What's new

Breaking: Trump Expels 60 Russian Diplomats for U.K. Attack

Torch_v2.0

FULL MEMBER
Joined
Dec 4, 2017
Messages
596
Reaction score
-3
Country
Romania
Location
Romania
Trump Expels 60 Russian Diplomats for U.K. Attack
By
Jennifer Epstein
and
Jennifer Jacobs
Updated on
  • The president also ordered Russian consulate in Seattle closed
  • Moves are the most aggressive by U.S. in Trump presidency

640x-1.jpg

play-076012604d.svg

President Trump reportely expelled 60 Russian diplomats in response to an attack on a U.K. spy.
President Donald Trump ordered 60 Russian diplomats the U.S. considers spies to leave the country in response to the nerve-agent poisoning of a former Russian spy in the U.K. and closed Russia’s consulate in Seattle, as European allies and Canada took similar measures.



The expulsions are the most aggressive U.S. move against Russia under Trump, who has sought a closer personal relationship with President Vladimir Putin while at the same time introducing new sanctions against people and entities with ties to the Kremlin.



“Today President Donald J. Trump ordered the expulsion of dozens of Russian intelligence officers from the United States and the closure of the Russian consulate in Seattle due to its proximity to one of our submarine bases and Boeing,” White House press secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders said in a statement. “The United States takes this action in conjunction with our NATO allies and partners around the world in response to Russia’s use of a military-grade chemical weapon on the soil of the United Kingdom, the latest in its ongoing pattern of destabilizing activities around the world.”



European Council President Donald Tusk said that 14 European Union countries would expel Russia diplomats as well, and those announcements came in rapid succession, from France and Germany to Latvia and Estonia.



U.S. officials called the March 4 poisoning of Sergei Skripal and his daughter in Salisbury, England an attack on America’s closest ally and a reckless attempt to murder a British citizen on British soil. They said there are more than 100 Russian intelligence agents under cover as diplomats in the U.S. and described the number as unacceptable.

QuickTake: The Russian Nerve Agent That’s Spooking Britain

Russia’s state-owned news service said the Kremlin will respond in “coming days.

The 60 people expelled from the U.S. include 48 attached to the Russian embassy and 12 at the country’s mission to the United Nations. They have seven days to leave the country, the officials said.

The MOEX Russia index of stocks fell as much as 1.5 percent after the news. The ruble pared its gain against the dollar. The 10-year ruble bond dropped, lifting the yield four basis points to 7.05 percent. Russian credit-default swaps climbed to the highest since Jan. 1.

The U.K. already expelled 23 Russian diplomats in response to the attack on Skripal and his daughter, which Prime Minister Theresa May’s government determined was perpetrated by Russia. Putin’s government in turn ordered 23 British diplomats out of Russia over what it called “unsubstantiated accusations,” and the Kremlin on Monday said it would act reciprocally if Trump expels officials.

Germany expelled four Russian diplomats on Monday, the Foreign Ministry in Berlin said on Twitter, citing Russia’s lack of an explanation over the Salisbury attack. “We didn’t take this decision lightly,” Foreign Minister Heiko Maas said.

‘Highly Likely’
Last week EU leaders declared in a statement that it was “highly likely” there was “no plausible alternative explanation” other than Russia being to blame.

While the U.K. and EU also recalled their ambassadors from Russia in response to the attack, the U.S. has no plans to withdraw diplomats from the country, the officials said.

U.S. policy toward Russia has grown more aggressive in recent months, but some Trump critics say he’s been slow to respond to Putin’s provocations. Some have drawn a connection to special counsel Robert Mueller’s investigation of possible collusion between Trump’s 2016 campaign and the Russian government, as well as Trump’s past business relationships with Russian figures.

Trump faced criticism last week for calling Putin to congratulate him on his re-election, a vote observers said was marred by irregularities. After the call, Trump said he hoped to meet with Putin in the “not-too-distant future.”

“The United States stands ready to cooperate to build a better relationship with Russia, but this can only happen with a change in the Russian government’s behavior,” Sanders said in her statement.

Undercover Spies
It is common for countries to station intelligence agents overseas under cover as diplomats, whose presence at embassies is accepted with a wink and a nod by their host nations.

The Obama administration expelled 35 Russian diplomats and shut down two embassy compounds that it said were used for “intelligence-related purposes” in December 2016 in response to alleged Kremlin hacking of the presidential elections Trump won.

