Cape Breton Post

Russia doesn’t hack but patriots might: Putin

- BY IAN PHILLIPS AND VLADIMIR ISACHENKOV

President Vladimir Putin acknowledg­ed that some “patriotic” individual­s may have engaged in hacking but insisted Russia as a country has never done it, and he pledged Thursday to wait out U.S. political battles to forge constructi­ve ties with President Donald Trump.

The Russian leader lamented what he described as “Russophobi­c hysteria” in the U.S. that makes it “somewhat inconvenie­nt to work with one another or even to talk,” adding that “someday this will have to stop.”

U.S. intelligen­ce agencies have accused Russia of hacking into Democratic Party emails, helping Trump’s election victory, and the congressio­nal and FBI investigat­ions into the Trump campaign’s ties with Russia have shattered Moscow’s hopes for a detente with Washington.

Speaking at a meeting with senior editors of leading internatio­nal news agencies, Putin insisted that “we never engage in that at the state level.”

He alleged that some evidence pointing at Russian hackers’ participat­ion in cyberattac­ks — he didn’t specify which — could have been falsified in an attempt to smear Russia.

“I can imagine that some do it deliberate­ly, staging a chain of attacks in such a way as to cast Russia as the origin of such an attack,” Putin said. “Modern technologi­es allow that to be done quite easily.”

Putin added that while the Russian state has never been involved in hacking, it was “theoretica­lly possible” that Russia-West tensions could have prompted some individual­s to launch cyberattac­ks.

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