The same Russian military unit that hacked into Democratic Party systems before the 2016 election has begun to target right-leaning think tanks that have adversarial relationships with President Trump, a report said Tuesday.

The Russian intelligence unit, formerly known as the GRU, created websites that mimicked both the Hudson Institute and the International Republican Institute with the intention of tricking people into clicking on the links and giving away their passwords, according to the New York Times.

The technique, known as spear-phishing, was used to penetrate the Democratic National Committee and the emails of Hillary Clinton aide John Podesta.

“Broadening cyberthreats to both US political parties make clear that the tech sector will need to do more to help protect the democratic process,” Microsoft’s president, Brad Smith, said in a statement.

“Attackers want their attacks to look as realistic as possible and they therefore create websites and URLs that look like sites their targeted victims would expect to receive email from or visit. The sites involved in last week’s order fit this description.”

The Hudson Institute and the International Republican Institute have advocated positions that are at odds with Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin — including a critique of the two-hour closed-door meeting of the two leaders in Helsinki last month.

Some members of the boards include Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.), 2012 GOP presidential nominee Mitt Romney and Sen. Marco Rubio (R-Fla.).

Despite the intelligence community’s assessment that Russia was behind the election hacking, Trump has tried to shift blame for who was responsible to others, including a “guy sitting on their bed who weighs 400 pounds.”