"An agreement has been given," President Vladimir Putin's top foreign policy aide Yury Ushakov told reporters, referring to a diplomatic procedure in which the host government accepts the nomination of an ambassador.
He said he knew Tefft well and called him a "first-class diplomat".
If confirmed by the US Senate, Tefft, a career diplomat with 40 years of experience, will succeed Michael McFaul, who quit his post in February after just two years on the job.
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