Washington Accuses Moscow of Trying to 'Intimidate' U.S. Media in Russia

INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
The United States on Monday accused Russia of trying to "intimidate" American correspondents in Moscow, who were summoned by the Russian
foreign ministry and threatened with reprisals because of U.S
sanctions."The Russian Ministry of Foreign affairs summoned your colleagues to quote 'explain to them the consequences of their government's
hostile line in the media sphere,'" State Department spokesman Ned Price told reporters in Washington."Let's be clear, the Kremlin is
engaged in a full assault on media freedom, access to information and the truth," he added, slamming what he called a "a clear and apparent
effort to intimidate independent journalists."Russian foreign ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova threatened at the end of May to expel
Western media if YouTube continued to block the department's weekly briefings.On Friday, she again accused Washington of "targeting for
repression Russian media" inside the United States."They are doing everything to make it impossible for Russia media to work," she said,
adding that "if they don't normalize the work of Russian media on U.S
territory, there will be forceful measures as a consequence."She said the U.S
media representatives were "invited" to the Russian foreign ministry on Monday.Price said Moscow was reacting to the blacklisting a month
invasion of Ukraine.He accused Moscow of "false equivalence" in comparing independent U.S
journalists to the sanctioned Russian media, whom he described as "propaganda arms of the Russian government.""The United States continues
to issue visas to qualified Russian journalists, and we have not revoked the foreign press center credentials of any Russian journalists
working in the United States," he said.