Sanctions put on 33, including Russians charged by Mueller
WASHINGTON — The Trump administration on Thursday imposed sanctions on 33 foreign individuals and businesses, including 12 Russian intelligence officers previously indicted by special counsel Robert S. Mueller III on charges of interfering with the 2016 U.S. presidential campaign.
The sanctions, announced by the State Department, are the latest sign of the discordant U.S. policy toward Moscow, with President Donald Trump repeatedly praising Russian President Vladimir Putin while other parts of the administration move to crack down on Russian abuses.
The latest list means 72 Russians have been sanctioned since Trump took office last year. In March, the administration also expelled 60 Russian diplomats, who it said were spies, in retaliation for the nerve agent attack on a former Russian spy living in England.
The State Department said those named Thursday were "a part of, or operating for or on behalf of, the defense or intelligence sectors" of the Russian government. A division of the Chinese military also was blacklisted for buying Russian weaponry.
The target list also included several Russian individuals and entities that the State Department says played a role in Russia’s 2014 invasion of neighboring Ukraine and its seizure of Crimea.
The sanctions are "in direct response to Russia’s aggressive actions against our country, our allies and our partners," said a State Department official who briefed reporters on condition of anonymity in keeping with department rules.
The 12 Russian intelligence agents were indicted by a federal grand jury in July for the hacking of the Democratic National Committee and Hillary Clinton’s presidential campaign in 2016. The Russians were identified as military intelligence officers in the indictment, which was handed down three days before Trump met with Putin in Helsinki, Finland.