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{UAH} Three reasons for Obama’s new Russia sanctions that have nothing to do with ‘hacking

Danielle Ryan
Danielle Ryan is an Irish freelance writer, journalist and media analyst. She 

has lived and traveled extensively in the US, Germany, Russia and Hungary. Her byline has appeared at RT, The Nation, Rethinking Russia, The BRICS Post, New Eastern Outlook, Global Independent Analytics and many others. She also works on copywriting and editing projects.
Three reasons for Obama's new Russia sanctions that have nothing to do with 'hacking'

U.S. President Barack Obama © Carlos Barria / Reuters
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There are a few reasons Washington has imposed new political sanctions on Russia this week — including the expulsion of 35 diplomats — and none of the reasons have anything to do with Russia "hacking" the American election.

So, let's go through them. There are three primary motivators for Barack Obama here.

Reason 1: Part of a face-saving exercise for Hillary Clinton and the Democratic Party

Barack Obama's party has been kicking up such an unholy fuss over Russian "hacking" for months. The Democrats fully intended to blame the Russians if the election went Donald Trump's way — and as expected, since November 9, they have been gung ho about Putin stealing the election from Hillary Clinton. Clinton voters, many of them, fully believe groups of hooded Kremlin-backed hackers in Vladivostok stole their election. They believe this with such ferocity because it is what they were told to believe by their party, by their country's intelligence agencies, and by the media. The hurt feelings after losing the election could only be alleviated by directing the blame toward outside forces that had nothing to do with their candidate or their campaign.

How would it look if Obama now came along and said, "We don't have the evidence for it, so let's all pack up and move on with our lives?" Not a chance. How would it look if he admitted that there's stronger testimony pointing toward these "hacks" actually being an insider leak? Having spent months sharpening the swords against Russia, that would be mortifying.

Reason 2: Last-ditch attempt to sour relations between Trump and Russia

It's too early to tell what the Trump effect on US-Russia relations will be, but the current administration is doing everything in its power to ensure it won't be entirely restorative. That's rather sad, because after an eight-year-long plummet into a new and dangerous Cold War, surely improving the relationship should be a top priority. Instead, the Obama administration seems intent on trying to convince Trump that the Russians really are the baddies for all seasons and that only the most aggressive approach will work when dealing with the Kremlin.

Obama has just a few more weeks to force Trump to "admit" that Russia interfered with the election, thus forcing him to begin his term on a more sour note with Russia. Of course, given that he won, Trump is hardly going to jump enthusiastically aboard that bandwagon and start tweeting about how Putin stole the election — but he is in a bit of a bind. Although he won't suddenly begin attributing his victory to Russian hackers, he will not want to be seen to be ignoring the leaders of the US intelligence community. As such, he has agreed to meet intelligence officials next week to be "updated on the facts" of the situation.

Reason 3: An immature revenge over Syria

It surely can't be a coincidence that these sanctions were communicated on the day a new ceasefire was announced in Syria; a ceasefire organized by Russia, Iran and Turkey, with the US playing no part. A bitter pill to swallow, indeed.

The fact the US was left out of these latest ceasefire negotiations will be yet another reminder to the Obama administration of where they failed on the global stage. A US presence at the negotiating table was irrelevant because three weeks from now Trump is expected to take a vastly different approach to Syria.
A year ago, after Turkey shot down a Russian jet over Syria, Russia-Turkey relations were dead in the water, seemingly never to be revived. If Moscow and Ankara can get from there to here, surely the US can think up better 'solutions' to their problems than kicking a few dozen diplomats out of New York and Maryland.

The Kremlin called the latest sanctions "unpredictable and even aggressive" in their response. One could easily disagree with that. The 'agree with us or hit the road' approach is standard and entirely predictable in US foreign policy. When you consider that forcibly removing foreign leaders from power is eternally more preferable than talking, throwing out diplomats over possibly fake hacking doesn't seem so surprising

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