Trump ramps up Russia tension with consulate shutdown
September 3, 2017 by admin
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The Trump administration has retaliated against Russia for expelling American diplomats by shuttering Russia’s oldest consulate in the United States along with two annexes, the latest sign of tensions between Washington and Moscow rising despite Trump’s public desire for warmer relations.
The closures were positioned by the State Department as done in the spirit of “parity,” and administration officials have underlined the ultimate goal of improving relations with Russia. Moscow, however, has reacted by accusing the U.S. of escalating tensions, leaving the door open for further retaliation.
The development is the latest in Trump’s rocky relationship with Russia, one that has been consistently viewed in the context of the ongoing investigation into potential collusion between Trump’s presidential campaign and Moscow during the 2016 election.
Trump critics have hailed the new restrictions on Russian diplomats, which come as a response to a Russian order in July that the U.S. cut diplomatic personnel in the country to 455. That Russian order was itself a response to new penalties imposed on Moscow over election interference.
“It’s a necessary reaction given what Vladimir Putin did,” Michael McFaul, the former U.S. ambassador to Russia under the Obama administration, told MSNBC. “We had to respond. I would have liked to see a bigger response, but this is better than no response at all.”
The State Department abruptly announced the move on Thursday, confirming that the U.S. had complied with Russia’s “unwarranted and detrimental” request to reduce its personnel. The new U.S. order gave Moscow just two days to close down the San Francisco consulate — the Kremlin’s oldest and most established in the country — as well as two trade annexes in Washington and New York.
“The United States hopes that, having moved toward the Russian Federation’s desire for parity, we can avoid further retaliatory actions by both sides and move forward to achieve the stated goal of both of our presidents: improved relations between our two countries and increased cooperation on areas of mutual concern,” State Department spokeswoman Heather Nauert said. “The United States is prepared to take further action as necessary and as warranted.”
U.S. officials and Russian embassy personnel walked through the properties on Saturday to ensure they were vacated and to “secure and protect the facilities,” a senior State Department official confirmed to Fox News.
“The Department of State can confirm that the Russian government complied with the order to vacate its Consulate and two annexes,” the official said.
The U.S. and Russia now each maintain three consulates within one another’s respective borders, at a time when their relationship is widely perceived to be at its lowest point since the Cold War.
“The issue is, what do the Russians decide to do next?” said Steven Pifer, a retired Foreign Service officer who spent over 25 years with the State Department. “There’s not a large chance, but there’s a chance that you could end up with no consulates in either country.”
“There are probably a number in Moscow who don’t want to play that game,” Pifer, now a nonresident senior fellow at the Brookings Institution, added.
Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov pledged Friday that Russia “will have a tough response to the things that come totally out of the blue to hurt us and are driven solely by the desire to spoil our relations with the United States.”
Russia’s foreign ministry drafted a formal “note of protest” to the United States’ over the latest move, and summoned Anthony Godfrey, the deputy chief of mission at the U.S. Embassy in Moscow, to receive it on Saturday.
The White House on Thursday cast the decision as a “firm and measured action” that had been made by Trump, but rejected the notion that the relationship is at a decades-low point.
“We want to halt the downward spiral and we want to move forward towards better relations,” White House press secretary Sarah Sanders said. ”But we’re also going to make sure that we make decisions that are best for our country.”
The development has added further uncertainty to the president’s ultimate strategy toward Russia. Less than a month ago, Trump was seen “thanking” Russia for expelling the diplomats, a statement the White House later cast as sarcastic.
“It is reassuring for the countries most worried about Russian revisionism,” said Dalibor Rohac, an expert on Europe at the right-leaning American Enterprise Institute. “But it hardly alleviates the worries about the ambiguous stance that POTUS has taken towards Russia.”
Trump raised eyebrows during the presidential campaign by repeatedly praising Russian President Vladimir Putin.
As recently as Monday, Trump declined to single out Russia as a “security threat” when asked about Moscow’s role in escalating the situation in the Baltic region.
“I hope that we do have good relations with Russia,” Trump told reporters at a joint press briefing with the president of Finland. “I say it loud and clear, I have been saying it for years. I think it’s a good thing if we have great relationships, or at least good relationships, with Russia.”
Pifer said that he has been “puzzled” by Trump’s statements on Russia because he does not articulate the need for Russia to change its behavior when calling for warmer ties.
“While I agree with the sentiment, I am puzzled by his reluctance to be critical of Russia,” Pifer said.
Other administration officials, including Secretary of State Rex TillersonRex Wayne TillersonTrump quietly growing irritated with some officials: report The Hill’s 12:30 Report Trump orders Russia to shutter San Francisco consulate, two annexes MORE, have signaled to Russia that the U.S. stance will remain the same unless the Kremlin changes its policies on to Ukraine and other issues.
“You see the administration internally struggling given differences between the cabinet and the president,” said Peter Harrell, a former State Department official under Obama who worked on sanctions policy.
A senior administration official told reporters on Thursday that the U.S. welcomes the opportunity to improve relations in the event that Russia addresses certain “concerns.”
“We have areas of contention between our two countries and concerns that the Russian side has not addressed,” the official said. “Certainly, if the Russian side wanted to address some of our concerns, we would always be willing to listen and keep an open mind because our fundamental goal is to find a way to improve the relations between our countries.”
The closure of the facilities is the latest in a tit-for-tat fight between the U.S. government and the Kremlin that was triggered when Congress passed a bill levying new sanctions against Moscow earlier this number. Trump was forced to sign the bill, which also restricts the president’s ability to ease sanctions on Russia, after it passed with a veto-proof majority.
For now, Moscow appears to still be considering its response. The administration gave Russia until Saturday to close down the facilities.
