by Eli Leon, News Agencies and Israel Hayom Staff
Tensions between Moscow and Washington grow as U.S. and U.K. mull imposing fresh sanctions on Syria and its allies • Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Sergei Ryabkov warns tougher Western sanctions will prompt "asymmetrical and aggressive moves."
Russia will use "painful" countermeasures to
respond to any new financial sanctions imposed on it by the U.S. and
other Western countries, a top Russian official warned Wednesday.
Britain and the United States said on Sunday
they were considering imposing additional sanctions on Syrian President
Bashar Assad and his supporters for their actions in Syria's
long-running civil war.
"If the U.S. opts to further toughen sanctions
in defiance of common sense and in disregard of its experience that has
already been quite painful for them, then we will find measures in our
toolbox that will have a painful impact, particularly in terms of
America's positioning in the world," Russian Foreign Minister Sergei
Ryabkov was quoted by the state-run RT news network as saying Wednesday.
Ryabkov was speaking at a meeting of the
deputies of the Russian State Duma ahead of a vote on a bill suspending
the Russian-American deal on reprocessing weapons-grade plutonium. He
told lawmakers that the toughening of U.S. sanctions against Russia
would lead to "asymmetrical and aggressive moves."
According to the nuclear agreement, Moscow and
Washington are required to dispose of weapons-grade plutonium taken
from decommissioned warheads originally intended to be used in nuclear
weapons.
Earlier this month, Russian President Vladimir
Putin decided to waive the implementation of the deal amid growing
tensions with Washington after the Russia-U.S.-brokered cease-fire in
Syria's embattled city of Aleppo collapsed in September.
The escalating violence in Syria has
exacerbated the already fragile relations between Washington and Moscow,
which have been trading barbs over the collapsed truce. The U.S.
accused Russia of not living up to its commitments under the Sept. 9
deal to halt fighting and ensure that aid reached the besieged
population, while Russia said U.S.-led coalition strikes against the
Islamic State group killed more than 60 Syrian soldiers in eastern
Syria.
Eli Leon, News Agencies and Israel Hayom Staff
Source: http://www.israelhayom.com/site/newsletter_article.php?id=37273
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