Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Consequenc­es, finally

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After the prior administra­tion got itself in hot borscht for, even before taking office, all but assuring Russia that there would be no lasting penalties for 2016 election interferen­ce, Joe Biden is setting a better precedent and imposing harsh sanctions. It’s good that Vladimir Putin’s government will finally pay a steep economic price for cyberattac­ks on America, but don’t expect the penalties to change the Kremlin’s behavior one bit.

Via executive order issued Thursday, Biden is imposing fresh sanctions on Moscow: prohibitin­g U.S. institutio­ns from buying bonds from Russia’s Central Bank, finance ministry and its sovereign wealth fund; blacklisti­ng a half-dozen large cybersecur­ity firms; expelling 10 Russian diplomats from their embassy in Washington, and turning the screws on more than 30 other people and entities.

It’s partial payback for the SolarWinds hack, one of the largest ever network attacks on the U.S. government and American corporate interests, which was orchestrat­ed by Russian intelligen­ce.

When such meddling is met by weakness, as it repeatedly was during the Trump administra­tion, it is bound to get worse. Which is not to say that toughness cures the problem, as opposed to plunging the U.S. and Russia into a mutually harmful economic Cold War. Putin is too tough a customer for that.

Turns out, real life is more complicate­d than politics. Who’da thunk?

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