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14 Jul, 2017 07:08

US mulls return of seized Russian diplomatic property ‘to give cooperation a chance’ – Trump aide

US mulls return of seized Russian diplomatic property ‘to give cooperation a chance’ – Trump aide

The US may hand two diplomatic compounds confiscated by the Obama administration back to Moscow if it sees “acts of good faith” from the Kremlin, similar to the recently brokered ceasefire in Syria, Sebastian Gorka, deputy assistant to President Trump, says.

By considering a release of the Russian diplomatic compounds that have remained sealed since December, Washington wants to leave the door open for rapprochement with Russia, Gorka told CNN in an interview on Thursday.

The statement follows a warning by Moscow that it is preparing a “tough response” to the move, which took place in December 2016. During the transitional period for the new administration, the Russian government decided to hold off on retaliatory measures until US President Donald Trump’s position becomes clear.

“We want to give collaboration and cooperation a chance,” Gorka said, adding that while Moscow and Washington are often not on the same page, there are areas where the two countries are able to find common ground.

“The fact is we may not share the same philosophy, we may not share the same type of statesman view of the world but the fact is there are some issues of common concern,” Gorka said. He noted that the return of the compounds in New York and Maryland would not be unconditional. He cited the ceasefire agreement for southwestern Syria negotiated by the Russian and US leaders on the sidelines of the recent G20 summit as an example of the kind of goodwill the White House expects from the Kremlin.

“If we can see acts of good faith come out of the Kremlin with regards to things such as a ceasefire, then perhaps there is a chance for what [US Secretary of State] Rex Tillerson wants to see happen, which is an improvement in relations between our two capitals,” the official said.

Gorka’s statement comes as several US lawmakers are demanding the premises not be returned to Russia, arguing that such a step “would embolden” Moscow and “invite a dangerous escalation in the Kremlin’s destabilizing actions” in a letter signed by Senators Marco Rubio (R-Florida), Jeanne Shaheen (D-New Hampshire), and Johnny Isakson (R-Georgia).

Despite media reports in May that the US is reviewing former President Barack Obama’s decision to confiscate the compounds and is considering their return if Moscow greenlights the construction of the US consulate in St. Petersburg, the issue is still up in the air.

The issue was reportedly brought up during the first face-to-face meeting between Russian President Vladimir Putin and Donald Trump at the G20, but no breakthrough followed.

Moscow, which also had 35 of its diplomats expelled with only 72 hours’ notice to leave the country, now says that its patience is wearing thin.

“I believe that it is just shameful for such a great country as the US, which champions international law, to leave the situation in suspension,” Russian foreign minister Sergey Lavrov said this week, calling the unresolved situation with the Russian diplomatic property in the US “just outrageous.”

Lavrov went on to say that Russia was preparing a response to the seizure, considered to be by Moscow a violation of the 1961 Vienna Convention on Diplomatic Relations that demands respect for diplomatic immunity.

While Lavrov did not specify what Russia’s response would be, Deputy Foreign Minister Sergey Ryabkov noted that if Washington continues to drag its feet on the issue, there will be a “tough response.”

There have been reports in the Russian media that Russia might expels 30 US diplomats and seize a summer residence of the US Embassy in northwestern Moscow in a tit-for-tat measure.

READ MORE: Russian FM proposes expulsion of 35 US diplomats in sanctions tit-for-tat

Justifying the closure of the compounds at the time, Obama called them a “necessary and appropriate response” to alleged Russian meddling in the US election. The US authorities claimed that the compounds were used by Moscow for “intelligence-related purposes,” allegations Russia has repeatedly denied.

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