Russia Imposes Soviet-Style Restrictions on British Diplomats in Moscow

A convoy of vehicles leaves the British embassy in Moscow, Russia March 23, 2018. (Reuters)
A convoy of vehicles leaves the British embassy in Moscow, Russia March 23, 2018. (Reuters)
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Russia Imposes Soviet-Style Restrictions on British Diplomats in Moscow

A convoy of vehicles leaves the British embassy in Moscow, Russia March 23, 2018. (Reuters)
A convoy of vehicles leaves the British embassy in Moscow, Russia March 23, 2018. (Reuters)

Russia on Thursday imposed Soviet-style restrictions on British diplomats, requiring them to give at least five working days' notice of any plans to travel beyond a 120-km (75-mile) radius, due to what it called London's "hostile actions".

Since President Vladimir Putin sent troops into Ukraine in February 2022, the West has sent Kyiv tens of billions in military aid and imposed stringent economic sanctions.

Britain is one of the loudest advocates for concerted international opposition to what Moscow calls its "special military operation" in Ukraine, and one of the leading Western suppliers of weaponry to help Ukraine defend itself.

Britain's chargé d'affaires in Russia was summoned to the foreign ministry in Moscow on Thursday to be scolded for what Moscow said was support for the "terrorist actions" of Ukraine and for obstructing Russian diplomacy in Britain.

"The British side was also informed of the decision to introduce a notification procedure for the movement of employees of British diplomatic missions on the territory of our country as a response to London's hostile actions," the ministry said.

The restrictions will put British diplomats under the toughest constraints they have experienced in Moscow since Soviet times, when travel by foreigners was severely limited and closely controlled by the KGB security service.

Britain's embassy in Moscow declined to comment.

Russia casts Britain and the United States as perfidious powers which are supporting Ukraine in an attempt to cleave Russia apart and grab its vast natural resources - assertions Washington and London deny.

Moscow has suggested that Britain and the United States were involved in a drone attack on the Crimean Bridge which killed two people on Monday. Moscow has also suggested both powers may have helped blow up the Nord Stream gas pipelines connecting Russia and Germany.

Hardship post

British diplomats, with the exception of the ambassador and three other senior diplomats, will be required to send notification of any plans to travel beyond the 120-km (75-mile) "free movement zone" at least five working days ahead.

"Such a document should contain information about the timing, purpose, type of trip, planned business contacts, accompanying persons, type of transport, places of visit and accommodation, as well as the route of the trip," the ministry said.

Diplomatic postings to Moscow are now considered among the most difficult in the world by Western countries. The US State Department ranks Moscow alongside Freetown, Mogadishu, Damascus and Kabul in hardship terms.

Western diplomats in Moscow say intrusive surveillance and harassment are frequent and a guide known as "Moscow Rules" that was developed by Western spies in Soviet times to guard against complacency has been updated for modern Russia.

Russia has long complained that its own diplomats are routinely harassed in major Western capitals.

In May, Russia's ambassador to Washington, Anatoly Antonov, said that embassy employees had been threatened with physical violence, and were frequently badgered in the vicinity of the embassy to work for the Federal Bureau of Investigation or the Central Intelligence Agency.



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