Diplomats from US, Russia hold 'tough' talks: State Dept
WASHINGTON: Senior diplomats from Washington and Moscow held a "tough, forthright" conversation concerning bilateral tensions, the State Department said Tuesday, including over Russian access to diplomatic compounds in the US.
That spat was high on the agenda at Monday's talks in Washington between Thomas Shannon, the US State Department's No. 3, and Russia's deputy foreign minister Sergei Ryabkov.
The Kremlin has demanded Washington restore diplomatic access to two compounds in the states of New York and Maryland, which the Obama administration restricted in December following initial suspicions of Russian meddling in the 2016 US election.
"The conversation was tough, forthright, and deliberate, reflecting both parties' commitment to a resolution," the State Department said of Monday's talks. "The United States and Russia seek a long-term solution that would address areas of bilateral concern that have strained the relationship."
"The talks reflected a spirit of goodwill, but it is clear that more work needs to be done."
The meeting, which lasted three hours, had originally been scheduled for June, but Moscow had canceled it over new US sanctions linked to the conflict in Ukraine.
After the meeting Ryabkov, asked by journalists if the issue of the diplomatic compounds had been resolved, replied: "Almost, almost."
The development came as the White House it was nominating former Utah governor Jon Huntsman as ambassador to Russia.
Huntsman previously served as US ambassador to Singapore and China.
In December then president Barack Obama expelled 35 Russian diplomats for suspected spying and ordered the residential complexes shut down.
When President Vladimir Putin and US counterpart Donald Trump met for the first time at the G20 summit in Hamburg this month, the Kremlin strongman raised the question of the diplomatic sites "quite unambiguously," Russian spokesman Dmitry Peskov said.
Putin had initially abstained from evening the score of the diplomatic row, awaiting the Trump administration's response.
But hopes that the US president would follow up on campaign pledges to boost relations have fizzled as the White House struggles to contain the snowballing scandal over possible collusion between Russia and the Trump campaign.
Russia has now threatened to take belated "counter actions" in retaliation to the US measures†–AFP
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