Russia retaliates for US diplomatic expulsions
- Published
Russia is expelling 10 US diplomats and blacklisting eight top American officials in retaliation for sanctions imposed by the US on Thursday.
Those now banned from entering Russia include the director of the FBI and the US attorney general.
The White House says the US sanctions were in response to the "SolarWinds" hack last year, external, bullying Ukraine, and interference in the 2020 US election.
They come at a tense time for relations between Washington and Moscow.
Russia has been moving thousands of troops towards Ukraine, while US warships have been heading for the Black Sea, warned off by the Russian foreign ministry.
Last month the US targeted seven Russian officials and more than a dozen government entities over the poisoning of Kremlin critic Alexei Navalny. Russia says it was not involved.
However, this week US President Joe Biden offered his Russian counterpart Vladimir Putin a summit - an offer that Moscow has said it views positively and is currently considering.
Who is affected by the sanctions?
Moscow has asked 10 US diplomats to leave the country. It has also banned eight officials from entry. They include:
US Attorney General Merrick Garland
FBI Director Christopher Wray
US Domestic Policy Adviser Susan Rice
Five Polish diplomats have also been told to pack their bags, after Warsaw expelled five Russian officials.
As well as expelling 10 Russian diplomats, the US is targeting 32 entities and officials accused of trying to influence the 2020 US presidential election "and other acts of disinformation".
US financial institutions are also banned from purchasing rouble-denominated bonds from June.
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