US accuses Russia of 2024 election interference
The US has charged and sanctioned Russian state media executives and restricted Kremlin-linked broadcasters as it accused Moscow of a widespread campaign to interfere with the presidential election.
The justice, state and treasury departments announced coordinated actions on Wednesday to âaggressively counterâ the alleged operations.
Attorney General Merrick Garland accused state broadcaster RT, formerly Russia Today, of paying a Tennessee $10m to âcreate and distribute content to US audiences with hidden Russian government messagingâ.
RT boss Margarita Simonyan was one of 10 people sanctioned for alleged attempts to harm âpublic trust in our institutionsâ. RT denied involvement.
Mr Garland said that Moscow wanted to secure a âpreferred outcomeâ in the race between Donald Trump and Kamala Harris,
White House national security spokesman John Kirby said that Russiaâs programme was aimed at âreducing international support for Ukraine, bolstering pro-Russian policies and interests, and influencing voters here in the USâ.
The Biden administrationâs response so far includes:
- Charging two Moscow-based managers of RT â Kostiantyn Kalashnikov, 31, and Elena Afanasyeva, 27 â for paying content creators on US soil to âpump pro-Russia propaganda and disinformation⊠to US audiencesâ;
- Sanctioning two entities and 10 people including Simonyan, RT editor-in-chief, âactivities that aim to deteriorate public trust in our institutionsâ;
- Restricting visas for employees of Kremlin-backed media outlets;
- Seizing 32 internet domain names used to âcovertly promote AI-generated false narrativesâ targeting specific US demographics and regions on social media;
- Designating Rossiya Segodnya and five of its subsidiaries (RIA Novosti, RT, TV-Novosti, Ruptly, and Sputnik) as âforeign missionsâ, requiring them to report information about their personnel to the US government;
- Offering a $10m reward for information on hackers associated with the Russian group, Russian Angry Hackers Did It (RaHDit).
Much of the Kremlinâs disinformation effort is directed and funded by RT, Mr Kirby said.
âRT is no longer just a propaganda arm of the Kremlin,â he said. âItâs being used to advance covert Russian influence actions.â
The state media outlet mocked the US governmentâs accusations, saying in a statement to the BBC that â2016 called and it wants its clichĂ©s backâ.
âThree things are certain in life: death, taxes and RTâs interference in the US elections.â
US officials warn that a growing number of foreign adversaries have attempted to interfere with its elections since Russiaâs efforts in 2016.
In June, a group of hackers linked to the Iranian government successfully breached Donald Trumpâs campaign and leaked internal documents.
A month later, the Department of Justice announced the seizure of two domain names and the search of nearly 1,000 social media accounts operated by Russian actors to âcreate an AI-enhanced social media bot farm that spread disinformationâ.
Researchers have also uncovered a growing Chinese influence operation aimed at infiltrating and swaying US political conversations on social media.
Xi Jinping, Chinaâs president, pledged his country would not interfere in the US election during a summit with President Joe Biden last November.
Jen Easterly, director of the US Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency, said on Tuesday that the US could âabsolutely expect⊠foreign adversariesâ to try to âundermine American confidence in our democracy⊠and sow partisan discordâ.
âAnd thatâs why it is up to all of us not to let our foreign adversaries be successful.â
Eight years ago, Russia conducted a sophisticated campaign that involved hacking the Democratic National Committee and leaking stolen documents to Wikileaks with the intent of hurting Hillary Clintonâs presidential campaign.
Many Democrats argue the operation helped contribute to Trumpâs eventual victory that November.
US politicians and intelligence officials have since concluded that the operation was directly ordered by Vladimir Putin, Russiaâs president.
Twelve Russian military intelligence officers were charged in 2018 with orchestrating the effort, and federal warrants were issued for their arrest.