EU slaps sanctions on 2 Russians over Germany cyberattack
The European Union on Thursday imposed sanctions on
two Russian officials and part of Russia’s GRU military intelligence agency
over a cyberattack against the German parliament in 2015.
EU headquarters said in a statement that travel bans
and asset freezes have been imposed on the two men: Igor Kostyukov, head of the
Main Directorate of the General Staff of the Russian Armed Forces, and Dmitry
Badin, a military intelligence officer.
The EU said that Badin, who is also being sought by
U.S. authorities, was part of a team that launched the attacks on the
Bundestag.
“This cyber-attack targeted the parliament’s
information system and affected its operation for several days. A significant
amount of data was stolen and the email accounts of several MPs as well as of
Chancellor Angela Merkel were affected,” it said.
The part of the intelligence agency targeted is
known as “military unit 26165,” or more commonly by monikers like APT28, Fancy
Bear, Pawn Storm and Strontium. The EU said it “is responsible for
cyber-attacks with a significant effect constituting an external threat to the
Union or its Member States.”
The same unit stands accused of trying to hack into
the Wi-Fi network of the Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons,
based in the Netherlands, in 2018.
The sanctions were imposed under a set of measures
designed to “prevent, discourage, deter and respond to continuing and
increasing malicious behavior in cyberspace.” EU citizens and organizations are
banned from making funds available to those listed.
A total of eight people and four organizations now
appear on the list.
Russian officials have repeatedly denied any
involvement by Moscow in the hacking attack. They have similarly dismissed
charges of Russian meddling in the 2016 U.S. presidential election and alleged
cyberattacks on other Western nations and institutions.
Diplomatic ties between Germany and Russia are
already tense, following the brazen killing of a Georgian man on the streets of
Berlin last year. Prosecutors have suggested the hit was ordered either by
Moscow or authorities in the Russian republic of Chechnya.



