The Justice Department on Thursday announced criminal charges against seven Russian military intelligence officials for cyberattacks aimed at messing with the international investigation of the Kremlin’s Olympic-doping conspiracy — and that wasn’t even Vladimir Putin’s only espionage debacle of the day.

Britain and the Netherlands, joined a day later by Germany, also revealed a Russian plot to hack the Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons in the Hague in order to mess with the investigation into Russia’s deadly effort to poison ex-spy Sergei Skripal in Britain. Four Russian intel officers stand charged in that case, and Russians also stand accused of hacking to mess with the investigation into the 2014 downing of Malaysian Airlines Flight 17 over Ukraine.

These are all crimes to cover up other crimes: The anti-doping cyberattacks aimed to spread disinformation to muddy the waters over the mass cheating by Putin’s athletes at multiple Olympics by making other nations’ competitors look like dopers.

It’s not exactly news that the Putin regime will happily cheat, steal, assassinate or invade if it thinks that will serve its goals: It recognizes no limits except power.

No, the takeaways here are: 1) The West is calling out Russia on its crimes, and 2) Putin’s thugs are screwing up and getting caught more and more often.

Proof of Putin’s villainy could actually make him an international pariah. Better yet, proof of his incompetence may put his rule of Russia at risk.

Keep it up, Vlad.