US will not respond to Russian 'threats,' but says talks ongoing

Russians are demanding access to their diplomatic compounds in the U.S.

— -- While the U.S. and Russia exchange some tough words, the two countries are taking steps to work through their issues -- including an ongoing discussion of Russian access to two diplomatic compounds in the U.S.

The Russian Foreign Ministry demanded those compounds be returned Thursday, or else the U.S. would face a "mirror response." Thirty-five Russian diplomats were expelled and the two properties seized by the Obama administration in December, in response to Russian interference in the election and harassment of American diplomats in Russia.

"I'm not going to respond to a threat being delivered by Russia. I'm also not going to respond to a hypothetical," Nauert said at a press briefing Thursday.

Nauert also admitted for the first time that the compounds would be part of the conversations between Russian and American officials. Under Secretary of State Tom Shannon will travel to St. Petersburg, Russia, on June 23 to meet with Deputy Foreign Minister and discuss the "irritants" in the relationship.

"Those discussions are ongoing. That is one of the issues –- the dachas –- that remains an irritant and something they certainly have asked us to address," she said, using the Russian term for the facilities that purported to be vacation spaces for their diplomats.

As the two sides negotiate the issue, Russia has ratcheted up their demands.

"We demand that everything that was seized in an absolutely illegal way be returned to us immediately," said Russian foreign ministry spokesperson Maria Zakharova. She did not elaborate on what a mirror response would look like, but the U.S. has a few facilities in Russia, including a residential complex and an Anglo-American school that Russia has previously threatened to shut down.

Nauert also blasted Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov's claim that Russia faces a daily barrage of cyberattacks from American hackers, calling it "propaganda."

"We're working to try to rebuild trust with the Russian government. There are areas where we can work together ... ISIS cooperation would be one of them," Nauert said.