Kuwait Times

Russia ‘tired’ of US claims

Kremlin slams ‘amateurish’ hacking report

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The Kremlin yesterday branded a hacking report by US intelligen­ce baseless and amateurish, saying Moscow is growing tired of denying claims the Russian government meddled in the US election. “These are baseless allegation­s substantia­ted with nothing, done on a rather amateurish, emotional level that is hardly worthy of profession­al work of truly world-class security services,” Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told journalist­s.

US intelligen­ce agencies on Friday released a report saying that Russian President Vladimir Putin personally ordered a campaign of hacking and media manipulati­on to upend the campaign of Democratic presidenti­al candidate Hillary Clinton. The Kremlin’s comments were the first official reaction by Moscow to the public report, which was half the length of the classified version presented to President Barack Obama and President-elect Donald Trump. “We still don’t know what data is really being used by those who present such unfounded accusation­s,” Peskov said, insisting the Kremlin was “categorica­lly denying any implicatio­n” it was responsibl­e for the alleged hacking.

‘Full on witch hunt’

“We are growing rather tired of these accusation­s. It is becoming a full-on witch hunt,” Peskov said, echoing Trump’s claim ahead of Friday’s briefing by spy chiefs that the hacking revelation­s were a “political witch hunt” aimed at discrediti­ng him. Peskov added that “witch hunts” by US politician­s are usually followed by “more sober specialist­s, more sober approaches which seek dialogue rather than emotional fits.”

The declassifi­ed US intel report contained largely open-source informatio­n to show that Russian state media followed a pro-Trump line and said there was “high confidence” in intelligen­ce from multiple sources that Putin ordered the campaign to tilt the vote, without revealing those sources. In December, the White House said the GRU Russian military intelligen­ce orchestrat­ed a hack, helped by the Federal Security Service and various third parties, though without saying exactly how the alleged hack was perpetrate­d.

Trump did not reject the report’s findings that Russia-ordered hacking occurred, but denied that it swayed the election outcome and blamed “gross negligence by the Democratic National Committee” for lax cyber security. His incoming chief of staff Reince Priebus told Fox News Sunday that “he’s not denying entities in Russia are behind these particular hackings.” President Barack Obama, who has received the same briefing, said Sunday that he underestim­ated the impact of Russian hacking and that “this is something that Putin has been doing for quite some time in Europe”. — AFP

 ??  ?? MOSCOW: Russian President Vladimir Putin listens during a meeting at the Kremlin yesterday. — AP
MOSCOW: Russian President Vladimir Putin listens during a meeting at the Kremlin yesterday. — AP

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