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NATO members unite to face evolving threats from Russia and China

U.S. President Joe Biden attends a meeting with NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg during a NATO summit, at the Alliance’s headquarters in Brussels, Belgium, June 14, 2021.

Stephanie Lecocq | Reuters

WASHINGTON  —  NATO members vowed to address a range of traditional and evolving security challenges, including several posed by China, in a joint statement released Monday at the close of their summit.

“China’s growing influence and international policies can present challenges that we need to address together as an Alliance,” the statement, known as a communique, said. “We will engage China with a view to defending the security interests of the Alliance.”

The references to China represent a victory for President Joe Biden, who was attending his first NATO summit as president.

Biden arrived at the summit intent upon rallying NATO’s 30 member-strong alliance behind a security policy that confronts both new threats, like cyberwarfare and China, as well as traditional threats, like Russia’s military incursions into Eastern Europe.

But Beijing’s ambitious military buildup also received mention in the communique.

“China is rapidly expanding its nuclear arsenal with more warheads and a larger number of sophisticated delivery systems to establish a nuclear triad,” the communique said. 

Biden has said his administration will stand “shoulder to shoulder” with America’s closest allies, breaking sharply from his predecessor’s “America First” policy.

President Donald Trump attacked NATO on a regular basis, questioning both the relevancy and the effectiveness of the decades-old alliance.

By contrast, Biden is outspoken in his belief that NATO is a cornerstone of global stability and a crucial player in confronting these evolving threats.

Yet NATO’s pivot to China, as opposed to a laser focus on Russia, is not necessarily a welcome change for everyone.

Some of NATO’s smallest members, many located in Eastern Europe, believe that deterrence against Russian aggression should be the chief concern of the alliance’s security efforts.

Biden met with the leaders of several Balkan nations on Monday morning, as well as with Poland’s president, Andrzej Duda. The U.S. military maintains a significant presence in Poland that is widely viewed as a major deterrent to Russia.

In response to the threat of hybrid warfare that Russia poses, NATO member states opened the door to potentially invoking Article 5, the mutual defense agreement, in cases of destabilizing disinformation attacks against “political institutions” and “public opinion.”

To date, Article 5 has only been invoked once — in defense of the United States in the wake of the 9/11 terrorist attacks.

“We are enhancing our situational awareness and expanding the tools at our disposal to counter hybrid threats, including disinformation campaigns, by developing comprehensive preventive and response options,” the communique states.

Russia’s disinformation campaigns have hit Europe hard, notably ahead of the 2016 Brexit referendum, during the 2017 protests in Catalonia, and before the 2019 European Parliament elections.

On Tuesday, Biden will travel to Geneva for a summit with Russian President Vladimir Putin. Biden is expected to raise many of the topics addressed in the NATO communique.

Russian President Vladimir Putin, left, and Chinese President Xi Jinping, right, attend the Tsinghua Universitys ceremony, at Friendship Palace on April 26, 2019 in Beijing, China.

Kenzaburo Fukuhara | Getty Images

A broader power struggle

Throughout his visit to Europe, Biden has framed the competition between Western democracies and both Russia and China as more than simply an economic or a military rivalry.

To the president, it is a battle over which system of governance will emerge as the world’s great power, Chinese-style authoritarianism or Western democracy and capitalism.

Both Moscow and Beijing regularly ignore the international rules and norms that govern trade, security, defense, labor and human rights. This constitutes a serious threat to NATO and to developing countries around the world.

In some ways, Biden’s approach to China is not that different from Trump’s.

Tensions between Beijing and Washington soared under the Trump administration, fueled by a trade war and barriers preventing Chinese technology companies from doing business in the United States.

But Biden has said his approach to China would differ from his predecessor’s in that he would work more closely with allies in order to mount pushback against Beijing.

“We will confront China’s economic abuses,” Biden said in a recent speech. “But we’re also ready to work with Beijing when it’s in America’s interest to do so. We’ll compete from a position of strength by building back better at home and working with our allies and partners.”

Biden’s message has been warmly welcomed by NATO member leaders, following four years under Trump during which the United States was a thorn in the side of the alliance.

Trump repeatedly attacked NATO during his presidency, accusing it of being irrelevant and impotent. He even threatened to pull the United States out of the alliance.

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Politics

Actuality Winner, who leaked Russia intel to The Intercept, launched from jail

Reality winner leaves the Augusta Courthouse on June 8, 2017 in Augusta, Georgia. The winner is an intelligence industry contractor accused of leaking National Security Agency (NSA) documents.

Sean Rayford | Getty Images

Reality Winner, a former Air Force linguist who pleaded guilty in 2018 to leaked an intelligence report on Russian interference in the 2016 elections, has been released from prison, her lawyer said Monday.

