From the MT:
“Russia Calls on U.S. to Beef
Up Understaffed Moscow Embassy”
Russia is calling on the United
States to send embassy staff to Moscow in order to resume U.S. visa services,
senior Russian diplomats said Tuesday. Deputy Foreign Minister Sergei Ryabkov
issued the invitation after the U.S. Embassy in Moscow stopped processing
immigrant visas, requiring Russians to travel to the Embassy in Warsaw to
apply. The U.S. State Department has warned that the U.S. Embassy in Moscow
could stop performing most functions in 2022. “We call on the U.S. to
strengthen its presence in Moscow and send new employees so that at least
consular services in Russia are provided in a more or less normal volume,”
Ryabkov said as quoted by the state-run RIA Novosti news agency.
Speaking at the annual Fort Ross
Dialogue in Washington, Ryabkov noted that U.S. diplomatic presence in Russia
has been reduced to a level that no longer allows it to provide basic consular
services. Russia's Ambassador in Washington Anatoly Antonov called for a
“reciprocal reset of all restrictions on diplomatic presence,” according to RIA
Novosti. The change in tone comes after the State Department added Russia to a
short list of countries where it has no consular representation or where “the
political or security situation is tenuous or uncertain enough" to prevent
consular staff from processing immigrant visa applications. Most countries on
that list have poor or no direct relations with the U.S., including Cuba, Iran,
Syria, Yemen and Venezuela.
Successive rounds of tit-for-tat
diplomatic expulsions by the two countries have left embassies and consulates
badly understaffed, playing havoc with normal services. Amid a continuing
dispute over how many diplomats each side can post in the other's country,
Russia has placed the U.S. on a list of "unfriendly" countries
requiring approval to employ Russian nationals. Russia on Aug. 1 barred embassies from hiring
Russian or third-country staff, forcing the United States to lay off more than
200 locals at missions across Russia, according to the State Department. A
senior U.S. official warned last week that the understaffed U.S. Embassy in
Moscow could be unable to perform functions like sending diplomatic cables
without more staff. The United States complains of a lack of reciprocity with
Moscow counting local staff in its tally of U.S. diplomats while Washington
only factors in Russian nationals in its limit on numbers. The United States
has around 120 people at its Russian missions, far down from 1,200 in 2017,
while Russia has some 230 people in the United States, excluding those posted
in New York for its UN mission.
^ Hopefully, this shows Russia’s
change and willingness to end its diplomatic attack on the US. It would be nice to see the US Embassy and Consulates in Russia and the Russian Embassy and Consulates in the US return to normal operations. ^
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.