OPINION - Editorial

Others say: A slap on the wrist

For a presidency marked by reticence to criticize Russia, Thursday offered a change of tone. The White House signed on to a multinational statement condemning Russia for poisoning people on British soil with a military-grade nerve agent. Meanwhile, the Treasury Department unveiled sanctions against five Russian organizations and 19 Russian nationals in response to Kremlin-backed meddling in the 2016 presidential election.

Both moves are welcome--but, unless they hint at much bigger things to come, and soon, they also are inadequate. These measures alone will not deter Russian President Vladimir Putin from interfering in America's 2018 elections, nor from engaging in the variety of aggressive attacks on the West that Russia continues to perpetrate.

The statement, co-signed by France, Germany and Britain, concluded that it is "highly likely that Russia was responsible" for the chilling nerve-agent attack against Sergei and Yulia Skripal in southern England, which put them in the hospital in critical condition and sickened others nearby. "There is no plausible alternative explanation," the allies insisted, noting that Russia's refusal to cooperate with British authorities underlines the Kremlin's probable guilt. This honesty is good. It must be followed by action.

In announcing the sanctions, Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin cited the "ongoing nefarious attacks emanating from Russia," including election interference and cyberattacks.

Yet, as Sen. Mark Warner, D-Va., noted Thursday, "Nearly all of the entities and individuals who were sanctioned today were either previously under sanction during the Obama Administration, or had already been charged with federal crimes by the Special Counsel." In other words, the sanctions do not represent a dramatic change in U.S. policy. "With the midterm elections fast approaching," Warner added, "the administration needs to step it up, now, if we have any hope of deterring Russian meddling in 2018."

Treasury released a list of potential targets in January. It should finally make better use of it. The Russian threat also demands that the Trump administration push much harder to obtain funding, intelligence and other support for states seeking to secure their election systems. And the president should express full support for the special counsel investigation into Russian actions.

Encouragingly, Mnuchin said Thursday that he intends to impose additional sanctions "to hold Russian government officials and oligarchs accountable for their destabilizing activities by severing their access to the U.S. financial system." With U.S. primary races already underway, time is fast running out to deter Russian interference.

Editorial on 03/17/2018

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