“I’m very excited to announce that Reality Winner has been released from prison,” Alison Grinter Allen wrote in a post on Twitter. “She is still on remand during the re-entry process, but we are relieved and hopeful.”

According to a website from the Bureau of Prisons, Winner is currently in a re-entry facility in San Antonio. Your discharge date from the facility is November 23, 2021.

Winner, now 29, was 25 when she printed out a classified intelligence report at the Georgia National Security Agency facility where she worked and made it available to journalists for investigative news agency The Intercept.

A story based on Winners Leak was published on June 5, 2017 with the headline: “TOP SECRET NSA REPORT DETAILS RUSSIAN HACKING EFFORT DAYS BEFORE 2016 ELECTION.”

“Just days before the presidential election last November, Russian military intelligence launched a cyberattack on at least one US election software provider and sent spear phishing emails to more than 100 local election officials, according to a top-secret intelligence report by The Intercept.” said the article, written by journalists Matthew Cole, Richard Esposito, Sam Biddle and Ryan Grim.

Winner was sentenced to five years and three months in August 2018. According to Allen, Winner’s early release was not the product of “a pardon or compassionate release process, but rather the time earned through exemplary behavior during incarceration.”

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Allen added that Winner was still prevented from making public statements or appearances. Winner and her family, Allen said, “have sought privacy during the transition process as they work to heal the trauma of incarceration and rebuild the lost years.”

Winner’s case was an early example of the tough approach that President Donald Trump’s administration took against the defendants of divulging confidential government information. Prosecutors at the time said Winner’s sentence would be the longest serving a federal defendant for media leakage.

The case also reflected poorly on the source protection methods used by The Intercept. In 2017, Editor-in-Chief Betsy Reed issued a statement acknowledging that “at several points in the editorial process, our practices have fallen short of the standards we adhere to to minimize the risks of source exposure when handling anonymously provided materials.”

Winner was arrested on June 3, 2017, two days before The Intercept published his article based on the document she provided. Investigators said they tracked down Winner after discovering that whoever leaked the secret document had printed it out. Sieger was one of only half a dozen people who had printed the document, and she had also used her work computer to email someone at The Intercept.

The winner’s release comes as the Biden administration is under pressure from aggressive maneuvers by the Justice Department under Trump to uncover the source of the leaked material. On Friday, the Inspector General of the Justice Department said he would investigate the previous seizure of electronic records from journalists in major news outlets and Democratic members of Congress as part of a leak investigation.

It was reported Monday that John Demers, a senior Justice Department official overseeing these leak investigations, will be leaving in two weeks. A Justice Department spokesman said Demers’ departure was planned prior to the latest scandal.

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Health

Vaccine journey offers? Russia plans packages to revive tourism business

Tourists walk along Red Square in front of St. Basil’s Cathedral in Moscow on November 6, 2020.

ALEXANDER NEMENOV | AFP | Getty Images

With Russia’s coronavirus shot Sputnik V sluggishly received among its own citizens, Russia is considering launching travel packages for Covid vaccinations for tourists.

Russian state news agency Tass quoted one of the country’s tourism industry leaders as saying that “vaccination prices” were ready, but that visas and entry requirements for foreign visitors were holding them back.

“The product is ready, but the issues of visa support and legal entry for foreigners who want to get the Russian vaccine have yet to be resolved,” Andrei Ignatyev, president of the Russian Union of Travel Industry (RUTI), told Tass.

The price of a three-week vaccination rate for foreigners will be anywhere from $ 1,500 to $ 2,500, excluding the airline’s expense, Ignatyev added.

Vaccine prices seem to have the blessing of Russian President Vladimir Putin. Speaking at the International Economic Forum (SPIEF) in St. Petersburg last week, Putin asked the government to examine the possibility of offering paid Covid vaccinations to foreign visitors to Russia.

Russia is keen to revitalize its tourism industry to end the Covid pandemic. Like other countries around the world, last March Russia introduced entry restrictions for almost all foreigners (with the exception of some workers), bringing tourism to a standstill. Since then, entry restrictions have been relaxed if visitors present negative Covid tests before traveling.

Immunization tourism could prove popular for people in countries struggling to get their own immunization programs off the ground. The Times of India reported last month that a Delhi-based travel agent was offering a 24-day package tour to Russia that included two shots of the Sputnik-V vaccine and a 21-day interval to allow sightseeing between vaccinations.

Slow domestic recording

Russia was the first country in the world to approve a coronavirus vaccine – its own Sputnik V – last August, but despite its rapid approval and rollout, domestic uptake of vaccination has been sluggish.

According to data compiled by Our World In Data, only 9% of the adult population are fully vaccinated so far, placing Russia behind Brazil, India, Turkey and Mexico in terms of vaccination progress.

Target market

In Europe, according to Our World In Data, over 23% of adults are now fully vaccinated. Russia will therefore look for potential vaccination tourists in the distance, said Ignatiev.

