Rusia meng-hack juga bisa dibilang tidak masuk akal, tetapi toh terjadi.Dalam 
kampanye ber-kali2 Trump minta bantuan Rusia meng-hack walaupun kemudian 
dibantah begundalnya sebagai joke.Kalau memang puppet ya nggak perlu di black 
mail lagi.
---In GELORA45@yahoogroups.com, <djiekh@...> wrote :

Memangnya anda tahu dengan bukti2 kalau Trump minta bantuan Putin ?Ya, kan tak 
masuk akal, bisa diblackmail nantinya ?

On 30 December 2016 at 01:08, Jonathan Goeij jonathangoeij@... [GELORA45] 
<GELORA45@yahoogroups.com> wrote:

 
setelah sekarang terbukti Trump itu boneka Putin, terus bagaimana?bukankah 
setelah sang boneka naik tahta bulan January executive order itu bisa 
dibatalkan.
---In GELORA45@yahoogroups.com, <ambon@...> wrote :

http://www.chicagotribune.com/ news/nationworld/ct-russia- 
hacking-us-response-20161229- story.html 
Obama imposes sanctions on Russia, expels 35 diplomats in response to 
election-related hacking


ObamaSaul Loeb / AFP/Getty ImagesU.S. President Barack Obama holds a year-end 
press conference at the White House on Dec. 16, 2016.U.S. President Barack 
Obama holds a year-end press conference at the White House on Dec. 16, 
2016.(Saul Loeb / AFP/Getty Images)Justin Sink, Nick Wadhams, Alan Katz, Chris 
StrohmBloombergPresident Barack Obama retaliated Thursday against Russia for 
cyberattacks aimed at interfering with the 2016 presidential campaign, imposing 
sanctions on top Russian intelligence officials and agencies and expelling 35 
Russian operatives from the U.S.As part of the administration's response, the 
FBI and Homeland Security Department also were set to release a report with 
technical evidence intended to prove Russia's military and civilian 
intelligence services were behind the hacking to expose some of their most 
sensitive hacking infrastructure."All Americans should be alarmed by Russia's 
actions," Obama said in a statement. "These data theft and disclosure 
activities could only have been directed by the highest levels of the Russian 
government. Moreover, our diplomats have experienced an unacceptable level of 
harassment in Moscow by Russian security services and police over the last 
year. Such activities have consequences."Among those targeted in the sanctions 
announced by the Treasury Department were the chief and deputy chiefs of GRU, 
Russia's military intelligence agency. Cybersecurity experts in the U.S. have 
linked GRU to the hacking of the Democratic National Committee and party 
officials through a group they have nicknamed APT 28 or Fancy Bear. The U.S. 
also is sanctioning the Federal Security Service and Main Intelligence 
Directorate of the Russian state and cyber companies associated with them.Those 
expelled were described by Obama as intelligence operatives and the U.S. also 
shut down two Russian compounds — one in Maryland and another in New York — 
used for "intelligence-related purposes."The hackers leaked the pilfered emails 
in a bid to damage the campaign of Democratic presidential candidate Hillary 
Clinton, according U.S. intelligence agencies. She lost to Republican Donald 
Trump who has repeatedly scoffed at the finding that Russia was behind the 
cyberattacks.The moves will ratchet up tensions with Russia less than a month 
before Trump's inauguration. The president-elect, who has said the hacking 
could have been the work of "somebody sitting in a bed someplace," told 
reporters Wednesday that "we ought to get on with our lives."U.S. intelligence 
officials say Russian hacks 'prioritized' DemocratsGreg Miller, Adam EntousThe 
CIA assessment that Russia waged a cyber-campaign to help elect Donald Trump is 
based in part on intelligence suggesting that Moscow's hacking efforts were 
disproportionately aimed at targets tied to the Democratic Party and its 
nominee Hillary Clinton, U.S. officials said.U.S. officials said...The CIA 
assessment that Russia waged a cyber-campaign to help elect Donald Trump is 
based in part on intelligence suggesting that Moscow's hacking efforts were 
disproportionately aimed at targets tied to the Democratic Party and its 
nominee Hillary Clinton, U.S. officials said.U.S. officials said...(Greg 
Miller, Adam Entous)They also raise the possibility of an escalating cycle of 
finger-pointing and retaliation between Washington and Moscow despite Trump's 
pledge to seek better relations with Putin. The Russian government, which has 
denied responsibility for the hacking, has vowed to respond to any new 
sanctions with unspecified counter-measures.The actions announced Thursday may 
be matched by covert countermeasures intended to warn Russia that the U.S. is 
able to breach its most sensitive computer systems, while preserving public 
deniability."If I want to just quietly take out their capability and send a 
very sneaky message and not an overt message, I would probably do a covert 
action," Bob Stasio, a fellow at the Truman National Security Project and 
former chief of operations at the National Security Agency's cyber operations 
center, said in advance of Thursday's announcement.U.S. relations with Putin's 
government have deteriorated over Russia's military intervention in Ukraine on 
behalf of separatist rebels and in Syria to bolster the regime of President 
Bashar al-Assad.Trump rejects intel, lawmakers vow probe of Russia 
hackingTribune news servicesDonald Trump on Sunday called a recent CIA 
assessment of Russian hacking "ridiculous" and says he's not interested in 
getting daily intelligence briefings — an unprecedented public dismissal by a 
president-elect of the nation's massive and sophisticated intelligence 
apparatus.Trump's remarks come...Donald Trump on Sunday called a recent CIA 
assessment of Russian hacking "ridiculous" and says he's not interested in 
getting daily intelligence briefings — an unprecedented public dismissal by a 
president-elect of the nation's massive and sophisticated intelligence 
apparatus.Trump's remarks come...(Tribune news services)The U.S. and European 
allies imposed sanctions over Russia's moves in Ukraine and its annexation of 
Crimea, targeting Russia's financial services, energy, metals and mining, 
defense, and engineering sectors.The Justice Department has used indictments in 
the past to target foreign officials it believes participated in 
cyberattacks.In 2014, a grand jury indicted five Chinese military hackers the 
Obama administration alleges stole trade secrets and internal communications 
from an American business. Seven Iranians were indicted earlier this year for a 
series of cyberattacks against the U.S. financial system and a U.S. dam in New 
York state three years ago.Commenting before the Obama administration's 
announcement, Trump transition spokesman Sean Spicer said Thursday if the 
government has any proof of foreign interference in the election, it should 
make that evidence known. "Right now we need to see further facts based on what 
we do know and what's in the public domain," Spicer told reporters on a 
conference call.The Trump transition team released a letter this month to Trump 
from Putin in which the Russian leader offered holiday greetings and said he 
hoped to work more cooperatively with the incoming administration."A very nice 
letter from Vladimir Putin; his thoughts are so correct," Trump said in a 
statement released alongside the Dec. 15 letter. "I hope both sides are able to 
live up to these thoughts, and we do not have to travel an alternate 
path."Despite Trump's admiration for the Russian leader, members of both 
parties in Congress have expressed alarm about the campaign hacking and vowed 
to conduct hearings into Russia's role."I'm going after Russia in every way we 
can go after Russia," Republican Sen. Lindsey Graham of South Carolina, a 
member of the Senate Armed Services Committee, said on CNN this month. "I think 
they did interfere with our elections, and I want Putin personally to pay a 
price."


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