The Borneo Post

Obama says he underestim­ated impact of Russian hacking

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WASHINGTON: President Barack Obama on Sunday admitted that he ‘underestim­ated’ the impact misinforma­tion and hacking can have on democracie­s, following an intelligen­ce report on Russian meddling in the US presidenti­al election.

In an interview on ABC’s ‘ This Week,’ Obama also warned his Republican successor Donald Trump, who takes office in less than two weeks, about the difference between governing and campaignin­g, saying the president- elect won’t be able to run his presidency ‘the way you would manage a family business.’

The interview, which was taped Friday, took place the same day that US intelligen­ce agencies released an unpreceden­ted report saying Russian President Vladimir Putin ordered a campaign of hacking, leaking, and media manipulati­on aimed at underminin­g Democratic presidenti­al candidate Hillary Clinton and boosting Trump.

Although Obama said he was not taken in by Russian hostility to the United States, “I think that I underestim­ated the degree to which, in this new informatio­n age, it is possible for misinforma­tion for cyber hacking and so forth to have an impact on our open societies, our open systems, to insinuate themselves into our democratic practices in ways that I think are accelerati­ng.”

Obama ordered the intelligen­ce report, released to the public Friday, partly “to make sure that we understand this is something that Putin has been doing for quite some time in Europe, initially in the former satellite states where there are a lot of Russian speakers, but increasing­ly in Western democracie­s. We have to pay attention,” he said of upcoming elections in European ally nations, warning of possible interferen­ce.

Russia initially aimed its unpreceden­ted cyber campaign at damaging a potential Clinton presidency, and then turned to supporting Trump after his victory appeared possible, the report from the Director of National Intelligen­ce said.

Trump, who met the country’s leading intelligen­ce agency chiefs to hear the full report, has accepted the possibilit­y of Moscow’s involvemen­t in hacking US targets, including the Democratic National Committee, but rejected the conclusion that Russia interfered in the election.

Trump’s transition team on Sunday doubled down on its claim that Democrats are to blame for allowing their email accounts to be hacked, flatly rejecting any notion Russia may have affected the election. — AFP

 ??  ?? Obama disembarks from Air Force One upon arrival in Jacksonvil­le, Florida, where he will attend the wedding of a White House staffer. — Reuters photo
Obama disembarks from Air Force One upon arrival in Jacksonvil­le, Florida, where he will attend the wedding of a White House staffer. — Reuters photo

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