Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

U.S. sanctions Russia again

Moscow also faces new allegation­s of cyberattac­ks

- By Tracy Wilkinson, Jim Puzzangher­a and Jazmine Ulloa

The sanctions this time were over Russian support for North Korea.

WASHINGTON — The Trump administra­tion on Tuesday imposed more sanctions against Russia — this time for helping North Korea evade internatio­nal sanctions — as Moscow separately was accused anew of cyberattac­ks in the United States apparently aimed at underminin­g the midterm election in November.

The Russia sanctions were not related to the latest allegation­s of election interferen­ce but are the newest punitive measures in what has become a large package of penalties to force Russia to end its alleged violations of internatio­nal norms and agreements.

They come amid mounting evidence that people or groups associated with the Kremlin are actively hacking U.S. political institutio­ns, national infrastruc­ture such as the electricit­y grid, and major social media outlets, with an eye toward disrupting the American democratic system.

The action against Russia also was another example of the disconnect between administra­tion action and the president’s words. It came as President Donald Trump continued to speak ambivalent­ly about Russia’s interferen­ce in the 2016 presidenti­al election. In an interview with Reuters this week, Trump said, “if it was Russia,” when speaking of that interferen­ce, which the U.S. intelligen­ce community has concluded was mastermind­ed by Russia’s government.

Microsoft announced Tuesday that it took control of six internet domains created by a group with ties to the Russian government, which sought to trick people into believing they were legitimate sites related to the U.S. Senate and two conservati­ve Washington­based think tanks that have been critical of Trump: the Hudson Institute and the Internatio­nal Republican Institute.

The move by Microsoft, based on court orders and executed last week by its digital crimes unit, marked the 12th time in the last two years that the technology giant has moved to shut down fake websites created by the group variously known as Strontium, Fancy Bear or ATP28.

Microsoft has shut down 84 of the group’s sites during that period.

“We’re concerned that these and other attempts pose security threats to a broadening array of groups connected with both American political parties in the run-up to the 2018 elections,” Microsoft President Brad Smith said in a written statement.

Similarly, Facebook last month shut down 32 pages and accounts that it called part of a covert operation to stoke racial tensions in the United States.

Facebook and investigat­ors from the Digital Forensic Research Lab at the Atlantic Council, a nonpartisa­n think tank, later concluded that the shuttered pages and accounts were run by or linked to Russia’s Internet Research Agency.

The agency is the troll farm in St. Petersburg that U.S. officials say meddled in the 2016 election. It and 13 employees have been indicted on charges brought by special counsel Robert S. Mueller III in his ongoing investigat­ion of Russia and possible Trump campaign complicity.

An estimated 580 sanctions have been levied against Russian firms, entities and individual­s, including a number of oligarchs close to President Vladimir Putin. The sanctions are punishment for assorted transgress­ions: violations of human rights, use of chemical weapons, sabotage of elections and refusing to abide by U.S. sanctions against other countries.

Tuesday’s sanctions fall into the last category. The Treasury Department said it was blacklisti­ng two Russian citizens and two large Russian shipping companies for using at least seven Russian-flagged vessels to illegally ship refined petroleum products to North Korea.

Under United Nations sanctions unanimousl­y approved by the Security Council, North Korea is barred from trade in most oil, coal, minerals and other commoditie­s as punishment for its developmen­t of nuclear weaponry and as an inducement to halt the program. So it has sought willing partners to evade the limits.

“The Treasury Department is disrupting Russian efforts to circumvent our sanctions,” said Steven Mnuchin, the secretary of the Treasury.

The Trump administra­tion has also expelled Russian spies, closed down Russian diplomatic offices and seized Russian-owned properties in the United States. But after Congress overwhelmi­ngly approved additional sanctions late last year as punishment for election activities, Trump only reluctantl­y and belatedly signed them into law, aware that Congress probably would overturn any veto.

The gulf between his administra­tion’s tough action on Russia and Trump’s refusal to condemn Moscow or Putin has long vexed lawmakers and other White House watchers.

On Tuesday, Assistant Secretary of State Wess Mitchell went before a skeptical Senate panel to explain U.S. policy toward Russia. Several members of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, from both parties, repeatedly questioned why there was a disparity between the president’s actions and that of his administra­tion.

Democrats also said they were concerned there has been no full official report of what Trump and Putin said in their roughly two-hour, one-on-one meeting in Helsinki, Finland, last month, with only translator­s present.

Mitchell asserted several times that the administra­tion’s actions are at Trump’s behest. “We are executing the policy directives of the president. Full stop,” he said.

The sanctions are biting, he added, noting that Russia has lost $8 billion to $10 billion in arms sales, other export revenue is falling, and foreign direct investment in Russia is down 80 percent since 2013.

The administra­tion is prepared to take additional steps up “an escalatory ladder” of sanctions, he said.

“Putin wants to break apart the American republic, not by influencin­g an election or two, but by systematic­ally inflaming the perceived fault lines that exist within our society,” Mitchell said. “His is a strategy of chaos for strategic effect.”

Downstairs in the Senate building, members of the Senate Banking Committee were airing similar grievances and forcing senior State and Treasury officials to defend the administra­tion’s approach toward Russia.

“It seems to many of us that our efforts are not effective enough,” Sen. Tim Scott (R-S.C.) said. “There’s so little we can show for our efforts.”

Indeed, sanctions do not seem to have made much of a dent in the work of the cyberspies, as shown by the examples disclosed by Microsoft involving the U.S. Senate; the Internatio­nal Republican Institute, which is affiliated with the Republican Party; and the Hudson Institute, whose website on Tuesday featured a report entitled, “Countering Russian Kleptocrac­y.”

The cyberattac­kers created realistic-looking internet domains using words from the targeted entities’ official website addresses to fool users, Microsoft said. Cybersecur­ity experts say the strategy can be employed to disseminat­e false informatio­n, spread viruses or steal passwords and other credential­s from people.

 ?? J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE/AP ?? Assistant Secretary of State Wess Mitchell went before a Senate panel Tuesday to explain U.S. policy toward Russia.
J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE/AP Assistant Secretary of State Wess Mitchell went before a Senate panel Tuesday to explain U.S. policy toward Russia.

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