Just hours after the Electoral College elected Joe Biden as the next president, formalizing the former Democratic vice president’s win in the Nov. 3 election, Russia’s leader Vladimir Putin on Tuesday finally acknowledged Biden’s victory, saying he “wished the president-elect every success” and was “ready for interaction and contact.”
The Kremlin, which has decried what it’s called Biden’s “sharp anti-Russian rhetoric” but praised the president-elect’s comments on arms control, previously said it preferred to wait until the election results were official before congratulating a winner.
Putin was one of the last world leaders who had not acknowledged Biden’s victory. President Donald Trump is still refusing to concede the election.
In a telegram sent to Biden – published by Russian state media – Russia’s longtime leader “expressed confidence that Russia and the U.S., who bear special responsibility for global security and stability, can facilitate resolution of many problems and challenges faced by the world now despite disagreements.”
Still, Putin’s remarks come as cybersecurity experts point the finger at Russian state-backed hackersfor a massive, months-long digital spying operation that targeted the U.S. government, military and corporations. Russia denies any involvement.
On Monday, the Department of Homeland’s Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency, or CISA, issued a highly unusual public appeal for further information about the breach. The federal agency requested that anyone with knowledge of the hack, which dates back to mid-year or earlier, to contact an email address: central@cisa.gov.
The apparent conduit for the hacks is server software called SolarWinds. It is used by hundreds of thousands of organizations globally, including most Fortune 500 companies, multiple U.S. federal agencies including the Homeland, Commerce, State and Treasury departments, all five branches of the U.S. military, and dozens of universities.
None of the potentially affected U.S. government agencies have responded to requests for comment about the hack or released information about the extent of the possible damage caused by the cyber-espionage, which is being investigated.
The Kremlin’s alleged links to criminality were also in focus this week after the U.K.-based investigations outlet Bellingcat unveiled detailed telecommunications evidence that it claims links the near-fatal Novichok poisoning of outspoken Putin critic Alexei Navalny with operatives from Russia’s secretive Federal Security Service. A number prominent opponents of Putin – journalists, politicians, former associates – have died or been injured in violent or suspicious circumstances, both at home and abroad.