As Russian diplomats rested at the cottages in the United States. VIDEO - ForumDaily
The article has been automatically translated into English by Google Translate from Russian and has not been edited.
Переклад цього матеріалу українською мовою з російської було автоматично здійснено сервісом Google Translate, без подальшого редагування тексту.
Bu məqalə Google Translate servisi vasitəsi ilə avtomatik olaraq rus dilindən azərbaycan dilinə tərcümə olunmuşdur. Bundan sonra mətn redaktə edilməmişdir.

As Russian diplomats rested at the cottages in the United States. VIDEO

Russian diplomatic dachas in the US have been empty for two years now. The Americans restricted access to them, accusing Russia of using country houses for intelligence operations. Correspondents Air force We went to Maryland to find out how the dacha life of Russian diplomats looked from the outside.

The estate on the coast of the Chesapeake Bay in Maryland belongs to Russia, but since December 2016, the Russians have not appeared there.

Two years ago, on December 29, the administration of US President Barack Obama imposed anti-Russian sanctions in response to cyber attacks during the presidential campaign in America in 2016. Moscow denied the charges.

In addition to expelling 35 Russian diplomats, the United States closed access to two diplomatic country residences in Maryland and in New York. Both belong to Russia.

The White House said that the Russians used these dachas for intelligence purposes, without specifying how. In the Kremlin, it was reported that outside the city, staff of diplomatic missions only rested.

Of all the Russian diplomatic property arrested in the United States, the area in Maryland is the largest in area. 18,2 hectares of land with two mansions of the Georgian era, the USSR acquired in 1972 year. The estate is located in 108 km from the Russian Embassy in Washington.

It was built by financier John Jacob Rascob, who at one time invested in the construction of the Empire State Building in New York.

Photo by wikipedia.org

Rasokob built a three-story mansion on the site in Maryland and another two-story house with an attic for his children.

After his death, the property changed hands several times until it was bought by the Soviet government for $1,2 million, as the New York Times reported. Small country houses, a tennis court, a football field - all this appeared in the residence when it became Soviet diplomatic property.

The mansion on the 35 rooms with wine cellar, 12 bathrooms and 13 fireplaces was used as the ambassador’s residence. The rest of the house at the weekend came to the embassy staff.

After the collapse of the USSR, when this property went to Russia, according to the Associated Press agency, it cost 3 million dollars.

Regattas and parties

The local residents told the Air Force that their relations with the workers of the Russian diplomatic mission were good-neighborly.

John Wiley, a farm worker bordering on ambassadors ’dachas, recalled how Yuri Dubinin once called for lunch (he worked as ambassador extraordinary and plenipotentiary to the United States from 1986 to 1990).

And in September, according to him, diplomats organized a holiday to which they invited locals: “In general, a day of fun. They invited us to dinner and cocktails. They had their own band and played music.”

Photo: video frame

The head of the local municipality, Steven Wilson, also remembered the fun of diplomatic workers at their dachas. “Bonfires, terrible-sounding Russian songs,” he lists with a laugh. He himself had not been to the embassy residence.

“Everything around was fenced off. There was very little interaction with people who came there periodically,” says Wilson. According to him, FBI agents were monitoring the dachas. Agents conducted surveillance from Wilson's beach - he lives across the river from the embassy residence.

“I never heard any stories about dark things going on there, about submarines or laser beams at night, nothing like that,” he said.

John Wiley added that most of the time at the dachas lived only technical personnel, about eight people, and diplomatic workers came only on weekends or on holidays.

Photo: video frame

Local farmer Peter Schaeffer, whose land borders Russian dachas, waxes nostalgic about his conversations with Ambassador Anatoly Dobrynin: “I think he’s the smartest person I’ve ever met.” Dobrynin headed the Soviet diplomatic mission to the United States from 1962 to 1986.

“One day we sat with him over a bottle of wine. There was half a watermelon on the side table,” the farmer recalls. - He asked me - Peter, do you want a piece of watermelon? I tell him - Mr. Dobrynin, it’s mid-January, where did you get it? “What do you think,” he answered, “Fidel!”

Schaeffer recalls how the two of them were discussing the Caribbean crisis over a bottle of wine, and criticized the Obama administration for deciding to shut down Russia’s access to summer houses.

“Obama kicked them out because he wanted to complicate the situation for the incoming president,” the farmer is sure. A fan of Donald Trump, he also scolds the State Department, which has been protecting the embassy dachas since 2016.

According to him, Russian diplomats paid him 4200 dollars a year so that Schaeffer would maintain the road to dachas in good condition.

“Nobody cares about the roads now, I won’t repair them for the State Department, what the hell,” he says indignantly.

How Russia is trying to return the embassy cottages

In July, 2017, both the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and the State Department said that they were close to an agreement to lift their dacha arrest, but this did not happen. The Russian Foreign Ministry accused the United States of violating the Vienna Convention on Diplomatic Relations 1961.

The United States denied these allegations. According to the American Foreign Missions Act, the Secretary of State has the right to demand that a foreign representative stop using any real estate if it is necessary to protect the national interests of the United States.

In September 2017, President Vladimir Putin instructed the Foreign Ministry to file a lawsuit in the United States to regain access to diplomatic ownership. The fate of the claim is still unclear.

Kommersant wrote that the American company White & Case will represent Russia’s interests in US courts. However, the publication’s sources in government agencies admitted that the chances of getting the seizure lifted from real estate are minimal.

According to the American Foreign Missions Act, if diplomatic property is not used for a year, the secretary of state may decide to sell it.

The media wrote that Secretary of State Rex Tillerson also offered Russia the option of selling real estate, but Moscow refused it. So, the dacha in Maryland will continue to be empty for now. Now the territory is monitored by two guards.

Read also on ForumDaily:

Passed her boss: what else did Maria Butina admit

Secrets of the embassy cuisine: what feed the Russian ambassador to the US

How to extend your stay in the United States on a non-immigrant visa

Mysterious illness of American diplomats in Cuba has spread to China

Miscellanea In the U.S. diplomats country house
Subscribe to ForumDaily on Google News

Do you want more important and interesting news about life in the USA and immigration to America? — support us donate! Also subscribe to our page Facebook. Select the “Priority in display” option and read us first. Also, don't forget to subscribe to our РєР ° РЅР ° Р »РІ Telegram  and Instagram- there is a lot of interesting things there. And join thousands of readers ForumDaily New York — there you will find a lot of interesting and positive information about life in the metropolis. 



 
1078 requests in 1,589 seconds.