San Diego Union-Tribune

U.S. PREPARES TO ANNOUNCE SANCTIONS ON RUSSIA

Move would be in response to massive hacking campaign

- BY AAMER MADHANI & ERIC TUCKER Madhani and Tucker write for The Associated Press.

The Biden administra­tion is preparing to announce sanctions in response to a massive Russian hacking campaign that breached vital federal agencies, as well as for election interferen­ce, a senior administra­tion official said Wednesday night.

The sanctions, foreshadow­ed for weeks by the administra­tion, would represent the first retaliator­y action announced against the Kremlin for last year’s hack, familiarly known as the SolarWinds breach. In that intrusion, Russian hackers are believed to have infected widely used software with malicious code, enabling them to access the networks of at least nine agencies in what U.S. officials believe was an intelligen­ce-gathering operation aimed at mining government secrets.

Besides that hack, U.S. officials last month alleged 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 measures are to be announced today, according to the official, who was not authorized to discuss the matter by name and spoke on condition of anonymity to The Associated Press.

It was not immediatel­y clear what, if any, other actions might be planned. Officials had previously said they expected to take actions both seen and unseen.

The sanctions, presumably intended to send a clear retributiv­e message to Russia and to deter similar acts in the future, come amid an already tense relationsh­ip between the U.S. and Russia.

President Joe Biden told Putin this week in their second call to “de-escalate tensions” following a Russian military buildup on Ukraine’s border, and said the U.S. would “act firmly in defense of its national interests” regarding Russian intrusions and election interferen­ce.

In a television interview last month, he replied “I do” when asked if he thought Putin was a “killer.” He said the days of the U.S. “rolling over” to Putin were done.

Putin later recalled his ambassador to the U.S. and pointed at the U.S. history of slavery and slaughteri­ng Native Americans, and the atomic bombing of Japan in World War II.

It remained unclear whether the U.S. actions would actually result in changed behavior, especially since past measures by the U.S. have failed to bring an end to Russian hacking. The Obama administra­tion expelled diplomats from the U.S. in 2016 in response to interferen­ce in that year’s presidenti­al election. And though Trump was often reluctant to criticize Putin, his administra­tion also expelled diplomats in 2018 for Russia’s alleged poisoning of an ex-intelligen­ce officer in Britain.

U.S. officials are still grappling with the aftereffec­ts of the SolarWinds intrusion, which affected agencies including the Treasury, Justice, Energy and Homeland Security department­s, and are still assessing what informatio­n may have been stolen. The breach exposed vulnerabil­ities in the supply chain as well as weaknesses in the federal government’s own cyber defenses.

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