US says Russia behind Democratic server hack, Kremlin says ‘nonsense’ | World News - Hindustan Times
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US says Russia behind Democratic server hack, Kremlin says ‘nonsense’

ByReuters, Washington
Oct 08, 2016 07:57 AM IST

The Obama administration’s decision to blame Russia for the attacks is the latest downward turn in Washington’s relations with Moscow, which are under strain over Russia’s actions in Syria and Ukraine and in cyberspace.

The US government for the first time on Friday formally accused Russia of a campaign of cyber attacks against Democratic Party organisations ahead of the November 8 presidential election.

The Obama administration’s decision to blame Russia for the attacks is the latest downward turn in Washington’s relations with Moscow, which are under strain over Russia’s actions in Syria and Ukraine and in cyberspace.(AFP file photo)
The Obama administration’s decision to blame Russia for the attacks is the latest downward turn in Washington’s relations with Moscow, which are under strain over Russia’s actions in Syria and Ukraine and in cyberspace.(AFP file photo)

“We believe, based on the scope and sensitivity of these efforts, that only Russia’s senior-most officials could have authorised these activities,” a US government statement said on Friday about hacking of political groups.

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“These thefts and disclosures are intended to interfere with the US election process,” the statement said.

US intelligence officials concluded weeks ago that the Russian government was conducting or orchestrating cyber attacks against the Democratic National Committee and the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee, possibly to disrupt or discredit the election, in which Democrat Hillary Clinton faces Republican Donald Trump.

A Kremlin spokesperson called the US allegations “nonsense”, the Interfax news agency reported.

The Obama administration’s decision to blame Russia for the attacks is the latest downward turn in Washington’s relations with Moscow, which are under strain over Russia’s actions in Syria and Ukraine and in cyberspace.

Read | Who hacked US Democratic emails? Putin says ‘I don’t know, but Russia didn’t’

Also on Friday, US secretary of state John Kerry said Russian and Syrian actions in the Syrian civil war, including bombings of hospitals, “beg for” a war-crimes investigation.

In addition, a US intelligence official said on Friday that Russia is moving short-range nuclear-capable missiles into Kaliningrad, a tiny Russian enclave between Poland and Lithuania, confirming Estonian news reports.

Clinton’s campaign chairperson, John Podesta, said public blaming for the hacks left one remaining question of “why Donald Trump continues to make apologies for the Russians.” Trump had previously expressed doubt about Russia’s involvement. In July, he suggested Russia should attempt to retrieve and publish emails from Clinton’s private server.

Trump’s campaign did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Hours after the US government’s accusation was levied, WikiLeaks posted hundreds of emails on its website purportedly hacked from Podesta’s private account.

Read | FBI investigates DNC email hacking; Clinton campaign blames Russia

Change in tone

Until Friday, the administration had avoided publicly naming Russia in connection with the mounting civilian deaths in Syria or the cyber attacks.

The statement by the department of homeland security and the office of the director of national intelligence did not blame the Russian government for hacking attempts against state election systems, but said “scanning and probing” of those systems originated in most cases from servers operated by a Russian company.

However, a department of homeland security spokesperson told Reuters that US officials have concluded that the hacking attacks or probes of state voter registration systems are “consistent with Russian motivations.”

Concern has grown about the reliability of the US voting system as a result of the breach, and Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump has called the system “rigged,” but without providing specific evidence.

US intelligence officials have said there is no evidence that voting recording systems have been manipulated.

Naming Russia as the actor behind the cyber attacks on political organisations falls short of more punitive measures the United States has taken against other countries for cyber intrusions.

Lawmakers of both political parties welcomed the formal accusation. Republican Senator Cory Gardner, chairman of the US Senate Foreign Relations Subcommittee on East Asia, the Pacific and International Cybersecurity, said he planned to introduce sanctions legislation.

Earlier this year, a US grand jury indicted seven Iranians employed by two Iran-based computer companies on hacking charges into US financial sector. In 2015, Obama announced sanctions against North Korea for hacking into Sony Pictures. In 2014, the United States charged five Chinese military hackers for economic espionage aimed at US nuclear, metals and solar industries.

A senior US official said the administration is considering other retaliatory steps against Russia, but he declined to identify them. Those steps may remain covert, the official said.

Read | Why Russia would prefer Trump enough to hack Clinton

The Democratic National Committee publicly disclosed intrusions into its systems in June, blaming Russia for the attacks. Leaks of the committees’ emails from pro-transparency group WikiLeaks soon followed, demonstrating what appeared to be favouritism for Clinton over another Democrat, Bernie Sanders, by committee chairperson Debbie Wasserman Schultz. Wasserman Schultz, a Florida congresswoman, stepped down.

In Friday’s statement, the government said disclosures of emails by WikiLeaks and hacking entities known as DCLeaks and Guccifer 2.0 “are consistent with the methods and motivations of Russian-directed efforts.”

WikiLeaks has not identified the source of its leaks and criticised those who have claimed it was Russia. Guccifer 2.0 has identified itself as a Romanian hacker, but US intelligence officials have concluded it and DCLeaks are both a front for Russian spy units.

Lawmaker demands sanctions

The chairperson of a US Senate cyber security subcommittee said on Friday he planned to introduce sanctions legislation over “Russia’s cyber criminals” after Washington accused Russia of political cyber attacks ahead of the November 8 presidential election.

Republican Senator Cory Gardner said his legislation would require the Obama administration to investigate those who have engaged in significant actions undermining cyber security and aggressively pursue sanctions when appropriate.

Gardner is chief of the Senate foreign relations subcommittee on East Asia, the Pacific and International Cybersecurity.

Read | A Russia shadow over Trump vs Hillary script after cyber attack twist

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