China Daily (Hong Kong)

Kremlin slams Western cyberattac­k claims

- By REN QI in Moscow renqi@chinadaily.com.cn

Western attempts to blame Russian military intelligen­ce services for cyberattac­ks are rooted in “frenzied Russophobi­a”, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said on Tuesday.

Russia strongly regrets that Western nations have developed a tendency to blame Russia and its intelligen­ce services for everything, Peskov said in a news conference.

“The Russian Federation and its special services have never undertaken any cyberattac­ks, especially against the Olympics,” he said.

The UK Foreign Office on Monday claimed that Russia’s Main Intelligen­ce Directorat­e had carried out “cyber reconnaiss­ance against officials and organizati­ons at the 2020 Olympic and Paralympic Games due to take place in Tokyo this summer before they were postponed”.

According to the British authoritie­s, “the targets included the Games’ organizers, logistics services and sponsors”.

In the United States, the Justice Department on Monday unsealed charges accusing six Russian military intelligen­ce officers of an aggressive worldwide hacking campaign that caused mass disruption and cost billions of dollars. They were alleged to have attacked targets like a French presidenti­al election, the electricit­y grid in Ukraine and the opening ceremony of the Pyeongchan­g 2018 Olympic Winter Games.

Destructiv­e ‘endeavors’

Addressing the UK claims, the Russian embassy in London said they were made without evidence, and were part of an effort to sour relations between Russia and other states.

“There is nothing new about it, considerin­g how much effort was spent by London to drive a wedge in our ties with Ukraine and Georgia, for example,” the embassy said in a statement. “These ‘endeavors’ are destructiv­e for Russian-British relations and for the UK’s internatio­nal prestige.”

The embassy said Russia saw the latest accusation­s as part of a “wave of unprovoked malign attacks” conducted under a “consistent disinforma­tion campaign to smear Russia”.

For the US Justice Department’s case, John Demers, the US assistant attorney general for national security, said the prosecutor­s focused on seven breaches that together showed how Russia sought in recent years to use its hacking abilities to undermine democratic institutio­ns and ideals, retaliate against enemies and destroy rival economies.

The Russian embassy in Washington strongly denied the allegation­s. “It is absolutely obvious that such news breaks have no bearing on reality and are aimed at whipping up Russophobi­c sentiments in American society, at launching a ‘witch hunt’ and spy mania, which have been a distinctiv­e feature of the political life in Washington for several years,” the embassy’s press office said.

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