“The countries of Africa and Latin America have shown great interest in such a tourist product throughout the vaccination campaign in Russia, and RUTI has received such inquiries,” he added, according to Tass.

In late May, President Putin announced Russia would not make Covid vaccines compulsory for its citizens and said people should recognize the need to vaccinate for themselves. He also stressed that the vaccine was safe; According to peer-reviewed results from its late-stage clinical study published in February in the medical journal The Lancet, Sputnik V was found to be 91.6% effective in preventing the development of Covid-19.

“I would like to emphasize again and appeal to all of our citizens: think carefully, remember that the Russian vaccine – practice has already shown that millions (of people) have used it – is currently the most reliable and safest. ” “Said Putin. “In our country, all the conditions for a vaccination are in place.”

A poll published in March by the Russian electoral center Levada found that 62% of people did not want to receive the vaccine, with the greatest reluctance noted among 18-24 year olds.

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Politics

Russia threatens to depart Worldwide House Station program

Since last decade, NASA has turned repeatedly to Colorado companies to produce the technology it needs to not only send astronauts on new lunar missions but also to Mars and into the depths of space. Above, the International Space Station.

NASA | Getty Images

WASHINGTON — Russia’s space chief threatened Monday to withdraw from the International Space Station program if U.S. sanctions against Moscow’s space entities are “not lifted in the near future.”

“If the sanctions against Progress and TsNIIMash remain and are not lifted in the near future, the issue of Russia’s withdrawal from the ISS will be the responsibility of the American partners,” Roscosmos Director General Dmitry Rogozin said during a Russian parliament hearing on Monday, according to an NBC translation.

“Either we work together, in which case the sanctions are lifted immediately, or we will not work together and we will deploy our own station,” he added.

In December, the Trump administration labeled Russia’s JSC Rocket and Space Center Progress and JSC Central Research Institute of Machine Building, also known as TsNIIMash, as companies with alleged ties to the Russian military. The designation requires U.S. companies to obtain licenses before selling to these foreign firms.

The U.S. Department of Commerce also included under that designation Russia’s Foreign Intelligence Service, or SVR, Moscow’s top spy agency, as well as 42 other Russian entities and 58 Chinese companies.

ISS Expedition 64 crew member, Russian cosmonaut Sergey Ryzhikov takes part in a training session at the Yuri Gagarin Cosmonaut Training Center in Zvyozdny Gorodok [Star City], Moscow Region.

Anton Novoderezhkin | TASS | Getty Images

The U.S. Department of Treasury and NASA did not immediately respond to CNBC’s requests for comment.

Launched in 1998, the ISS serves as the largest hub for scientific research and collaboration in orbit. The U.S., Russia, Canada and Japan alongside a dozen countries participating in the European Space Agency work in support of the ISS.

While Russia has previously signaled that it was considering a withdrawal from the program in order to develop a space station of its own, the ISS represents more than two decades of close collaboration between Washington and Moscow.

In a recent interview with CNN Business, NASA Administrator Bill Nelson said that “it would not be good” if the Russians left the program.

“For decades, upwards now of 45 plus years [we’ve cooperated with] Russians in space, and I want that cooperation to continue,” he added.

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Politics

Putin says foreigners can get vaccinated towards Covid in Russia

Russian President Vladimir Putin gives a speech during a plenary session of the International Economic Forum (SPIEF) in St. Petersburg on June 4, 2021.

DMITRY LOVETSKY | AFP | Getty Images

Russian President Vladimir Putin on Friday called on the government to pave the way for foreign citizens to be vaccinated against Covid-19 in the country for an undisclosed fee.

Speaking during a plenary session at the annual International Economic Forum in St. Petersburg, Putin said: “The Russian pharmaceutical industry is ready to further boost the production of vaccines so that we not only fully meet our own needs.”

“We can also give foreign nationals the opportunity to come to Russia and get vaccinated here. I know that given the effectiveness of our vaccines, there is great demand,” he went on, according to a translation.

“In this regard, I would like to ask the government to analyze all aspects of this issue by the end of the month for a chance to get a vaccine on a commercial basis,” Putin said, without specifying the cost.

Russia has approved four Covid vaccines for home use. The most widely used Sputnik-V vaccine has so far been registered in 65 countries around the world, according to the Russian state fund.

The price of Sputnik V is less than $ 10 per shot, requiring two doses over a 21 day period.

Russia has been criticized for pursuing a strategy of selling or donating Covid vaccines overseas in order to expand its influence worldwide. Moscow denies that it is.

Putin’s comments come as pressure mounts on the world’s richest countries to do more to expand global access to Covid vaccines.

Equal access to vaccines is reported to be high on the agenda when the G-7 leaders meet in the UK next week.

