From the MT:
“U.S.
Slashes Visa Services at Consulates in Russia”
U.S. visas and
services for American citizens will only be available in Moscow after the U.S.
slashed operations at its remaining Russian consulates, U.S. Ambassador to
Russia John Sullivan announced Thursday. High tensions and Russia’s 2017
personnel cap on the U.S. diplomatic mission previously prompted the State
Department to consider closing the two remaining U.S. consulates in Russia’s
fourth-largest city of Yekaterinburg and the Far Eastern port of Vladivostok. Sullivan
said in a statement that the Vladivostok consulate's operations will remain
suspended while the Yekaterinburg consulate will operate without visa and
American citizen services.
The changes
leave the U.S. Embassy in Moscow and its consular district as the last U.S.
diplomatic mission in Russia. “Effective April 1, U.S. Embassy Moscow’s
consular district will be expanded to include all of Russia,” Sullivan said in
the statement on the embassy’s website. “The Embassy will provide services to
U.S. citizens across the Russian Federation. The Embassy will also provide visa
services as efficiently and expeditiously as possible, given staffing
constraints,” he added. According to the statement, the U.S. mission reached
the decision after talks with State Secretary Antony Blinken following a
“lengthy review of the safety and security of the U.S. diplomatic mission and
our personnel.” Russia in 2018 ordered the closure of the U.S. consulate in St.
Petersburg in a diplomatic tit-for-tat sparked by the poisoning of former
double agent Sergei Skripal and his daughter in Britain. Moscow took the steps
after then-U.S. President Donald Trump closed Russia’s consulate in Seattle and
expelled 60 Russian diplomats from the country. The U.S. Embassy temporarily
suspended non-immigrant visa processing for several months in 2017 after Russia
expelled U.S. diplomats in response to sanctions over suspected interference in
the 2016 U.S. presidential elections. The Kremlin denies meddling in U.S.
elections.
^ My main
concern about this is for the Americans living across Russia since they can now
only receive US Government help from Moscow. ^
https://www.themoscowtimes.com/2021/04/01/us-slashes-visa-services-at-consulates-in-russia-a73439
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