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Today: March 28, 2025

US, Russia agree to restore diplomatic missions as first step in Ukraine war talks

U.S. Secretary of State Rubio visits Saudi Arabia
February 18, 2025

By Humeyra Pamuk and Simon Lewis

RIYADH/WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The U.S. and Russia agreed on Tuesday to restore the normal functioning of each other's diplomatic missions, Secretary of State Marco Rubio said after talks between senior U.S. and Russian officials in Saudi Arabia.

The move appeared to signal a significant easing of restrictions on Russian diplomatic missions in the United States that were imposed by past U.S. administrations over Moscow's invasion of Ukraine and other Russian actions.

The Riyadh talks were aimed as a step toward ending Russia's war in Ukraine after President Donald Trump, who took office last month, ordered top officials to begin negotiations.

Rubio said the sides agreed as a first step to appoint teams of officials to "work very quickly to re-establish the functionality of our respective missions."

The two countries have expelled diplomats and limited the appointment of new staff at each other's missions in a series of tit-for-tat measures over the past decade, leaving their respective embassies thinly staffed.

Rubio said those moves had "really diminished our ability to operate in Moscow" and that Russia would say the same about its mission in Washington.

"We're going to need to have vibrant diplomatic missions that are able to function normally in order to be able to continue these conduits," Rubio told the Associated Press.

He said he would not negotiate in public the details of how the missions would be restored.

The State Department did not immediately respond to a request for details of the current operations of U.S. missions in Russia.

Rubio's Russian counterpart, Sergei Lavrov, raised the functioning of Russia's U.S. missions with Rubio in a call on Saturday ahead of the talks in Riyadh, Russia's foreign ministry said.

Even before Russia's full-scale invasion of Ukraine in 2022, U.S. officials complained they were able to maintain only a "caretaker presence" in Russia, after Russia imposed a cap on personnel in U.S. missions, forcing Washington to shutter its consulates in Vladivostok and Yekaterinburg.

(Reporting by Humeyra Pamuk and Simon Lewis; Editing by Frances Kerry)

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