Putin held back from an immediate response, a decision praised as “very smart” by Trump, who’d campaigned on a pledge of improved relations with the Kremlin leader. But after legislators passed a law last July that prevented Trump from easing sanctions without congressional approval, Putin ordered the U.S. to cut staff at its diplomatic missions in Russia by 755, or nearly two-thirds, by Sept. 1, to create parity with Russian embassy officials in the U.S.

— With assistance by Jennifer Jacobs, Richard Bravo, Andrea Dudik, Anthony Halpin, and Ksenia Galouchko

Source: https://www.bloomberg.com/news/arti...-to-expel-60-russian-diplomats-for-u-k-attack
 
. . .
Trump Expels 60 Russian Diplomats for U.K. Attack
By
Jennifer Epstein
and
Jennifer Jacobs
Updated on
  • The president also ordered Russian consulate in Seattle closed
  • Moves are the most aggressive by U.S. in Trump presidency

640x-1.jpg

play-076012604d.svg

President Trump reportely expelled 60 Russian diplomats in response to an attack on a U.K. spy.
President Donald Trump ordered 60 Russian diplomats the U.S. considers spies to leave the country in response to the nerve-agent poisoning of a former Russian spy in the U.K. and closed Russia’s consulate in Seattle, as European allies and Canada took similar measures.



The expulsions are the most aggressive U.S. move against Russia under Trump, who has sought a closer personal relationship with President Vladimir Putin while at the same time introducing new sanctions against people and entities with ties to the Kremlin.



“Today President Donald J. Trump ordered the expulsion of dozens of Russian intelligence officers from the United States and the closure of the Russian consulate in Seattle due to its proximity to one of our submarine bases and Boeing,” White House press secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders said in a statement. “The United States takes this action in conjunction with our NATO allies and partners around the world in response to Russia’s use of a military-grade chemical weapon on the soil of the United Kingdom, the latest in its ongoing pattern of destabilizing activities around the world.”



European Council President Donald Tusk said that 14 European Union countries would expel Russia diplomats as well, and those announcements came in rapid succession, from France and Germany to Latvia and Estonia.



U.S. officials called the March 4 poisoning of Sergei Skripal and his daughter in Salisbury, England an attack on America’s closest ally and a reckless attempt to murder a British citizen on British soil. They said there are more than 100 Russian intelligence agents under cover as diplomats in the U.S. and described the number as unacceptable.

QuickTake: The Russian Nerve Agent That’s Spooking Britain

Russia’s state-owned news service said the Kremlin will respond in “coming days.

The 60 people expelled from the U.S. include 48 attached to the Russian embassy and 12 at the country’s mission to the United Nations. They have seven days to leave the country, the officials said.

The MOEX Russia index of stocks fell as much as 1.5 percent after the news. The ruble pared its gain against the dollar. The 10-year ruble bond dropped, lifting the yield four basis points to 7.05 percent. Russian credit-default swaps climbed to the highest since Jan. 1.

The U.K. already expelled 23 Russian diplomats in response to the attack on Skripal and his daughter, which Prime Minister Theresa May’s government determined was perpetrated by Russia. Putin’s government in turn ordered 23 British diplomats out of Russia over what it called “unsubstantiated accusations,” and the Kremlin on Monday said it would act reciprocally if Trump expels officials.

Germany expelled four Russian diplomats on Monday, the Foreign Ministry in Berlin said on Twitter, citing Russia’s lack of an explanation over the Salisbury attack. “We didn’t take this decision lightly,” Foreign Minister Heiko Maas said.

‘Highly Likely’
Last week EU leaders declared in a statement that it was “highly likely” there was “no plausible alternative explanation” other than Russia being to blame.

While the U.K. and EU also recalled their ambassadors from Russia in response to the attack, the U.S. has no plans to withdraw diplomats from the country, the officials said.

U.S. policy toward Russia has grown more aggressive in recent months, but some Trump critics say he’s been slow to respond to Putin’s provocations. Some have drawn a connection to special counsel Robert Mueller’s investigation of possible collusion between Trump’s 2016 campaign and the Russian government, as well as Trump’s past business relationships with Russian figures.

Trump faced criticism last week for calling Putin to congratulate him on his re-election, a vote observers said was marred by irregularities. After the call, Trump said he hoped to meet with Putin in the “not-too-distant future.”

“The United States stands ready to cooperate to build a better relationship with Russia, but this can only happen with a change in the Russian government’s behavior,” Sanders said in her statement.

Undercover Spies
It is common for countries to station intelligence agents overseas under cover as diplomats, whose presence at embassies is accepted with a wink and a nod by their host nations.

