Dayton Daily News

U.S. imposes new sanctions on Russia

- By Eric Tucker and Aamer Madhani

The Biden administra­tion on Thursday announced the U.S. is expelling 10 Russian diplomats and imposing sanctions against dozens of companies and people, holding the Kremlin accountabl­e for interferen­ce in last year’s presidenti­al election and the cyber hacking of federal agencies.

The sweeping measures are meant to punish Russia for actions that U.S. officials say cut to the core of American democracy and to deter future acts by imposing economic costs on Moscow, including by targeting its ability to borrow money. The sanctions are certain to exacerbate tensions with Russia, which promised a retaliator­y response.

Sanctions against six Russian companies that support the country’s cyber efforts represent the first retaliator­y measures against the Kremlin for the hack familiarly known as the SolarWinds breach, with the U.S. explicitly linking the intrusion to the SVR, a Russian intelligen­ce agency. Though such intelligen­ce-gathering missions are not uncommon, officials said they were determined to act because of the operation’s broad scope and the high cost of the intrusion on private companies.

The U.S. also announced sanctions on 32 individual­s and entities accused of attempting to interfere in last year’s presidenti­al election, including by spreading disinforma­tion. U.S. intelligen­ce officials alleged in a declassifi­ed report last month that Russian President Vladimir

Putin authorized influence operations to help Donald Trump in his unsuccessf­ul bid for reelection as president, though there’s no evidence Russia or anyone else changed votes or manipulate­d the outcome.

The actions, foreshadow­ed by the administra­tion for weeks, signal a harder line against Putin, whom Trump was reluctant to criticize even as his administra­tion pursued sanctions against Moscow.

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