Thursday 8 July 2021

Didn't you ALREADY warn him, Joe? Biden says he'll go straight to Putin with his 'message' on $50million REvil ransomware attacks amid criticism he is being weak on Russia

 President Joe Biden said on Wednesday that he will personally deliver a message to Vladimir Putin about the rash of cyber attacks taking place on American companies and groups.

'I will deliver it to him,' he told reporters at the White House when asked his message for the Russian president.

It's unclear how the message will be transmitted or when and comes less than three weeks after he warned Putin he would respond if the US was hit by another hack.


Biden's new message came after conservatives criticized him for an early lackluster response to the latest cyber attack.

Last week, a U.S. software firm was hit by a REvil - a Russian cybercriminal group - in a ransomware attack that crippled hundreds of companies worldwide. 

Kaseya provides services to more than 40,000 organizations and it was considered the single, largest global ransomware attack on record. 

Additionally, Russia’s S.V.R. intelligence agency hacked a contractor for the Republican National Committee last week, the New York Times reported, although the committee said none of its data had been breached. 

White House press secretary Jen Psaki said on Wednesday the administration won't 'preview our punches' and has a 'range of options' when it comes to a response. 

President Joe Biden said that he will personally deliver a message to Vladimir Putin about the rash of cyber attacks

President Joe Biden said that he will personally deliver a message to Vladimir Putin about the rash of cyber attacks

It's unclear how President Biden will deliver his message to President Vladimir Putin and what it will be

It's unclear how President Biden will deliver his message to President Vladimir Putin and what it will be

Biden says he'll deliver cyberhack warning direct to Putin
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And Psaki said on Tuesday that the US and Russia have kept up a dialogue on the issue since the June 16 sitdown between the two leaders.

Since the Geneva summit 'we have undertaken expert-level talks that are continuing, and we expect to have another meeting next week focused on ransomware attacks,' she said.

'And I will just reiterate a message that these officials are sending. As the President made clear to President Putin when they met, if the Russian government cannot or will not take action against criminal actors residing in Russia, we will take action or reserve the right to take action on our own,' she added.

The White House has not offered any hint of their response or what action officials may take. 

Right-wing media and groups excoriated Biden for an awkward exchange in Michigan on Saturday where he fumbled with paper in his suit jacket pocket to answer a question on the ransomware attack. 

During that trip to a cheery farm store, Biden said he was just briefed on the attack, which was launched on Friday, but he had to refer to notes to give a non-answer updating reporters on the situation.

And, on Tuesday, Biden again pulled out notes to deliver a prepared response to reporters questioning whether he would retaliate against Russia. 

'I can tell you a couple things,' Biden said when asked if the attack warrants a response from the U.S. as he started reading from a notebook. 'I received an update from my national security team this morning.'

The president insisted the attack 'appears to have caused minimal damages to U.S. businesses,' despite reports showing at least 1,000 American companies were affected – and the hacking gang claims up to 1 million companies were targeted.

'We're still gathering information to the full extent of that attack,' Biden said after delivering an update on the coronavirus pandemic and state of vaccinations from the White House.

He previewed: 'I'm going to have more to say about this in the next several days. We're getting more detail and information – but that's what I can tell you now.'

At their meeting on June 16 in Geneva, President Biden warned President Putin he will take action if the ransomware attacks continue

At their meeting on June 16 in Geneva, President Biden warned President Putin he will take action if the ransomware attacks continue


REvil was able to breach Kaseya, a Miami-based IT firm, and use their malware protection product to target, it claims, up to 1 million different businesses in at least 17 different countries.

The gang is publicly demanding $70 million bitcoin to fix the issue, which the White House is advising Kaseya against.

REvil has lowered their asking price to $50 million, according to private negotiations reported by Reuters on Monday. 

Biden has faced a slew of criticism for his slow response to the ransomware attack and his failure to 'get tough' on Russia despite vowing retaliation if there were any attacks on U.S. critical infrastructure.

Rep. John Katko told DailyMail.com Monday night the U.S. is 'facing a time of reckoning' in relations with Russia.

'Only weeks after President Biden sat down with Putin and allegedly talked a tough game with Russia, hackers from Russia again attacked thousands of U.S. companies, compromising our nation's critical infrastructure,' Katko, ranking member of the House Committee on Homeland Security, said.

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