The urgency and importance of surrendering certain intellectual property rights to Covid vaccines and treatments amid the pandemic has been underscored by WHO, health experts, civil society groups, trade unions, former world leaders, international medical charities, Nobel Prize winners and human rights organizations.

India and South Africa jointly submitted a proposal to the World Trade Organization in October last year calling for politicians to facilitate the production of Covid treatments on site and to press ahead with the global vaccination campaign.

Several months later, the proposal continues to be blocked by a small number of governments – including the EU, UK, Switzerland, Japan, Norway, Canada, Australia and Brazil.

Nord Stream 2

Regardless of this, Russia’s Putin said the first pipeline of the Nord Stream 2 gas pipeline to Germany had been completed. The second line is not ready yet.

The controversial 1,230-kilometer underwater pipeline is set to become one of the longest offshore gas pipelines in the world. It is supposed to deliver Russian gas to Germany directly under the Baltic Sea bypassing Ukraine.

Along with several European countries, the US is rejecting the pipeline, calling it a “bad deal” for European energy security. President Joe Biden is under pressure to do more to stop the near-completed project.

Putin is due to hold talks with Biden on June 16 in Geneva, Switzerland.

Whether the summit can make a big difference is questionable, especially given the poor diplomatic relations between the two nuclear powers.

Some U.S. lawmakers have criticized the Biden administration for giving the talks the go-ahead, pointing to the ongoing detention of opposition politician Alexei Navalny and the Kremlin’s support for Belarus after Russia’s neighbor took a commercial flight to Minsk last month had diverted.

At a press conference last month, White House press secretary Jen Psaki rejected proposals that the bilateral talks should be interpreted as a “reward” for Moscow.

“This is how diplomacy works,” she said. “We don’t only meet with people when we are in agreement. It is important to meet with leaders when we have a number of disagreements, as we do with the Russian leader.”

For its part, Russia said the two presidents will hold talks to discuss the current state of bilateral relations, strategic stability issues and current international issues such as the coronavirus pandemic and regional conflicts.

– CNBC’s Holly Ellyatt contributed to this report.

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Politics

Robert Mueller will take legislation college students behind the decision-making means of the Russia inquiry.

Robert S. Mueller III will teach a course at the University of Virginia’s law school intended to take students inside his investigation that concluded Russia had interfered in the 2016 election to help Donald J. Trump, the university announced on Wednesday.

The course, called “The Mueller Report and the Role of the Special Counsel,” will be taught by Mr. Mueller alongside three former federal prosecutors: James L. Quarles III, Andrew D. Goldstein and Aaron Zebley, who was Mr. Mueller’s deputy. Mr. Mueller recruited the three men to work on the investigation, which spanned two years of the Trump administration.

Mr. Mueller will lead at least one of six in-person classes and said that he hoped to bring in other top prosecutors as guest speakers, according to the university.

The course will cover the investigation chronologically, from the hiring of Mr. Mueller as special counsel in 2017 until the inquiry’s conclusion in 2019. The instructors also intend to explain the challenges that prosecutors faced and “the legal and practical context” behind critical decisions, the university said.

The final class is expected to focus on obstruction of justice and the role of special counsels in presidential accountability. The Mueller report detailed actions by Mr. Trump that many legal experts said were sufficient to ask a grand jury to indict him on charges of obstruction of justice, but Attorney General William P. Barr cleared him of obstruction soon after the report was completed.

The announcement of the course is likely to revive curiosity around the Russian inquiry, which Mr. Trump repeatedly derided as a “witch hunt” and of which Mr. Mueller has seldom spoken publicly. He was a reluctant witness during a closely watched congressional hearing in July 2019, where he testified for nearly seven hours, giving many clipped answers and largely not straying from his report’s conclusions.

Last summer, Mr. Mueller wrote an opinion essay for The Washington Post the day after Mr. Trump commuted the prison sentence of his longtime friend Roger J. Stone Jr., a political operative. In the essay, Mr. Mueller defended the prosecution of Mr. Stone for federal crimes as part of the Russia inquiry.

“We made every decision in Stone’s case, as in all our cases, based solely on the facts and the law and in accordance with the rule of law,” Mr. Mueller wrote.

Mr. Zebley told the University of Virginia that the course instructors would rely on public records to explain the path of the investigation.

After the inquiry ended, Mr. Mueller, Mr. Zebley and Mr. Quarles left the Justice Department and returned to the private law firm WilmerHale in Washington, where they are partners. Mr. Goldstein is now a partner at the firm Cooley in Washington. Mr. Mueller and Mr. Zebley are both alumni of the University of Virginia’s law school.

All four lawyers had notable careers at the Justice Department and said they were looking forward to sharing those experiences with students, according to the university.

“I look forward to engaging with the students this fall,” Mr. Mueller said.

