures in the first sign of compliance with a Kremlin order. Photo credit: Reuters

The United States has begun removing furniture and equipment from a diplomatic property in Moscow in the first sign of compliance with a Kremlin order to slash its presence in Russia as retaliation for new US sanctions.

President Vladimir Putin has ordered the United States to cut 60 per cent of its diplomatic staff in Russia by September 1 and says Moscow will seize two US diplomatic properties in response to sanctions approved by Congress last week.

The White House has said President Donald Trump will sign the sanctions bill, meant as a response to alleged Russian meddling in the 2016 presidential election, and to further punish Moscow for its 2014 annexation of Crimea from Ukraine.

On Wednesday (NZT), removers began dismantling equipment at a US-owned dacha on the outskirts of Moscow, after being refused access the day before.

The dacha, which is being confiscated along with a US warehouse in the south of the Russian capital, was used by US diplomatic staff at weekends and to host parties for students, journalists and other diplomats.

The removers told a Reuters journalist they arrived at about 7am, and were seen packing beds and lamps into three white vans before leaving the property three hours later.

Deputy Foreign Minister Sergei Ryabkov said US staff had to leave the dacha and warehouse by midday Wednesday, TASS news agency reported.

Mr Ryabkov and the Kremlin said no one had obstructed US employees trying to access the property.

Mr Putin said on Sunday Russia had ordered the United States to cut 755 of its 1200 diplomatic staff in its embassy and consular operations, though many will be Russian citizens, with the United States allowed to choose who leaves.

The ultimatum issued by the Russian leader is a display to voters at home that he is prepared to stand up to Washington but is also carefully calibrated to avoid affecting the US investment he needs or burning bridges with Mr Trump.

Reuters