Relations between the US and Russia took a nosedive last Monday when Washington announced it would be suspending its negotiations with Moscow over its refusal to halt airstrikes on Syria's largest city, Aleppo.
That was only the start of a long week — one that saw the two countries entering their lowest point in relations since the end of the Cold War.
After reports emerged last Tuesday that the US was considering launching airstrikes on the forces of Syrian President Bashar Assad, Russia deployed surface-to-air missiles to its naval base in Tartus on Syria's western coast and suspended a nuclear and energy-related research pact with the US.
Then on Thursday, Russia's ministry of defense released a statement implying that US warplanes could be shot down without warning if they were to attack Syrian army positions. On Friday, US Secretary of State John Kerry responded by calling for a war-crimes investigation into Russia and Assad's scorched-earth offensive on Aleppo, which has killed hundreds of civilians since late last month.
The tumultuous week culminated with an unprecedented move: On Friday afternoon, the Department of Homeland Security and the Office of the Director of National Intelligence released a statement that for the first time publicly accused Russia of orchestrating a series of cyberattacks "intended to interfere with the US election process."
Hillary Clinton's presidential campaign has accused the Russian government of trying to tip the scales in favor of Republican nominee Donald Trump, who has been more sympathetic to Russia on the campaign trail.
Russia's deputy foreign minister, Sergei Ryabkov, condemned the accusation on Saturday, saying the current US administration was "not averse to using dirty tricks" to stir up "unprecedented anti-Russian hysteria."
Later that day, Russia vetoed a UN Security Council resolution proposed by France and backed by the US to immediately halt the bombing in Aleppo, calling it a ploy to protect former Al Qaeda fighters operating in and around the city.
On Tuesday, Retired Lt. Gen. Yevgeny Buzhinsky told the BBC that "as far as Russia sees it, as Putin sees it, it is full-scale confrontation [with the US] on all fronts."
"It's extremely worrisome," retired Adm. James Stavridis, the dean of the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy at Tufts University, told NBC News last week of the developments.
"The trend lines are very bad," he added. "We're not in a new Cold War, but we're edging close to one."
'Denial of reality isn't a useful policy option'
Experts are divided over what options Washington has now that its relationship with Moscow has reached its lowest point in decades — especially since it's unlikely that Russia, having successfully edged the US out of the Middle East and been credited with hacking into US political organizations, will ease up anytime soon.
Adding to the tension is NATO's buildup of combat battalions on Russia's doorstep in the Baltic countries and Poland. Russia has responded to the increased NATO presence by assembling troops and bases around Kaliningrad, which lies between Poland and Lithuania.
Among the highest-profile politicians arguing for a more robust response to Russian aggression is Trump's running mate, Mike Pence.
Pence called Russian President Vladimir Putin "small and bullying" in last week's vice-presidential debate, and he said he supported US military action to end Russia's bombardment of Aleppo. In an extraordinary moment in Sunday night's presidential debate, however, Trump said he "disagreed" with his running mate on Syria policy.
In any case, Ian Bremmer, the president of the political risk firm Eurasia Group, has not expressed optimism about Washington's recourse.
US-Russian relations "are now at the worst level since Andropov," Bremmer told Business Insider in an email, referring to the Soviet leader Yuri Andropov, the general secretary of the Communist Party who was instrumental in the Russians' 1979 invasion of Afghanistan.
"On Syria, the US doesn't have realistic options," Bremmer said. "The Russia talks didn't just fail, they failed immediately and completely, with brutal attacks against civilians. Assad isn't going anywhere, and the Russians (and Iran) are willing to ensure they get to determine the outcomes. That's not easy for the US to accept, but denial of reality isn't a useful policy option."
In an op-ed article for The Wall Street Journal last week, US Sen. John McCain of Arizona called Kerry's suspension of talks with Russia over Syria "meaningless." He advocated more forceful diplomacy backed by "strength."
"Any alternative approach must begin with grounding Mr. Assad's air power," McCain wrote. "The US and its coalition partners must issue an ultimatum to Mr. Assad — stop flying or lose your aircraft — and be prepared to follow through."
He added that the US should hold Russian aircraft "at greater risk," and step up its support to vetted Syrian opposition groups that are fighting the regime.
Many analysts who have been monitoring the conflict agree that massive Western support for Syria's opposition is the only viable way for the US to intervene — especially given Moscow's recent suggestion that it is prepared to shoot down American warplanes and the lack of appetite within the US for another incursion into the Middle East.
Both Clinton and her running mate, Tim Kaine, support establishing a no-fly zone in Syria. While that strategy may have worked had it been enacted before Russia entered the conflict on behalf of Assad in October of last year, as Defense One has noted, setting up a no-fly zone is extremely difficult when an adversary has a strong air force.
Enforcing a no-fly zone, moreover, would require sending more American troops into Syria to operate, support, and protect the increased number of US warplanes that would be flying in the area waiting to intercept violators. The US has a small number of "advisers" stationed in Syria now, but Clinton said during Sunday night's presidential debate that she did not support sending in more. Neither does Trump.
As such, increased support to vetted rebel groups seems to be the most realistic option. But to decisively turn the war around, experts say, such support must arguably include surface-to-air missiles — weapons the Obama administration has so far refused to supply to the rebels out of fear they may fall into extremists' hands.
Short of that, "the military alliance between Syrian President Bashar Assad, Iran, and Russia has managed to make constant progress and appears set to regain control over the whole of Syria," Ulrich Speck, an independent foreign-policy analyst, wrote for Carnegie late last month.
'You use yours, we use ours, nobody wins, world destroyed'
The US's options in the cyber realm are equally as limited.
When asked last week how the US should respond to reports that its voter-registration systems had been targeted, Trump emphasized going offensive and "launching crippling cyberattacks" against America's adversaries. Pence also warned of "serious consequences" if it is determined that Russia is interfering in US elections.
But cybersecurity experts are divided, too, over whether a more offensive posture would deter potential hackers — or escalate the global cyberwar even further.
"It seems like Trump wants to have a détente strategy similar to how we have traditionally handled nuclear weapons," Jason Glassberg, a cofounder of the cybersecurity firm Casaba Security, told Business Insider.
"You use yours, we use ours, nobody wins, world destroyed," he added. "I don't think that will work. The hacking game is ever changing and ever morphing and ranges from the very sophisticated to the downright lame."
Glassberg said — as Trump has when discussing other aspects of US counterterrorism strategy — that it would be unwise for the US to show the world how capable it is of staging harmful attacks against its adversaries.
Other experts disagree.
Michael Borohovski, a cofounder of the cybersecurity firm Tinfoil Security, said Trump wasn't wrong to call for a more offensive-minded cybersecurity policy in general.
"Cybersecurity is an offensive game — focusing only on defense essentially means you are always behind," Borohovski told Business Insider in an email. "Attackers only have to succeed once — defenders have to succeed every time."
Bremmer, of Eurasia Group, called the cyberattacks "an unacceptable sovereignty breach" that demanded US retaliation.
"I'd expect sanctions against Russian individuals and firms engaged in the attacks, possibly a withdrawal of the US ambassador," he said. "But there has to be a more significant deterrent out there. Probably best on the cyber side as well — a threat that if it continues the US will disrupt or damage the Russian Internet."
White House spokesman Josh Earnest told reporters on Tuesday that the president will consider a "proportional" response to the Russian cyber attacks.
"It is certainly possible that the president can choose response options that we never announce," he said.
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