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Health

Russia Covid vaccines will not be obligatory Putin says amid skepticism

Russian President Vladimir Putin examines military aircraft flying over the Kremlin and Red Square to celebrate the 75th anniversary of the victory over Nazi Germany in World War II in Moscow on May 9, 2020.

Alexey Druzhinin | AFP | Getty Images

President Vladimir Putin ruled Russia will not make Covid vaccines mandatory for its citizens, saying people should see the need to vaccinate for themselves.

Some officials in Russia had suggested making vaccination compulsory, but Putin said Wednesday that such a move would be “counterproductive”.

During a video conference on the economy, Putin said officials had analyzed options, including compulsory vaccination for the entire population or for workers in specific sectors who come into contact with large numbers of people, Russian news agency Tass reported.

This could have made Covid recordings mandatory for people who work in areas such as retail, education, or transportation. Putin said he did not approve of such a move.

“In my opinion, it is counterproductive and unnecessary to introduce compulsory vaccinations,” he said. “People should recognize this need for themselves” and understand that without a vaccine they “may be at very serious and even fatal danger”, especially the elderly.

Putin urged the public to get vaccinated, stressing that Russian Sputnik V vaccine is safe.

“I want to emphasize again and address all of our citizens: think carefully, remember that the Russian vaccine – practice has already shown that millions (of people) have used it – is currently the most reliable and safest,” said Putin. “All the conditions for vaccination have been created in our country.”

Vaccine hesitate

Despite the pleas from the President and other senior officials and the establishment of walk-in vaccination centers in shopping malls in major cities, Russia has found that much of its population is unwilling to receive a Covid shot.

Some officials have tried more unusual means of persuading those who hesitate. Moscow is offering free ice cream to everyone who has been vaccinated in Red Square and buying vouchers or gift cards worth 1,000 rubles (about $ 13.60) for retirees. Some Russian regions have reportedly offered cash incentives to get the shot.

Moscow Mayor Sergei Sobyanin has openly expressed his frustration at the slow response to vaccinations.

“It’s remarkable … people get sick, they keep getting sick, they keep dying. And yet they don’t want to get vaccinated,” Sobyanin said in comments posted on a video blog on Friday and reported by Reuters.

“We were the first big city in the world to announce the start of mass vaccination. And what?” Sobyanin said. “The percentage of people vaccinated in Moscow is lower than in any European city. In some cases, many times over.”

He noted that so far only 1.3 million people in Moscow had received a shot from a population of 12 million.

As of Wednesday, just over 11% of the Russian population had received at least one dose of a coronavirus vaccine, according to Our World In Data. This is comparable to the rate in India, which has also struggled to get its vaccination program off the ground due to production problems, but is lagging behind other major economies. For example, the UK has given at least one dose to over 70% of its population.

The home of Sputnik V.

That frustration is more palpable in Russia because it was one of the first countries in the world to approve a Covid vaccine last August. Initially, there were concerns about the safety and efficacy data of Sputnik V, particularly when Russia approved the shot prior to the completion of clinical trials, which aroused suspicion in the international scientific community.

However, the Sputnik V vaccine was found to be 91.6% effective in preventing people from developing Covid-19. This is evident from the peer-reviewed results of its late-stage clinical study published in The Lancet Medical Journal in February.

Even so, a poll published in March by Russian polling station Levada found that 62% of people did not want to receive the vaccine, with 18- to 24-year-olds showing the greatest reluctance.

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Politics

Russia Seems to Carry Out Hack By way of System Utilized by U.S. Support Company

Hackers connected to Russia’s main intelligence agency secretly seized an email system used by the Foreign Ministry’s international aid agency to dig into the computer networks of human rights groups and other organizations that President Vladimir V. Microsoft Corporation announced on Thursday that they were critical of Putin.

The breach was only discovered three weeks before President Biden’s planned meeting with Putin in Geneva and at a moment of increasing tensions between the two nations – also due to a series of increasingly sophisticated cyberattacks from Russia.

The newly uncovered attack was also particularly bold: By breaching the systems of a supplier used by the federal government, the hackers only this week sent e-mails from more than 3,000 real-looking accounts addressed to more than 150 organizations that are receiving regularly Communications from the United States Agency for International Development.

The e-mail was implanted with code that gave the hackers unrestricted access to the recipient’s computer systems, from “stealing data to infecting other computers on a network,” wrote Tom Burt, a Microsoft vice president, on Thursday evening.

Last month, Mr Biden announced a series of new sanctions against Russia and the expulsion of diplomats for an elaborate hacking operation called SolarWinds that used novel methods to injure at least seven government agencies and hundreds of large American companies.

This attack went undetected by the US government for nine months until it was discovered by a cybersecurity company. In April, Mr Biden said he could have reacted much more strongly but chose “proportionate” because he did not want to “start a cycle of escalation and conflict with Russia”.

