LONDON: Russia said on Thursday it was expelling two U.S. diplomats whom it accused of working with a Russian national charged with collaborating with a foreign state.
The Foreign Ministry said in a statement it had summoned U.S. envoy Lynne Tracy and told her that embassy First Secretary Jeffrey Sillin and Second Secretary David Bernstein must leave Russia within seven days.
The U.S. embassy confirmed the expulsions. There was no immediate comment from the State Department in Washington.
“The named people conducted illegal activity, maintaining contact with Russian citizen R. Shonov, accused of ‘confidential cooperation’ with a foreign state,” the Russian statement said.
Robert Shonov was employed by the U.S. Consulate General in the eastern Russian city of Vladivostok for more than 25 years until Russia in 2021 ordered the dismissal of the U.S. mission’s local staff.
Russia’s FSB security service published a video in August showing a purported confession by Shonov in which he said Sillin and Bernstein had asked him to collect information about Russia’s war effort in Ukraine, its annexation of “new territories”, its military mobilisation and the 2024 presidential election.
In the video, Shonov said he was told to gather “negative” information on these topics, to look for signs of popular protest and to reflect these in his reports.
The United States accused Moscow of attempting to intimidate and harass U.S. employees after Russian state media reported the charges against Shonov and said the FSB planned to question embassy employees who had been in touch with him.
When he was arrested in May, the State Department said the case highlighted Russia’s “blatant use of increasingly repressive laws” against its own citizens. It said the allegations against Shonov were “wholly without merit”.
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