News

Obama Administration issues series of sanctions on Russian Federation in response to reports of cyber interference in U.S. election

In response to multiple reports of Russian cyber interference in the recent U.S. election cycle, the Obama Administration issued a series of sanctions against the Russian Federation in violation of established international norms of behavior.

Among the actions issued by the President, 35 Russian government officials from the Russian Embassy in Washington D.C. and the Russian Consulate in San Francisco were declared “persona non grata.” Each individual was given a 72-hour window to leave the United States. Additionally, the United States shut down two compounds, one in Maryland and another in New York, that were used by Russian personnel for intelligence-related operations.

The President also addressed a forthcoming joint analysis report by the U.S. Department of Homeland Security and the Federal Bureau of Investigation. The report contains declassified information on Russian civilian and military intelligence services’ cyberattacks in an effort to better prepare United States-based network defense and disrupt Russia’s continuing malicious cyber activity.

“The hacking of our election systems is not a partisan issue. All Americans, regardless of party affiliation, should be alarmed that any foreign power would interfere in and attempt to undermine the free and fair elections that are the hallmark of our democracy,” Sen. Tom Carper (D-DE) said. “Congress must work together to ensure that the extent of the Russian hacking is investigated in a comprehensive, transparent and nonpartisan way in order to ensure that this can never happen again.”

HPN News Desk

Recent Posts

Bipartisan effort calls for details on foreign attempts to infiltrate U.S. military bases

A group of seven U.S. representatives recently wrote to Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin in a…

2 days ago

House bill calls for AI task force within Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency

As more governments and businesses seek what artificial intelligence (AI) can offer, U.S. Reps. Troy…

2 days ago

Senators push to preserve procurement levels for attack submarines

A group of 14 U.S. senators recently called on the U.S. Senate Appropriations Subcommittee on…

3 days ago

House advances appropriations for Coast Guard operations through 2026

In approving the Coast Guard Authorization Act of 2024 (H.R. 7659), the House recently authorized…

3 days ago

Commerce Department blacklists 37 Chinese entities over quantum, spying concerns

The U.S. Commerce Department recently added 37 Chinese entities to the Export Administration Regulations (EAR)…

4 days ago

U.S. Sens. Peters and Britt propose modern, better-suited body armor for DHS personnel

In introducing the DHS Better Ballistic Body Armor Act (S. 4305) this month, U.S. Sens.…

4 days ago

This website uses cookies.