However, the Russian response appears to have been an escalation. The malicious activity had only started for the past week. This suggests that the sanctions and any additional covert measures the White House has put in place – part of a strategy to create “seen and invisible” costs for Moscow – have not stifled the Russian government’s appetite for disruption.

A spokesman for the agency for cybersecurity and infrastructure security in the Department of Homeland Security said late Thursday that the agency is “aware of the possible compromise” with the agency for international development and is working “with the FBI and USAID to better understand it. ” Level of compromise and support for potential victims. “

Microsoft identified the Russian group behind the attack as Nobelium and said it was the same group responsible for the SolarWinds hack. Last month, the US government explicitly stated that SolarWinds was the work of the SVR, one of the KGB’s most successful Soviet-era spin-offs

The same agency was involved in the National Democratic Committee hacking attacks in 2016 and previously in attacks on the Pentagon, White House email system, and State Department unclassified communications.

It’s gotten increasingly aggressive and creative, say federal officials and experts. The SolarWinds attack was never discovered by the US government and was carried out through code implanted in network management software that is widely used by the government and private companies. When customers updated SolarWinds software – much like an iPhone would do overnight – they were unwittingly letting in an intruder.

The victims last year included the ministries of homeland security and energy, as well as nuclear laboratories.

When Mr Biden took office, he ordered a study into the SolarWinds case, and officials have been working to prevent future supply chain attacks where adversaries infect software used by federal agencies. This is similar to this case when Microsoft’s security team caught the hackers using a widely used Constant Contact email service to send malicious emails that appeared to come from real-world addresses belonging to the International Development Agency.

Updated

May 26, 2021, 9:17 p.m. ET

But the content was barely subtle at times. In an email sent through the Constant Contact service on Tuesday, the hackers highlighted a message claiming that “Donald Trump had published new emails about election fraud.” The email contained a link that, if clicked, would place malicious files on recipients’ computers.

Microsoft noted that the attack was “significantly” different from the SolarWinds hack and used new tools and craftsmanship to avoid detection. It was said that the attack was still ongoing and that the hackers continued to send spearphishing emails with increasing speed and reach. Because of this, Microsoft took the unusual step of naming the agency whose email addresses were used and posting examples of the spoofed email.

Essentially, the Russians got into the Agency for International Development’s email system by circling the agency and going straight to their software suppliers. Constant Contact manages bulk emails and other communications on behalf of the aid organization.

“Nobelium launched this week’s attacks by gaining access to USAID’s Constant Contact account,” wrote Microsoft’s Burt. Constant contact could not be reached for comment.

Microsoft, like other large cybersecurity companies, maintains a large network of sensors to search for malicious activity on the Internet and is often a target itself. It was instrumental in uncovering the SolarWinds attack.

In this case, Microsoft reported, the hackers’ goal was not to track down the State Department or the aid agency, but rather to use their connections to get into groups that work on the ground – and in many cases, Putin’s most powerful ones Critic.

“At least a quarter of the target organizations were involved in international development, humanitarian and human rights work,” wrote Burt. Although he did not name them, many such groups have exposed Russian actions against dissidents or protested the poisoning, conviction and imprisonment of Russia’s most prominent opposition leader, Alexei A. Navalny.

The attack suggests that Russian intelligence agencies are stepping up their campaign, perhaps to demonstrate that the country would not step down in the face of sanctions, the eviction of diplomats and other pressures.

Mr Biden raised the SolarWinds attack on a phone call with Mr Putin last month, telling him that the sanctions and expulsions are evidence that his government would no longer tolerate an accelerated pace of cyber operations.

Mr Putin has denied Russia’s involvement, and some Russian news outlets have argued that the United States launched the attack against itself.

At the same time, the White House also imposed a number of new sanctions on Russian individuals and assets, including new restrictions on buying Russia’s national debt that will make it difficult for Russia to raise money and support its currency.

“This is the beginning of a new US campaign against malicious behavior by Russia,” Treasury Secretary Janet L. Yellen said at the time.

Tensions over the housing of cybercriminals in Russia increased significantly this month after a ransomware group took corporate networks of the Colonial Pipeline hostage. The attack forced the company to shut down a pipeline that brings nearly half of its gasoline, diesel and jet fuel to the east coast, sparking a spike in gas prices and panic buying at the pump.

Mr Biden said two weeks ago: “We spoke in direct communication with Moscow about the need for the responsible countries to take decisive action against these ransomware networks. ”

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Politics

Blinken, in Ukraine, Warns of Twin Threats: Russia and Corruption

Kiev, Ukraine – Foreign Minister Antony J. Blinken told the Ukrainian President on Thursday that the United States strongly supported his country’s sovereignty against Russia’s military aggression, but also warned that the embattled country was threatened by “internal forces”, including powerful oligarchs who thrive on corruption.