“The new steps push our bilateral relations even further into a dead end and contradict other high level announcements,” a Kremlin foreign policy aide told reporters on Friday.
“There have been words, but there’s no readiness to cooperate yet. This is about further escalating tensions. We regret this and will calmly think about how we might respond.”
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1 home burned as wildfire torches more than 5000 acres
September 3, 2017 by admin
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A brush fire in the Verdugo Mountains north of downtown Los Angeles has burned more than 5,000 acres, making it one of the largest fires in the city’s history and one that officials warn could grow larger if erratic weather conditions continue.
Hundreds of firefighters battled the blaze overnight and into the morning, and at one point, the flames were spreading in four directions amid intense heat and wild winds. One home has burned, but no injuries have been reported, officials said Saturday.
Firefighters face another day of triple-digit heat in inland areas of Southern California as a heat wave that has gripped the state continues. The National Weather Service said temperatures could reach 110-115 degrees in the hottest areas, and hillside areas could experience more of the shifting winds that helped fuel what has been dubbed the La Tuna fire.
More than 700 homes in the area are under evacuation, including 300 in Burbank, 250 in Glendale and 180 in Los Angeles, officials said.
Eric Garcetti.
“There is a lot of unburned fuel” in this area, Terrazas warned, noting that the last fire in the area was at least 30 years ago.
Both Terrazas and Garcetti said the La Tuna fire was the largest in the city’s history in terms of acreage.
“We can’t recall anything larger,” Terrazas said.
“Our biggest concern is the wind and weather,” the chief said. “The erratic weather is our No. 1 challenge. If there’s no wind, this is a relatively easy fire to put out. But when the wind changes, it changes our priorities because other properties become at risk.”
The fire was 10% contained Saturday morning, officials said. Winds were blowing between 10 and 15 mph, with humidity at 10% to 15%.
The combination of dry brush, high heat, low humidity and shifting winds make it possible for the fire to spread, officials said.
“We are worried about the fire hooking southeast into Glendale and working its way up into the Whiting Woods area,” Garcetti said.
Late Saturday morning, the city of Glendale announced voluntary emergency evacuations in the Glenwood Oaks and Mountain Oaks neighborhoods. Residents in the city’s Whiting Woods neighborhood also were told to be prepared to leave.
Despite the size of the fire, it has destroyed only one home, in the southern region of the Sunland-Tujunga area, officials said.
Chris Hall, 37, was spraying his roof with a water hose Saturday morning when two police officers pulled up to his driveway on McGroarty Street in Sunland-Tujunga.
“Now it’s mandatory,” they told him. “Get your stuff and go.”
Hall said he wanted to stay but didn’t argue.
The officers gave him 20 minutes to pack, but Hall said he already was prepared. The night before, he organized his photos — those of his daughter’s birth, birthdays and visits to the zoo — and important documents, piling them in the trunk of his Nissan Sentra.
“Everything else can be replaced,” he said, sitting behind the wheel of his car and ready to flee.
Earlier that morning, after seeing flames creep up behind a nearby art center, he dropped his 5-year-old daughter and 12-year-old stepson, along with their pet hamster, at a friend’s home. He left their goldfish behind.
Over the last couple of weeks, as wildfires raged across California, Hall said he spent hours trimming trees and pruning bushes in case a fire erupted nearby.
“We did a lot of cleaning,” he said.
Music teacher Valerie Keith was 40 minutes into her work day Saturday morning when her Tujunga neighbor called.
“You gotta come home,” the neighbor told her.
Keith already was already on edge. Her dogs and cat were home — alone — as flames crept closer to her house. She rushed back.
Soon after, police told her she needed to leave.
Keith frantically loaded her pets in her car, along with her two best violins, spilling on her hands the yogurt she had taken for breakfast but hadn’t eaten.
“I thought I was going to be safe today,” she said.
Just about ready to escape, she remembered something. She dashed back inside and grabbed a framed photograph of her mother and a banjo made from a tambourine.
“When you have to leave for safety, then you suddenly realize what’s important,” she said.
In Burbank, Red Cross officials rushed Saturday to set up a shelter at McCambridge Recreation Center. Animals were housed in kennels in an animal control vehicle stationed in the parking lot.
“It got really bad in Burbank last night,” said Eric Baumgardner, emergency coordinator for the Burbank Fire Department. “It shifted on us real quick.”
Baumgardner said no homes or structures in Burbank were damaged Friday night but the flames got within 100 feet of houses in Burbank Estates above Brace Canyon and the Stough Canyon Nature Center.
Firefighters set up structure protection groups overnight, including at least 25 fire engines that backed into residents’ driveways in case the fire got too close.
Raul Claros, executive director of the Northern Valleys chapter of the Red Cross, said an apartment fire also caused several evacuations in Santa Clarita. Meanwhile, he said, 20 staff had been diverted for the past six days to work as dispatch operators for Hurricane Harvey evacuees in Texas.
“Then the emergency started at home with these fires,” he said.
When winds pushed a band of flames over the canyon ridgeline Friday night, authorities ordered those living in the Brace Canyon Park area and Castleman Estates to “leave immediately” and head to evacuation shelters, according to an alert issued by the fire department. The Stough Canyon Nature Center also is under evacuation order.
Nancy Varney, 71, got to the recreation center at 2:30 a.m. with her dog, Maggie. Her husband stayed at their home in Brace Canyon.
“It was coming down the hill pretty fast,” she said.
At 5 a.m., Varney took her dog outside, where they sat until noon, when the temperature reached 96 degrees and the smoke left a gray plume above the recreation center. She opted to walk around the mall as she waited for good news.
On Saturday, the fire was burning on multiple fronts southwest of the 210 Freeway, which remained closed between the Glendale Freeway and Sunland Boulevard. It was not known when the freeway would be reopened.