Chattanooga Times Free Press

Biden picks veteran diplomat as new Russia ambassador

- BY MATTHEW LEE AND ELLEN KNICKMEYER

WASHINGTON — The Biden administra­tion has picked a veteran foreign service officer with years of experience in Russian affairs as its nominee to be the next ambassador to Russia.

Administra­tion officials familiar with the matter say the nomination of Lynne Tracy, the current U.S. ambassador to Armenia, will be submitted to the Senate as soon as the Russian government signs off on the choice. Ambassador­ial nomination­s must be approved by the host government under the rules of diplomatic protocol.

Such approval is generally routine, but Russia’s acceptance of President Joe Biden’s pick for ambassador cannot be taken for granted at a time of particular­ly fraught U.S.-Russian relations over Ukraine, the detention of Americans in Russia, allegation­s of Russian meddling in U.S. and other elections, and an escalating spat over the staffing of embassies in Washington and Moscow.

The ambassador opening comes as many Russia experts in the United States who might have been candidates for the Moscow post have been banned from Russia. Russia was informed of the administra­tion’s decision to choose Tracy’s several weeks ago but has not yet given its formal approval, known as “agrément” in diplomatic parlance, the officials said.

Tracy, who speaks Russian, previously served as a senior adviser for Russian affairs in the State Department’s Bureau of European and Eurasian Affairs, as the deputy chief of mission at the U.S. Embassy in Moscow. She also held several posts in Central and South Asia.

The previous U.S. ambassador to Moscow, John Sullivan, left earlier this month, in an departure that had been expected this fall but was accelerate­d by the failing health of his wife, who died a day after his return.

Tracy is well-regarded within diplomatic circles. She received a State Department heroism award from then-Secretary of State Hillary Clinton in 2009.

While leading the U.S. consulate in Peshawar in Pakistan’s insurgency-ridden border regions, Tracy survived an attack on her by a gunman that left her vehicle riddled with bullets, but insisted on going to work that day and staying on post, even as security concerns compelled the consulate to trim its staff.

Tracy also received the State Department’s distinguis­hed honor award for her work as the embassy deputy in Moscow.

Sullivan ended his tenure as America’s top diplomat in Moscow this month after nearly three years. He had been expected to leave this fall, but his departure was sped up due to his wife’s deteriorat­ing medical condition. His wife, lawyer Grace Rodriguez, had not accompanie­d him to Moscow.

While the position remains vacant, Elizabeth Rood, the deputy chief of mission to Russia, is serving as the top U.S. diplomat in Moscow.

The ambassador post became vacant at a time when the United States is leading a campaign by NATO member nations to arm and fund Ukraine as that country fights to expel a brutal Russian invasion. The Biden administra­tion also is playing the lead role in rallying internatio­nal sanctions aimed at crushing Russia’s economy to force it to end the war.

Russian President Vladimir Putin, who sees NATO expansion and other Western partnershi­ps with former Soviet states as the U.S. encroachin­g on Russia’s security, launched the invasion in February, targeting Ukraine’s Western-oriented government.

The next U.S. ambassador to Moscow also is likely to play a central role in negotiatio­ns to bring home two Americans the U.S. says Russia is detaining unjustly, WNBA star Brittney Griner and civilian contractor Paul Whelan.

 ?? U.S. STATE DEPT. VIA AP ?? The Biden administra­tion has selected Lynne Tracy, a veteran foreign service officer with years of experience in Russian affairs, to be the next U.S. ambassador to Russia.
U.S. STATE DEPT. VIA AP The Biden administra­tion has selected Lynne Tracy, a veteran foreign service officer with years of experience in Russian affairs, to be the next U.S. ambassador to Russia.

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