Russia will retaliate if its Warsaw embassy cannot work, Russian envoy says

By Joanna Plucinska

WARSAW (Reuters) - Russia will retaliate against Poland if its embassy in Warsaw stops working because it cannot receive fresh funds from Moscow, its ambassador warned on Tuesday.

In March, Poland expelled 45 Russian diplomats over allegations of working for Russian intelligence and blocked the embassy's bank accounts. Moscow, which dismissed the accusations as baseless, retaliated in kind.

"We have some cash reserves, but they are not unlimited and unless the situation changes, after some time it may so happen that we shall not be in a position to pay our bills," Sergiy Andreev, 63, told Reuters.

"And it should be clear that as soon as our embassy stops functioning here, the same will happen to the Polish embassy in Moscow," he added.

Relations between Russia and Central European countries that once formed part of its sphere of influence have long been fraught but the invasion of Ukraine has fueled fear and suspicion about Moscow's intentions.

Andreev did not specify how soon the embassy may run out of cash, but added that about three-quarters of Russian officials who held diplomatic passports were expelled from Poland.

A spokesperson for Poland's foreign affairs ministry said 45 Polish diplomats were asked to leave Moscow in retaliation and the Polish embassy's bank accounts were frozen.

Andreev said that Poland's stance towards Russia since the Ukraine crisis began on Feb. 24 was particularly hostile, compared to other international partners.

"They are projecting this image of the most unfriendly country towards Russia, in NATO, in the EU, in Europe," he said.

Poland's decision to expel the Russian diplomats followed similar decisions in the Baltic states and Bulgaria.

(Reporting by Joanna Plucinska and Kuba Stezycki; Editing by Emelia Sithole-Matarise)