it shows the israelification of the pindo admin, that it should publicly threaten xi in order to blackmail and intimidate him prior to his visit, via this leak in the media of a third country

Pindostan mulls over sanctions on China and Russia for cyber-attacks
Sarah Steffen, Deutsche Welle, Sep 3 2015

Sanctioning Chinese and Russian companies and individuals for their role in cyber-attacks would be the first-time use of an executive order signed by Obama in April aimed at hitting back at those who are “engaging in significant malicious cyber-enabled activities.” The White House was not prepared to answer questions on the matter, but did provide a transcript of statements by spox Josh Earnest pointing out it would be “strategically unwise” to discuss economic sanctions before officially announcing them. The statement reads:

It would only allow those who could be the potential targets of economic sanctions to begin to take steps to evade that sanctions activity. We’ve previously indicated our concerns about China’s activity in cyberspace. These are concerns that the president has raised directly with his Chinese counterpart in the past. Certainly, the announcement by the Dept of Justice last year to indict five Chinese military officials for their actions in cyberspace should be an indication that we take these concerns very seriously.

Another reason the White House does not want to tip its hand is the upcoming state visit by Chinese Pres Xi at the end of this month. Mulling over sanctions could also work as leverage in talks about cyber-security with China, says James Lewis, a ‘cyber-security expert’ at CSIS in Washington. He told DW:

Some people say you can see sanctions next week, but it might be smarter to wait until the summit and use it as something you can negotiate with the Chinese.

Was this move purely intended as a threat to help spur negotiations, or is Pindostan going to push for those sanctions to make a point? Lewis said:

They’ve leaked too much for them to not do something. The question is, when do they do it and who do they do it against?

The Pindo government is eager to put an end to a string of embarrassing cyber-attacks (No, it isn’t: these are all-self staged, just like the phony terror attacks, to provide pretexts for clampdowns at home and aggression abroad – RB), including a hack of the White House Office of Personnel Management which stores data about government officials. Pindostan has suspected the attack was linked to China, which denied any involvement. Last week, White House national security adviser Susan Rice was sent to Beijing for talks to ‘help ease tensions’ (I doubt that – RB) over cyber-attacks and other issues. Republican presidential candidates, meanwhile, have called on Obama to cancel Xi’s visit altogether. Lewis said (and it’s his job to act as unofficial govt spox, cos the govt’s too cowardly to formally accuse, just like it’s too cowardly to formally declare war – RB):

Pindostan did an internal review of economic espionage and found that China does as much as the entire rest of the world combined when it comes to economic espionage. And Pindo authorities were able to pinpoint individuals and companies involved in cyber-attacks, as they did when they indicted five Chinese military officials last year. There have been a number of prominent hacks in recent months, for instance the attack on Sony Pictures in November last year. And the White House was very concerned to send a clear message that this kind of action would not be tolerated. The Chinese have largely ignored Pindostan. We’ve had discussions with them now on this topic for six years. And in six years they have done very little. Since there hasn’t been an official statement by Pindo authorities yet, China and Russia have kept quiet as well. The Chinese seem to be waiting to see: Will Pindostan actually go through with it? Will they do it before the summit? The Russians are also in a wait-and-see mode. There’s so many problems in the relationship with Russia that this is by far not the biggest. I think the most damaging thing would be to do the sanctions before the summit. That I think would upset the Chinese the most.

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