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Kremlin Says U.S. Cyberattacks On Russia Are 'The Reality We Live In'

Russian President Vladimir Putin's spokesman Dmitry Peskov, after a 2018 presidential awards ceremony in Moscow. On Wednesday, he said the U.S. has carried out a number of cyberattacks on Russian organizations and people.
Alexander Zemlianichenko
/
AP
Russian President Vladimir Putin's spokesman Dmitry Peskov, after a 2018 presidential awards ceremony in Moscow. On Wednesday, he said the U.S. has carried out a number of cyberattacks on Russian organizations and people.

Russian President Vladimir Putin's spokesman says that websites in the country are constantly under cyberattack by the United States, and that shows why Russia is pursuing an autonomous Internet.

Dmitry Peskov told reporters in Moscow on Wednesday that the United States has carried out a number of digital attacks on Russian entities and people. "This is the reality with which we live," he said, according to Russian state news agency Tass.

His remarks followed a Washington Post report that the U.S. Cyber Command, in the midst of the 2018 midterm elections, blocked Internet access to a St. Petersburg-based organization accused of spreading disinformation, the Internet Research Agency.

Last year, the so-called "troll farm" and 13 people were indicted for interfering in the 2016 U.S. presidential elections after being charged by special counsel Robert Mueller. One of the individuals, Yevgeny Prigozhin, who is nicknamed "Putin's chef," was indicted on charges that funded the operation through his catering company.

The U.S. Treasury Department imposed sanctionson the group a month later.

Prigozhin denied involvement in the Internet Research Agency. The Kremlin has denied influencing elections in the United States.

Peskov also spoke to reporters about Russia's exploration of an independent Internet, as foreign countries try to isolate the Runet, or Russian Internet. Legislators proposed a test into whether server data could be rerouted internally to evade interception, as opposed to being sent abroad.

Referring to the cyberattacks as "potential threats," Peskov said that Russian lawmakers are in the process of passing legislation, "like the so-called sovereign Internet bill."

Lawmakers recently voted for the bill to let the Runet function autonomously during a national emergency, NPR's Moscow Correspondent Lucian Kim reports.

Sanja Kelly, the director for Internet Freedom at Freedom House, a democracy watchdog organization, says it's a justification for the authoritarian regime's next repressive move.

"They are using this geopolitical angle to try to defend their own steps. But in reality it's generally just the pretext for censoring the Internet even more so than in the past," Kelly tells NPR.

"Particularly following the in-depth investigations into the Russian hacking of the DNC here in the United States, and also Russian disinformation campaigns, the Russian government is more generally concerned about retaliation," she adds.

For years, the Russian government has been looking at China's Great Firewall as a model for control in the digital sphere, Kelly says.

Peskov made international headlines earlier this week, after RFE/RL reported that his daughter is interning in the European Parliament in Brussels. She works for right-wing parliamentarian Aymeric Chauprade, who publicly condoned Russia's annexation of Crimea in 2014 and was a member of Marine Le Pen's National Front political party in France.

"We are talking about an ordinary student and an ordinary internship," Peskov told the outlet after the report published.

Copyright 2021 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.

Sasha Ingber is a reporter on NPR's breaking news desk, where she covers national and international affairs of the day.

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