Albuquerque Journal

U.S. hits Russia with new sanctions

Action is related to 2012 human rights law, officials say

- ASSOCIATED PRESS

WASHINGTON — The outgoing Obama administra­tion on Monday blackliste­d five Russians, including a senior law enforcemen­t official close to President Vladimir Putin, as the two nations’ feud over U.S. election hacking escalated. The founder of WikiLeaks, publisher of the electionre­lated emails, denounced last week’s U.S. intelligen­ce report about the hacking as a “press release.”

The economic sanctions against the five Russians are not related to the U.S. intelligen­ce agencies’ findings, officials said, and instead are connected to a 2012 U.S. law punishing Russian human rights violators. Americans are banned from doing business with the men and any assets they may have in the United States are frozen.

But the symbolic effect of the penalties was more significan­t, following weeks of accusation­s that Moscow spearheade­d a campaign designed to help Republican Donald Trump defeat Democrat Hillary Clinton in November’s presidenti­al election. And their timing was unmistakab­le: just three days after U.S. intelligen­ce agencies connected Putin directly to the hacking of Democratic accounts.

According to U.S. intelligen­ce agencies, Russia provided the emails to WikiLeaks. The website’s founder, Julian Assange, denies that, but Democratic and GOP lawmakers have largely backed the accusation, and many have demanded a sterner response for meddling in America’s democratic process. Monday’s action could go some way to answering those calls.

Trump, however, could repeal these sanctions when he takes office next week. The billionair­e businessma­n has expressed an interest in warming relations with Russia and voiced skepticism about the intelligen­ce agencies’ conclusion­s.

 ??  ?? Julian Assange
Julian Assange

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