U.S. eases restrictions on cyber-security sales to Russian spy agency

The US Treasury Department relaxed sanctions against Russia. US companies will now be able to make some cybersecurity transactions with Russia.

Via USA Today

The U.S. Treasury Department on Thursday eased economic sanctions on Russia, allowing some cyber-security transactions with the Russian Federal Security Service accused of meddling in the U.S. electoral process.

Some Russian officials applauded the move as signaling a thaw in relations with Washington. But several members of Congress decried the move as pandering to Russia and its hacking attempts. The Trump administration, meanwhile, denied any easing of sanctions, describing the changes as routine tweaking of complicated policy.

The move by Treasury makes changes to sanctions initially imposed by President Obama in April 2015 and strengthened again in December, in reaction to alleged “malicious cyber-enabled activities” by Russia’s security service, known as the FSB, in the U.S. electoral process.

The changes by the Office of Foreign Assets Control cover “all transactions and activities” involving the FSB, the successor to the KGB, that were banned by Obama’s executive orders. It specifically eases the ban on sales of information technology products to Russia.

Rep. Eric Swalwell on Twitter: “#RussianHacking attacked our democracy. They should pay a price. @POTUS rewards them by rolling back sanctions against their team of hackers / Twitter”

RussianHacking attacked our democracy. They should pay a price. @POTUS rewards them by rolling back sanctions against their team of hackers

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