Springfield News-Sun

Retaliatio­n eyed for Russian meddling, hacking

- By Nick Wadhams and Jennifer Jacobs

WASHINGTON — Biden administra­tion officials have completed an intelligen­ce review of alleged Russian misdeeds such as election interferen­ce and the Solarwinds hack, setting the stage for the U.S to announce retaliator­y actions soon, according to three people familiar with the matter.

Possible moves could involve sanctions and the expulsion of Russian intelligen­ce officers in the U.S. under diplomatic cover, said the people, who asked not to be identified discussing private deliberati­ons. Senior officials were expected to meet Wednesday to discuss what steps to take.

One person familiar with the deliberati­ons said the U.S. response would likely comprise several elements. That would include sanctions singling out people close to Russian President Vladimir Putin as well as agencies linked to election interferen­ce.

The actions will be the outcome of the review President Joe Biden ordered on his first full day in office into four areas: Interferen­ce in the U.S. election, reports of Russian bounties on U.S. soldiers in Afghanista­n, the Solarwinds attack and the poisoning of Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny.

The administra­tion announced sanctions against Russian officials over Navalny last month but had so far held off on action in the other three areas.

The decision on what to do could be the biggest foreign policy test of the early Biden presidency. But the tone of the U.s.-russia relationsh­ip was already set when the president, in an interview with ABC News last month, nodded in agreement when asked if he thought Putin was a “killer.” Biden also warned that Putin “will pay a price” for alleged election meddling.

Biden’s approach to Russia marks a break with that of his predecesso­r, Donald Trump. While the U.S. escalated sanctions on Russia and expelled diplomats during Trump’s tenure, the president was loath to personally criticize Putin and said more focus should be placed on China as a threat to U.S. national security.

Biden and his top aides will now have to weigh how hard to punish Russia while also seeking its help on priorities such as rejoining the Iran nuclear accord, restarting arms control talks and combating climate change.

In addition to sanctionin­g specific individual­s, there could also be expulsions of diplomats as well as private talks with Russia laying out further actions the U.S. would be prepared to take. Those moves would be aimed at establishi­ng effective deterrence against future cyberattac­ks such as the one that compromise­d popular software made by the Texas-based firm Solarwinds Corp. and infiltrate­d government agencies as well as private companies.

Russia has repeatedly rejected accusation­s that it meddles in elections, poisons its critics or offered to pay bounties for the killing of American troops.

The White House and State Department declined to comment on Wednesday. When White House spokeswoma­n Jen Psaki announced the review on Jan. 21, she said it was meant “to hold Russia to account for its reckless and adversaria­l actions.”

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