It’s up to Washington to rescue rock bottom relations with Russia, Moscow insists after US envoy visit

8 Nov, 2021 10:34

Moscow has said that a visa crisis hampering travel between the US and Russia can be fixed, but only if the American side is ready to make concessions and restore the functions of its consulates across the world’s largest country.

In a statement issued on Monday, Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova said there were hopes to rescue struggling bilateral ties after US Deputy Secretary of State Victoria Nuland visited Moscow last month for talks.

According to Zakharova, Nuland has a “specific task” to solve the impasse over travel permits, which has seen American diplomats cease to process all non-immigration visas from the country since May. Instead, Russians have been told to apply for entry to the US through a ‘homeless nationalities’ scheme. Washington blames the situation on a ban on hiring local and foreign staff, and has suspended work in its Yekaterinburg and Vladivostok consulates.

“If they want to move on from this, into any future state of normal bilateral relations, including in this area, they must undertake a number of practical steps,” Zakharova went on, saying US President Joe Biden’s administration has it within its power to fix the crisis.

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“They need to unblock the situation in which they’ve run themselves into a dead end.”

On Saturday, Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Sergey Ryabkov added his voice to the growing row, saying the negotiations he led with Nuland had simply led to both sides restating their long-held positions. “There is no progress and, it seems, none is expected,” he said.

The US State Department has previously said its 120-strong staff at its Moscow embassy amounts to only a “caretaker presence.”

Moscow’s Foreign Ministry said at the time that the warning “looked like a manifestation of the archaism and inefficiency of American consular and diplomatic services.”

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