Swift response promised to expulsion of Russians in EU and North America over Skripal attack

This article is more than 2 years old

This article is more than 2 years old

Russia has vowed to expel dozens of western diplomats in the growing diplomatic dispute over the Salisbury nerve gas attack.



Officials promised a swift and most likely tit-for-tat response after the expulsion of Russian diplomats across Europe and North America on Monday in a show of solidarity from British allies that represents the biggest concerted blow to Russian intelligence networks since the cold war.

In an official communique, the Russian foreign ministry issued a “determined protest” to the expulsions and said it would respond to the “unfriendly act”.



US and EU expel scores of Russian diplomats over Skripal attack Read more

“The provocative gesture of proverbial solidarity with London by these countries, having being led along by the British authorities in the so-called Skripal case and not having bothered to sort out the circumstances of what happened, are the continuation of a confrontational line toward escalating the situation,” the ministry wrote in its statement.



The Russian ambassador in Vilnius, Lithuania, one of the EU countries that announced expulsions on Monday, said “we will act on the basis of reciprocity ... and do the same thing as the Lithuanian side did”.



Alexei Chepa, the deputy head of the foreign affairs committee for the Russian State Duma, told reporters on Monday that Russia “must expel the diplomats of those countries”.

“Russia will not allow itself to be beaten up, the harder they try to intimidate us, the tougher our response will be,” he said.

Russian diplomats were expelled from at least 17 countries in Europe and North America on Monday. The US expelled 60 diplomats and closed Moscow’s consulate in Seattle, despite Donald Trump’s administration having previously made moves to build relations with Russia.



Germany, France, Poland, Lithuania, Czech Republic, Denmark, Italy and the Netherlands said they would expel Russian diplomats, along with Ukraine and Canada.



Russia has largely sought “reciprocity” in its responses to western expulsions of its diplomats. But it has also put new twists on diplomatic punishments: by cutting the total number of US staff in Russia by 755 last year rather than ejecting specific diplomats; and by closing the British Council, a government cultural initiative, after Theresa May ejected 23 Russian diplomats this month.



The Russian embassy to the US launched a Twitter poll on Monday asking users to vote on which American consulate should be closed in Russia. The US has an embassy in Moscow and consulates in St Petersburg, Yekaterinburg and Vladivostok.



Konstantin Kosachev, the chair of the upper house of the Russian parliament’s foreign affairs council, said on Facebook on Monday that the expulsions were “unprecedentedly dirty” and accused western countries of following a “herd instinct”.



“It will happen everywhere until they wake up and come to their senses,” he wrote of the expulsions. “We should not expect any apologies, that’s not what this unprecedentedly dirty and low game was made for.”

