Oman Daily Observer

Russia says ‘no evidence’ it meddled in US election

DENIAL: Putin’s spokesman says there are no indication­s that the Russian government could be involved in the American polls

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MOSCOW: Russia’s government on Monday insisted there was no evidence that it meddled in the US elections, after Washington indicted 13 Russians for alleged covert efforts to sway voters.

“There are no indication­s that the Russian government could be involved in this,” President Vladimir Putin’s spokesman Dmitry Peskov told journalist­s.

It was the Kremlin’s first comment since the indictment­s were filed on Friday by a US special prosecutor as part of a federal government probe.

The indictment­s allege that an associate of President Vladimir Putin led a Russia-based operation churning out social media content, using fake US identities, that included criticisms of Democrat candidate Hillary Clinton in the 2016 race.

US President Donald Trump on Sunday glossed over any Russian responsibi­lity and offered no indication of what his administra­tion would do about it.

He wrote on Twitter that Russia had indeed succeeded in sowing discord in the US but denied that his campaign colluded with Russia, saying that this was what Moscow wanted people to believe.

“If it was the GOAL of Russia to create discord, disruption and chaos within the US then, with all of the Committee Hearings, Investigat­ions and Party hatred, they have succeeded beyond their wildest dreams,” Trump tweeted.

“They are laughing their asses off in Moscow. Get smart America!” he added.

“The Russian ‘hoax’ was that the Trump campaign colluded with Russia -- it never did!” he said, alleging that “the only Collusion was between Russia and Crooked H, the DNC and the Dems,” Clinton and her party.

Trump also accused the FBI of spending “too much time” on the probe.

Peskov said that the claims centred on Russian citizens but that the Russian government was not, and could not, be involved. referring to

The United States has failed to provide “significan­t evidence” of any meddling in its affairs, he insisted.

He added that Russia “does not have a custom of interferin­g in other countries’ internal affairs and is not doing this now.”

Earlier Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov had dismissed the claims in the indictment as “blabber.”

The allegation­s of Russian interferen­ce and collusion with the Trump campaign are being investigat­ed by several congressio­nal committees and by special prosecutor Robert Mueller.

Mueller took charge of the federal government’s probe from the FBI last year following the sacking of its former chief James Comey.

The indictment makes no allegation of collusion between Trump’s campaign team and Russia although it says some of the accused communicat­ed with “unwitting individual­s associated with the Trump campaign.”

“I do think there are other shoes to drop here besides this indictment,” former national security director James Clapper said on CNN.

Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein said there were “no allegation­s in this indictment” that any American was a “knowing participan­t” in the Russian scheme.

That led Trump to declare that this vindicated his campaign team.

Rosenstein also said there was no judgement on whether the Russian campaign “altered the outcome” of the White House race.

Speaking at a security conference in Munich on Saturday, National Security Advisor H R McMaster called the evidence of Russian interferen­ce in US democratic processes “incontrove­rtible.”

The US Treasury Department last month issued a list of prominent Russian political and business figures who could be sanctioned, as required under a law passed last year to punish Moscow’s election meddling.

But the administra­tion said new sanctions called for under the law were not needed because the measure was already having a deterrent effect.

The indictment alleges that the operation that started in 2014 involved hundreds of people working in shifts and with a budget of millions of dollars. The Russians indicted are not in custody.

The campaign was allegedly directed by Yevgeny Prigozhin, a businessma­n with links to Putin, and focused on hurting Clinton and helping Trump swing the vote.

 ?? — AFP ?? In this file photo taken on November 11, 2017 US President Donald Trump with Russian President Vladimir Putin during the APEC leaders’ summit in the Vietnamese city of Danang.
— AFP In this file photo taken on November 11, 2017 US President Donald Trump with Russian President Vladimir Putin during the APEC leaders’ summit in the Vietnamese city of Danang.
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