Russia closes Romanias consulate in Saint Petersburg and expels acting consul

Russia closed Romania’s consulate in Saint Petersburg on Thursday and ordered the acting consul-general to leave the country, escalating a tit-for-tat expulsion that began last month after a Russian drone crashed near Galați. The move was confirmed by the Romanian Ministry of Foreign Affairs, which said Bucharest had already summoned its ambassador in Moscow for consultations after the Russian Foreign Ministry summoned Romania’s envoy on Wednesday. The Russian Foreign Ministry spokeswoman, Maria Zakharova, announced the ambassador’s summons and the reciprocal measures in Moscow on Thursday morning .
Romania shut the Russian consulate in Constanța and expelled its consul on 21 May 2026 after a Russian military drone was downed near Galați, an incident that Bucharest described as a violation of Romanian airspace. Moscow has now mirrored the decision, closing the Romanian consulate in Saint Petersburg and declaring the acting consul *persona non grata* . The Romanian ministry called the Russian response “predictable” and said it reflected the symmetry of the measures taken by both sides.
The chain of events began on 21 May 2026, when Romanian authorities reported the crash of a Russian drone near Galați, close to the border with Moldova. Bucharest summoned the Russian ambassador the same day and, on 22 May, ordered the closure of the Russian consulate in Constanța and the expulsion of its consul. The Russian Foreign Ministry confirmed those steps on 23 May and warned of “necessary retaliatory measures.” By 25 June, Moscow had executed the mirror response, closing the Romanian consulate in Saint Petersburg and expelling the acting consul .
Romanian officials said the ambassador in Moscow, Cristian Istrate, was summoned to the Russian Foreign Ministry on Wednesday afternoon, where he was informed of the decision. The Romanian ministry reiterated that consular services for Romanian citizens in Saint Petersburg would be transferred to the embassy in Moscow, while Russian citizens in Romania would continue to be served by the embassy in Bucharest and the consulate in Iași. No timetable for the closure has been published, but diplomatic sources in both capitals said the consulate would cease operations within days.
The reciprocal expulsions mark the most serious deterioration in bilateral relations since the start of Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine in 2022. Neither side has indicated a willingness to back down, and analysts in Bucharest and Moscow say the standoff is likely to persist in the absence of a broader de-escalation in the region.
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