The News (New Glasgow)

U.S. INTEL OFFICIALS: RUSSIA TARGETING MIDTERM ELECTIONS

-

Three of the nation’s top intelligen­ce officials said Tuesday that the U.S. has seen Russian activity aimed at meddling in the upcoming midterm elections.

“We have seen Russian activity and intentions to have an impact on the next election cycle,” CIA Director Mike Pompeo told the Senate intelligen­ce committee.

National Intelligen­ce Director Dan Coats and Adm. Mike Rogers, the head of the National Security Agency, agreed. They didn’t describe the activity, other than to say it was related to informatio­n warfare.

They told Congress that they would provide more details in a classified session later in the day. The intelligen­ce officials said the informatio­n will be shared with state and local government­s and state election officials.

Russian interferen­ce in the upcoming elections is part of its pursuit of bolder cyber operations and false informatio­n campaigns against America and its allies, according to a new intelligen­ce report on global threats.

This year’s threat assessment also described the risk of conflict, especially with North Korea, as higher today than at any time since the end of the Cold War. So, too, is a rivalry between Iran and Saudi Arabia that is destabiliz­ing the Middle East. The danger posed by weapons of mass destructio­n also is rising.

“In the next year, Russian intelligen­ce and security services will continue to probe U.S. and allied critical infrastruc­tures, as well as target the United States, NATO, and allies for insights into U.S. policy,” the report said.

“The 2018 U.S. midterm elections are a potential target for Russian influence operations.”

“Russians stepped up their game with cyber, in particular, in 2016,” Coats said in a telephone interview with The Associated Press.

His expectatio­n: Russian interferen­ce in the midterm or in state elections.

“We think it’s very likely because we don’t see a let up in efforts to do this,” Coats told the AP.

U.S. intelligen­ce concluded Moscow interfered in the 2016 presidenti­al election, which has led to the current FBI investigat­ion into possible Trump campaign connection­s. Russia denies the allegation­s and President Donald Trump has called the FBI probe as a witch hunt.

Tuesday’s report predicted Russian intelligen­ce agencies will disseminat­e more false informatio­n over Russian state-controlled media and through fake online personas to spread antiAmeric­an views and exacerbate social and political divides in the United States.

CIA Director Mike Pompeo also has said he expects Russia will insert itself in the November midterms, in which Republican­s and Democrats will vie for control of the House and Senate. “We will push back in a way that is sufficient­ly robust that the impact they have on our election won’t be great,” Pompeo recently told the BBC.

Last week, Secretary of State Rex Tillerson chimed in, telling Fox News the U.S. is seeing “certain behaviours” of Russian meddling in elections in the Northern Hemisphere, including “in the U.S.” this year.

Coats and other top intelligen­ce officials were appearing at a Senate intelligen­ce committee hearing Tuesday to discuss their annual assessment of global threats facing the United States.

North Korea’s pursuit of nuclear-tipped missiles that can reach the United States, Russian and Chinese aggression, the standoff between Iranian and Saudi Arabia-backed proxies and the threat of cyberattac­ks are all detailed in the 28-page paper.

 ?? AP PHOTO ?? FBI Director Christophe­r Wray, accompanie­d by CIA Director Mike Pompeo, right, speaks at a Senate Select Committee on Intelligen­ce hearing on worldwide threats Tuesday in Washington.
AP PHOTO FBI Director Christophe­r Wray, accompanie­d by CIA Director Mike Pompeo, right, speaks at a Senate Select Committee on Intelligen­ce hearing on worldwide threats Tuesday in Washington.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada