From Reuters:
“U.S. embassy in Moscow
dwindling to "caretaker presence," U.S. official says”
The U.S. State Department is
getting to the point of being able to maintain only a "caretaker
presence" in Russia in the face of a deep downturn in diplomatic relations
between Washington and Moscow, a senior department official said on Wednesday. Russia
and the United States withdrew their ambassadors in April after the incoming
Biden administration issued sanctions and expelled 10 Russian diplomats over
actions including the SolarWinds cyber attack and election interference. Those
ambassadors returned in June, but the staff at the embassy in Moscow - the last
operational U.S. mission in the country after consulates in Vladivostok and
Yekaterinburg were shuttered - has shrunk to 120 from about 1,200 in early
2017, the State Department official told reporters at a briefing. Staff were
struggling to issue visas, putting a drag on business ties between the two
countries, and were unable to repair elevators or entrance gates, creating
safety concerns, said the official, who spoke on condition of anonymity. "We're
going to confront the situation... sometime next year where it's just difficult
for us to continue with anything other than a caretaker presence at the
embassy,” the official said.
Russia and the United States
continue to engage in talks over nuclear threat reduction and climate change,
but relations remain strained by issues like the Nord Stream 2 gas pipeline to
Europe and President Vladimir Putin's suppression of his domestic opponents. The
United States was forced to lay off nearly 200 locally employed staff after
Russia banned the embassy from employing non-Americans, and a visa-for-visa
arrangement has prevented Washington from bringing U.S. citizens into Russia.
Russia has just over 400
diplomats in the United States, including its delegation to the United Nations
in New York, the State Department official said. U.S. officials continue to
negotiate with their Russian counterparts to stabilize the "downward
spiral" in relations, the official added.
^ The US Embassy in Moscow went
from having 1,200 employees (Americans, Russians and Third Nation Nationals) to
120 Americans - Putin doesn't allow them to hire Russians or Third Nation
Nationals anymore.
Russia has 400 Russians working
at their Embassy in Washington DC, their Consulate in New York, their Mission
to the UN and their Consulate in Houston.
The US Consulate in Saint
Petersburg was forced (by Putin) to close in 2018 and the US Consulates in Vladivostok and Yekaterinburg have only
skeleton American employees there, but offer no public assistance.
Russians wanting any kind of US
Visa have to get a Schengen Visa first and travel to the US Embassy in Warsaw,
Poland 700 miles away.
Americans wanting any kind of
non-emergency US Government Assistance (including A Report of Birth Abroad)
have to go to one of these US Embassies: Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Poland or
Ukraine.
If things continue as they are
the US will be forced to shut its 2 Consulates and its Embassy in Russia and have
no Diplomatic Presence in Russia.
The US had Diplomatic Relations
with Czarist Russia from 1776-1917, with the Soviet Union from 1933-1991 and
with Russia since 1992.
Things weren't even this bad
during the Cold War (1945-1991.)
Note: I've been to the US Embassy
in Moscow and to the Russian Embassy in Washington DC several times. ^
https://news.yahoo.com/u-embassy-moscow-dwindling-caretaker-173412858.html?fr=sycsrp_catchall
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