Sanctions against China for cyberattacks on the U.S. private sector could come as early as next week, U.S.officials told CNN Friday.The package of penalties on individuals and commercial entities believed to be responsible for the attacks has been in the works for months, and a government official familiar with the process confirmed to CNN earlier this week that they were getting a serious look.Still, the officials emphasized Friday, no final decisionhas been reached.Conventional wisdom had been that the sanctions wouldnot come until after Chinese President Xi Jinping's state visit to Washington at the end of the month. Experts believed the White House was looking to gain leverage by the credible threat of sanctions to bring the Chinese to the negotiating table on the unrelenting stream of cyberespionage coming from Beijing.The potential sanctions package comes amid increased tensions between the two nations, including over Beijing's increasingly assertive national security posture.For years, the U.S. has spoken out against Chinese hacking of U.S. businesses to steal intellectual property, which has ramped up since last year. In May 2014, the Justice Department indicted five Chinese military officials for allegedly stealing trade secrets from companies based in the U.S.President Barack Obama has also previously confronted Xi about the cyberespionage, including in face-to-face talks in 2013.Though the sanctions would deal with economic espionage, the move would also come in the shadow of the massive hack of the Office of Personnel Management that stole more than 21 million sensitive files of govermnment employees
The U.S. has sanctioned Chinese entities in the past for a range of offenses, including narcotics and support terrorism, and has levied penalties against North Korea under a pre-existing sanctions regime in response to the crippling hack of Sony Pictures Entertainment.The nascent executive order, however, has yet to be used -- and going after China for the first use of the power would send a message that the U.S. intends to aim it at the highest targets rather than low-level offenders.James Lewis, a cybersecurity expert at the Center for Strategic and International Studies, was one of the insiders who suspected the sanctions wouldn't comeuntil after the Xi visit
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