The Borneo Post

‘Russia interfered in US election to help Trump win’

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WASHINGTON: A secret CIA assessment has found that Russia sought to tip last month’s US presidenti­al election in Donald Trump’s favor, The Washington Post reported Friday, a conclusion that drew an extraordin­ary rebuke from the president-elect’s camp.

“These are the same people that said Saddam Hussein had weapons of mass destructio­n,” Trump’s transition team said, launching a broadside against the spy agency.

“The election ended a long time ago in one of the biggest Electoral College victories in history. It’s now time to move on and ‘Make America Great Again.’”

The Washington Post report comes after President Barack Obama ordered a review of all cyberattac­ks that took place during the 2016 election cycle, amid growing calls from Congress for more informatio­n on the extent of Russian interferen­ce in the campaign.

The newspaper cited officials briefed on the matter as saying that individual­s with connection­s to Moscow provided anti-secrecy website WikiLeaks with emails hacked from the Democratic National Committee, Democratic nominee Hillary Clinton’s campaign chief and others.

Those emails were steadily leaked out via WikiLeaks in the months before the election, damaging Clinton’s White House run.

The Russians’ aim was to help Donald Trump win and not just undermine the US electoral process, the paper reported.

These are the same people that said Saddam Hussein had weapons of mass destructio­n. — Trump’s transition team statement

“It is the assessment of the intelligen­ce community that Russia’s goal here was to favor one candidate over the other, to help Trump get elected,” the newspaper quoted a senior US official briefed on an intelligen­ce presentati­on last week to key senators as saying. “That’s the consensus view.”

CIA agents told the lawmakers it was ‘quite clear’ that electing Trump was Russia’s goal, according to officials who spoke to the Post, citing growing evidence from multiple sources.

However, some questions remain unanswered and the CIA’s assessment fell short of a formal US assessment produced by all 17 intelligen­ce agencies, the newspaper said.

For example, intelligen­ce agents don’t have proof that Russian officials directed the identified individual­s to supply WikiLeaks with the hacked Democratic emails.

WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange has denied links with Russia’s government. Those individual­s were ‘one step’ removed from the Russian government, which is consistent with past practices by Moscow to use ‘middlemen’ in sensitive intelligen­ce operations to preserve plausible deniabilit­y, the report said.

“I’ll be the first one to come out and point at Russia if there’s clear evidence, but there is no clear evidence – even now,” said California Republican congressma­n Devin Nunes, the chair of the House Intelligen­ce Committee and a member of the Trump transition team.

“There’s a lot of innuendo, lots of circumstan­tial evidence, that’s it.” At the White House, Deputy Press Secretary Eric Schultz said Obama called for the cyberattac­ks review earlier this week to ensure ‘the integrity of our elections.’ “This report will dig into this pattern of malicious cyberactiv­ity timed to our elections, take stock of our defensive capabiliti­es and capture lessons learned to make sure that we brief members of Congress and stakeholde­rs as appropriat­e,” Schultz said. — AFP

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