The Obama administration expelled 35 Russian diplomats and shut down two embassy compounds that it said were used for “intelligence-related purposes” in December 2016 in response to alleged Kremlin hacking of the presidential elections Trump won.

Putin held back from an immediate response, a decision praised as “very smart” by Trump, who’d campaigned on a pledge of improved relations with the Kremlin leader. But after legislators passed a law last July that prevented Trump from easing sanctions without congressional approval, Putin ordered the U.S. to cut staff at its diplomatic missions in Russia by 755, or nearly two-thirds, by Sept. 1, to create parity with Russian embassy officials in the U.S.

— With assistance by Jennifer Jacobs, Richard Bravo, Andrea Dudik, Anthony Halpin, and Ksenia Galouchko

Source: https://www.bloomberg.com/news/arti...-to-expel-60-russian-diplomats-for-u-k-attack

US actions are sign of desperation. US Empire is dying:

Death of US dollar? China launches petro-yuan to challenge greenback’s dominance
Published time: 26 Mar, 2018 09:32

The highly anticipated yuan-backed crude oil futures have been launched in Shanghai. China is the world’s biggest oil consumer, with eyes on rival benchmarks Brent and WTI as well as the US currency.
Trading of the new oil futures contracts for September settlement started on the Shanghai International Energy Exchange at 440.20 yuan ($69.70) per barrel, reports Chinese daily the South China Morning Post. Some 18,540 lots have reportedly been sold and purchased so far.

The long-awaited step evoked a surge in global prices for oil with Brent Crude soaring to $71 a barrel for the first time since 2015. US crude benchmark West Texas Intermediate (WTI) reached the highest level in three years at $66.55 per barrel, before retreating to $65.53.

Experts see China’s yuan-dominated contracts as historic as the new futures symbolize the first time that foreign investors can access a Chinese commodity market. The launch ends years of setbacks and delays since the country’s first attempt at listing the securities in 1993.

At the same time, the petro-yuan launch is seen as a blow to the US dollar that has been weakening in recent months. The US dollar is the predominant settlement currency for oil futures contracts. On Monday, the greenback slipped to a 16-month low against the Japanese yen, but remained steady against a basket of six major currencies.

Chinese authorities have reportedly accelerated the launch amid growing crude imports. Last year, the country outpaced the US as the world’s number one importer of oil. Thus, the contracts may not only help to win some control over pricing from the major international benchmarks, but also promote the use of Chinese currency in global trade.

The greenback will get weaker, as soon as other nations have a real credible alternative to it, Ann Lee, Adjunct Professor of Economics and Finance at New York University and author of the book ‘What the US Can Learn From China’, told RT.

“It is more of a game changer for the US. As soon as other nations have a real credible alternative to the US dollar, they can dump dollars and switch to the yuan which can spark a dollar crisis. If that happens, not only will there be inflation from the tariffs, but also from the flood of dollars,” said Lee.
source: https://www.rt.com/business/422314-petro-yuan-futures-dollar-death/

Is it a coincidence that in the same day US is expeling Russian diplomats ??

Expect more US provocations including provocations against 2018 Football World Cup in Russia.
 
Last edited:
. . . . . . .
This is largest collective expulsion of Russian diplomats in history. US, Canada and many EU countries.

Putin definitely was not expecting this especially from his buddy Trump.
 
.
Russia retaliates with vow to expel dozens of western diplomats


Swift response promised to expulsion of dozens of Russians in Europe and North America

Andrew Roth in Moscow

Mon 26 Mar 2018 16.04 BSTLast modified on Mon 26 Mar 2018 16.06 BST

Shares
0


A view of the Kremlin. Russia’s foreign ministry has described the diplomatic expulsions as an ‘unfriendly act’. Photograph: imageBroker/Rex/Shutterstock
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 solidarityfrom 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”.

“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 voteon 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.”
Source : https://www.theguardian.com/world/2018/mar/26/russia-retaliates-vow-expel-dozens-western-diplomats
 
.
Russland is used to getting sanctions.
Russia should do the same to them.

US regime led nato has been trying to gangbang russia for the longest time.
 
.
This is largest collective expulsion of Russian diplomats in history. US, Canada and many EU countries.

Putin definitely was not expecting this especially from his buddy Trump.

Truth be told, Trump is not Putin's buddy. Surely Russia owned the US elections and Trump has a soft spot for Putin, but they are far from being buddies. Trump would stab his mama and papa if he had the opportunity.

This is nothing, but a kneejerk reaction. Things will turn to normalcy very shortly. Russia is an important country.
 
. .

Latest posts

Back
Top Bottom