US 'Kremlin Report' A Short-Sighted Step: Russian Security Council Secretary


US 'Kremlin Report' A Short-Sighted Step: Russian Security Council Secretary

TEHRAN (Tasnim) - The so-called “Kremlin report” released by the United States is the short-sighted step, which will have a negative impact on bilateral relations, Russian Security Council Secretary Nikolai Patrushev said Wednesday.

"It is obvious that this short-sighted step by Washington will negatively affect bilateral contacts between our states, but it is not able to change the foreign policy of the Russian Federation and will not affect the credibility of our country on the world stage," Patrushev told reporters.

He stressed that the use of such “imaginary external threats” as Russia and China was an attempt by the US authorities to mask the difficult domestic situation, Sputnik reported.

"The course taken by the United States in regional and international affairs, which involves countering such imaginary external threats as Russia and China, is primarily intended to distract the attention of ordinary Americans from the complicated domestic situation in the United States, the accumulated social and economic problems, and the authorities' inability to effectively solve the tasks facing them, including because of inconsistencies between the actions of departments and agencies," Patrushev said.

On Monday night, the US Treasury Department released its so-called "Kremlin report," which identifies potential targets for future anti-Russia sanctions. The list included 114 Russian politicians and 96 businessmen, and was compiled under the Countering America’s Adversaries through Sanctions Act (CAATSA), which was passed by the US Congress last summer and enacted by President Donald Trump on August 2. It includes ten Russian ministers, such as Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev, Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu and Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov among other high-profile officials. Though the new report does not automatically impose new sanctions, it paves the way for more anti-Russian restrictions.

Russian President Vladimir Putin, who wasn't included in the report, joked he was "sad" that he hadn't been on the list, adding that, however, it represents an unfriendly step by the US administration. The Kremlin has also commented on the report, saying that the inclusion of top Russian politicians and businessmen in the report was "unprecedented."

In his turn, Medvedev jokingly said that non-inclusion to the reports is a reason to quit the Russian government, stressing that almost everyone put into an administrative position by President Putin has been added to the report.

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