Sixty American diplomats are leaving Russia on Thursday, meeting a deadline set when the Kremlin expelled them in retaliation for the U.S. expulsion of Russian diplomats. The tit-for-tat exchange is part of an international row over the poisoning of a former Russian spy in England.
"Three large buses and a minivan departed from the back gate of the U.S. Embassy in Moscow early Thursday morning," Charles Maynes reports for NPR's Newscast unit, "carrying American diplomats, their families, and the occasional family pet."
The Americans include 58 employees of the U.S. Embassy in Moscow and two staff members of the consulate in the Ural city of Yekaterinburg, an industrial center that's also Russia's fourth-largest city.
Russia set the deadline for the Americans' departure after President Trump
ordered 60 Russian officials
The Kremlin has denied being involved in the poisoning, which attracted extra suspicion as it came on the heels of other deaths of high-profile Russians in the U.K., from former KGB agent Alexander Litvinenko in 2006 to Russian oligarch Boris Berezovsky, a prominent critic of the Kremlin who died of an apparent hanging in 2013.
In addition to the expulsions, both the U.S. and Russia ordered the closures of diplomatic facilities — a Russian Consulate in Seattle and a U.S. Consulate in St. Petersburg.
Copyright 2018 NPR. To see more, visit
http://www.npr.org/