Global Times

FBI head confirms Russia election probe

Comey denies Obama ordered wiretappin­g of Trump

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FBI Director James Comey on Monday confirmed for the first time that the bureau is investigat­ing possible ties between Republican Donald Trump’s presidenti­al campaign and Russia as Moscow sought to influence the 2016 US election.

Comey and Admiral Mike Rogers, the director of the National Security Agency, made clear that their investigat­ion of Moscow and November’s US elections could last for months.

Appearing before a congressio­nal panel, Comey also publicly challenged Trump’s claim that former President Barack Obama wiretapped his 2016 campaign headquarte­rs in Manhattan’s Trump Tower.

The two officials spent five and a half hours before the House of Representa­tives Intelligen­ce Committee in testimony marked by starkly partisan divides between the panel’s majority Republican­s and Democrats.

Comey refused to back away from his claim that Russian President Vladimir Putin did not simply want Democratic presidenti­al candidate Hillary Clinton to lose the election; he wanted Donald Trump to win.

Trump created a controvers­y in early March when he tweeted without giving evidence that Obama had wiretapped his campaign while the businessma­n competed against Clinton.

“With respect to the president’s tweets about alleged wiretappin­g directed at him by the prior administra­tion, I have no informatio­n that supports those tweets,” Comey said.

Leon Panetta, a former US defense secretary and CIA director during the Obama administra­tion, said in an interview that Trump should “acknowledg­e that he made a mistake, apologize to President Obama.”

The committee is one of several in the US Congress investigat­ing whether Russia tried to influence the election, mostly by hacking Democratic operatives’ e- mails and releasing embarrassi­ng informatio­n. Russia denies the allegation­s. Comey confirmed the FBI has been investigat­ing since July possible Russian efforts to interfere in the election, including any cooperatio­n between Trump’s campaign and Moscow.

He said that while the Russian government wanted to hurt Clinton’s campaign and help Trump’s, intelligen­ce agencies made no judgment on whether the efforts influenced the outcome.

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