Mr Blinken also said that despite Russia’s recently announced plans to withdraw many of the 100,000 troops it raised in alarming violence on the border with Ukraine this spring, a clear military threat remained.

“Russia has withdrawn some forces, but significant forces remain on the Ukrainian border,” noted Blinken. “And so, on a fairly short-term basis, Russia has the ability to take aggressive action if it so wishes.” Mr Blinken added that the United States “was watching this very, very closely”.

Mr Blinken spoke at a joint press conference with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky, who thanked the first high-ranking Biden official to visit Kiev since President Donald J. Trump left office. The former president embroiled Mr Zelensky in a global scandal that the Ukrainian leader clearly hopes to forget.

When asked if the efforts of Mr. Trump’s personal attorney Rudolph Giuliani in 2019 had “thrown back” efforts to drive corruption out of Ukraine’s political system, Mr. Zelensky boasted of his reform record, saying he hoped it would the matter was closed.

“Let’s not talk about the past,” he said. “Let us let the past be the past and discuss the future.”

This can be difficult given an active FBI investigation into Mr. Giuliani that culminated in a robbery of his home and office last week. Federal agents reportedly sought evidence of his role in removing the American ambassador to Ukraine in May 2019, allegedly at the behest of Mr Giuliani’s Ukrainian staff.

For his part, Mr Blinken maneuvered a question with Mr Giuliani, but reminded Mr Zelensky – whose reform report has received mixed reviews – that “the effective fight against corruption is one of the most important issues for the Ukrainian people and for their lives is of vital importance improve. “

“There are strong interests against reforms, against the fight against corruption,” said Blinken. “This includes external forces like Russia, but also internal forces like oligarchs and other powerful people who are pursuing their own narrow interests.”

As Ukraine struggles to remove corruption from its political system, fueled in part by a Kremlin attempting to destabilize its pro-Washington government, the country fights off a Moscow-backed, pro-Russian separatist insurgency in the east of the country Country. According to the United Nations, the fighting in the region has claimed more than 13,000 lives.

To sustain this conflict and weather any new offensive by Russia, Ukrainian officials are keen to get more military support and potential arms sales from Washington, which is currently sending Ukraine more than $ 400 million in military aid annually. Mr Blinken said that the Biden administration was working “very actively” on the issue but was not offering any further details.

But Mr Blinken underscored his concern about Ukraine’s military plight with a morning visit to an outdoor memorial to soldiers who died in the conflict in the east. Known as the Wall of National Remembrance, the memorial features hundreds of photographs of the fallen strolling along an outer wall of St. Michael, a 12th-century monastery and church.

In driving rain, Mr. Blinken, accompanied by high-ranking figures from the Orthodox Church of Ukraine and the country’s foreign minister, knelt down to lay flowers at the foot of the wall.

Mr. Blinken later told Mr. Zelensky that the pictures of the fallen had touched him personally.

“We were able to pay tribute to those who lost their lives defending Ukrainian democracy,” he said. “And it’s very, very moving to be on the wall.”

“You see every one of them in these pictures – and you think of the mothers and fathers, the sisters and brothers, the children who lost loved ones in defending Ukraine, and it’s very, very powerful,” added he added.

In September 2019, a CIA whistleblower announced that in a phone call with Mr. Zelensky in June 2019, Mr. Trump had pressured him to announce an investigation into Mr. Biden, then a Democratic presidential candidate, and Mr. Biden’s son Hunter. who worked for a Ukrainian energy company. Mr Trump withheld U.S. military aid to Ukraine when he pressed his request. The episode led to Mr. Trump’s first impeachment trial and a painfully uncomfortable experience for Mr. Zelensky.

In a remark to U.S. Embassy staff during a virtual visit with them, Mr Blinken alluded to the chaos of events that led to Mr Trump’s impeachment – including the politicized removal of American Ambassador Marie Yovanovitch – created at the State Department .

“I know the last few years have been particularly difficult,” he said. “Even before Covid, Ukraine – and this mission – got embroiled in affairs, and that shouldn’t have been the case. And one thing that is very important is that politics stop at the C Street door, and it is now. ”

After his meetings with Ukrainian officials, Mr. Blinken held a round table on corruption and reform, which was attended mainly by representatives of civil society who were “at the forefront” in a second struggle for democracy in Ukraine.

During the joint appearance with Mr. Blinken, the Ukrainian guide said he hoped that Mr. Biden himself could visit Ukraine soon. Mr Blinken cited travel restrictions due to the coronavirus, but said the American President “will welcome the opportunity at the right time”.

Mr. Blinken was joined by a longtime ally of the Ukrainians, Victoria Nuland, the newly confirmed Secretary of the Foreign Ministry for Political Affairs. Ms. Nuland, a career foreign service official and senior State Department official in the Obama administration, left the administration in early 2017 but was selected as the number 3 official in the department that year.

