3 minggu lagi atau tepatnya 20 January 2017 sang puppet sudah naik tahta, 
ngapain sekarang repot2.
 

---In GELORA45@yahoogroups.com, <ambon@...> wrote :

 Dalam bidang diplomatik bisanya negeri yang diplomatnya diperson non grata 
melakukan hal yang sama, tetapi kali ini Russia tidak akan melakukan hal tsb,  
tetapi  mengundang anak-anak dari para diplomat USA untuk merayakan tahun baru 
di Kremlin. Demikian diberitakan dari Moskow.
  
 From: mailto:GELORA45@yahoogroups.com mailto:GELORA45@yahoogroups.com
 Sent: Friday, December 30, 2016 9:46 AM
 To: Gelora45 mailto:GELORA45@yahoogroups.com
 Subject: Re: [GELORA45] Re: Obama imposes sanctions on Russia, expels 35 
diplomats in response to election-related hacking


  

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

  
 On 30 December 2016 at 03:59, jonathangoeij@... mailto:jonathangoeij@... 
[GELORA45] <GELORA45@yahoogroups.com mailto:GELORA45@yahoogroups.com> wrote:
 
 tahu darimana?

---In GELORA45@yahoogroups.com mailto:GELORA45@yahoogroups.com, <djiekh@...> 
wrote :

 Kan Trump tidak minta bantuan Putin ?
 Kalau Hillary Clinton bersih, apanya yang bisa dibongkar orang ?

 
 On 30 December 2016 at 01:08, Jonathan Goeij jonathangoeij@... 
mailto:jonathangoeij@... [GELORA45] <GELORA45@yahoogroups.com 
mailto: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 mailto: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
 
 Obama Saul Loeb / AFP/Getty Images
 U.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 StrohmBloomberg
 

 President 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' Democrats Greg 
Miller, Adam Entous
 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...

 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 hacking Tribune news 
services
 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...

 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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