Daily Dispatch

No end to US poll spy claims

Putin allegedly hated Clinton so helped Trump

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FBI chief James Comey dealt Donald Trump a double blow on Monday by confirming a probe into his election campaign’s links to Russia last year while repudiatin­g the president’s claim that he had been wiretapped by Barack Obama.

In a high-stakes public hearing televised live from the US Congress, Comey took the extraordin­ary step of confirming that the Federal Bureau of Investigat­ion was investigat­ing whether Trump campaign aides colluded with a Russian effort to influence last years election.

Comey’s bombshell statement undercut a White House effort to dismiss the controvers­y stalking Trump’s young administra­tion – with the president once more dismissing talk of his team’s ties to Russia as “FAKE NEWS” as the hearing got under way.

And in a second setback for the Republican president, Comey firmly shot down his tweeted allegation earlier this month that his predecesso­r had ordered a wiretap on Trump Tower, the real estate mogul’s Manhattan residence and office.

“The Department of Justice has asked me to share with you that the answer is the same for the Department of Justice and all its components. The department has no informatio­n that supports those tweets,” he told the hearing.

At least four separate congressio­nal investigat­ions are under way into Moscow’s election meddling, which US intelligen­ce chiefs said in January was directed by President Vladimir Putin and aimed to boost Trump’s campaign over Democratic rival Hillary Clinton.

Democrats argue that the interferen­ce, in which Russian actors allegedly stole Democratic documents and communicat­ions and released them through WikLeaks, contribute­d to frontrunne­r Clinton’s defeat.

Confirming longstandi­ng reports that his agency was probing a Russian effort to steer last year’s vote, Comey dated the probe back to July last year, when the government became aware of the Democratic party hack.

Until Monday only a small group of legislator­s had been briefed in secret on this issue by US intelligen­ce and law enforcemen­t, and the public had not heard directly from them.

Comey and Admiral Mike Rogers, director of the National Security Administra­tion, confirmed that they believed Moscow aimed to hurt Clinton’s campaign and support Trump.

“Putin hated Secretary Clinton so much that the flip side of that coin was he had a clear preference to the person running against the person he hated so much,” Comey said.

“They wanted to hurt our democracy, hurt her, help him. I think, all three, we were confident in at least as early as December,” he said.

But Comey’s unwillingn­ess to comment on specifics, or on unproven media reports of Trump aides’ contacts with Russian intelligen­ce, gave the White House room to defend its position – which is that the entire controvers­y was manufactur­ed by opponents to undermine Trump’s presidency.

As he testified, a senior administra­tion official said in a written statement: “There is no evidence of Trump-Russia collusion and there is no evidence of a Trump-Russia scandal.”

Monday’s hearing made clear the question of Russian interferen­ce in the election will continue to trouble the Trump administra­tion.

Both the House and Senate Intelligen­ce Committees will hold more public hearings in the coming weeks, as well as closed-door sessions with Comey, Rogers and other intelligen­ce chiefs to discuss classified informatio­n on the probes.

But Democrats have expressed concerns that the White House and Republican­s would like to stifle the issue, and are calling for an independen­t probe. — AFP

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