Ms. Nuland is known in Kiev – and was insulted in the Kremlin – for distributing food in 2013 on the Independence Square of the Ukrainian capital, known as the Maidan, in the prelude to the overthrow of the Russian Viktor F. Yanukovych. supported the President of Ukraine at the time. It was this revolution in March 2014 and Putin’s fears that the former Soviet republic could be brought closer into harmony with the West that sparked Putin’s annexation of the Ukrainian Crimean peninsula and his instigation of an uprising in eastern Ukraine.

Your presence was clearly appreciated. At the beginning of a morning meeting with Mr. Blinken, Foreign Minister Dmytro Kubela congratulated Ms. Nuland on her appointment. He laughed when he remarked that one of the few major events on the Maidan that he had missed was “your cookies,” even though she said they were actually sandwiches she passed around, not cookies.

In Russia, Ms. Nuland is seen very differently: An article in July 2020 on the website of the Kremlin-funded RT network called her the “Maidan midwife” and characterized her Hawkish political views on Russia as “stupid, delusional and dangerous”.

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Politics

White Home warns Russia will face penalties if Alexei Navalny dies

WASHINGTON – White House National Security Advisor Jake Sullivan said Sunday the Biden government warned the Russian government not to let jailed Putin critic Alexei Navalny die in custody.

“We have told the Russian government that what happens to Mr. Navalny in their care is their responsibility and that they will be held accountable by the international community,” Sullivan said on CNN’s State of the Union program.

“We have announced that there will be consequences if Mr Navalny dies,” he added.

Navalny flew to Russia from Berlin earlier this year after recovering for nearly six months from nerve agent poisoning that occurred last August. He was arrested at passport control and later sentenced to more than two years in prison.

Last month, the United States sanctioned seven members of the Russian government for alleged poisoning and subsequent imprisonment of Navalny. The sanctions were the first to be directed against Moscow under Biden’s leadership. The Trump administration has taken no action against Russia because of the situation in Navalny.

State Secretary Antony Blinken wrote in a separate statement that the sanctions would send “a clear signal” to Russia that the use of chemical weapons and human rights violations are having grave consequences.

“Any use of chemical weapons is unacceptable and violates international standards,” wrote Blinken.

The Kremlin has repeatedly denied playing a role in Navalny’s poisoning.

A spokesman for Navalny said the Russian opposition leader’s health had deteriorated since his detention. Navalny went on a hunger strike to force his prison guards to access outside medical care to relieve back pain and leg pain. A Navalny lawyer said he had two spinal hernias, AP reported.

Continue reading: The US was concerned about the deteriorating health of incarcerated Kremlin critic Navalny

The Russian authorities have previously stated that they have offered Navalny adequate medical care but continue to refuse it. The prison has refused to allow a doctor, chosen by Navalny, from outside the facility to carry out his treatment.

On Saturday, doctor Yaroslav Aschikhmin said the test results he received from Navalny’s family show that the detained critic has elevated potassium levels that can trigger cardiac arrest. Navalny also has elevated creatinine levels which indicate possible kidney failure.

“Our patient could die at any moment,” said Ashikhmin in a Facebook post.

In an interview with the BBC on Sunday, the Russian Ambassador to Britain accused Navalny of dramatizing his condition to attract attention.

“Of course he can’t die in prison, but I can say that Mr. Navalny is acting absolutely like a hooligan,” said Andrei Kelin. “His goal for all of this is to get him noticed, including by saying that his left hand is sick today and his leg is sick tomorrow and all that stuff, so the journalists pay attention.”

“Navalny was treated in the hospital, which is not far from where he is serving his sentence, and I understand he is no longer complaining,” added Kelin.

Last week, the Biden administration hit Russia with a string of US sanctions for human rights abuses, widespread cyberattacks and attempts to influence the US elections.

In a speech on Thursday, Biden said he was ready to take further action against Moscow.

“If Russia continues to interfere with our democracy, I am ready to take further action to respond. It is my responsibility as President of the United States to do so,” said White House Biden.

“It was clear to President Putin that we could have gone further, but I decided against it, I chose to be proportionate,” Biden said of the measures, adding that he did not “want to initiate an escalation cycle and.” Conflict with Russia. “

Continue reading: The West is waiting for Putin’s next move as tensions between Russia and Ukraine mount

Biden also said that in a phone conversation with Putin, he suggested that the two meet in person in Europe this summer to discuss a number of pressing issues.

Sullivan told CNN that the Biden-Putin summit would be discussed but would not provide additional details.

“There’s no summit on the books right now, it’s something we’re talking about. Obviously, this summit would have to be held under the right circumstances in a way that could actually advance the relationship,” Sullivan said.