Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

RUSSIA: U.S.

media overreact to photos.

- ADAM TAYLOR

The presence of a Russian photograph­er working for a state-owned news agency during President Donald Trump’s meeting Wednesday with Russian diplomats in the Oval Office sparked criticism from media advocates, as well as concerns over the risk of a security breach.

White House officials initially said they had not anticipate­d that the state news agency Tass would post photograph­s from the meeting. “They tricked us,” one unnamed official was quoted as saying by CNN.

American news organizati­ons were not granted access to the Oval Office meeting; an official White House photograph­er was present. Officials said they were unaware that photograph­er Alexandr Scherbak would be shooting for both Tass and the Russian Foreign Ministry.

Russian officials have fired back, taking aim at the U.S. media.

Russian Foreign Ministry spokesman Maria Zakharova criticized a Washington Post story about the meeting on the sidelines of Thursday’s Arctic Council meeting in Fairbanks, Alaska. The Post story, published soon after the Oval Office meeting, had quoted a number of former intelligen­ce officials who said that White House visitors could hide surveillan­ce equipment such as a listening device in a camera or other equipment.

“Here he is — the spy!” Zakharova said sarcastica­lly after being approached by a Post reporter, referring to Scherbak, standing nearby. “Your newspaper is making our correspond­ents feel like Jews in 1933.”

In Facebook postings on Thursday, Zakharova also criticized CNN’s coverage of the Oval Office meeting, accusing the news network of reaching “rock bottom.” The spokesman shared a Web page made by the Russian Embassy in Washington that was simply a list of more than 200 tweets by journalist­s and other public figures discussing the meeting.

Scherbak issued his reply Thursday in a Facebook post written in Russian and later translated to English. Addressing the “U.S. media” directly about the “hysteria surroundin­g my photo shoot at the White House,” Scherbak said he had covered similar meetings around the world before and there was “nothing unusual” about Wednesday’s session.

After the Russian foreign minister met with his U.S. counterpar­t, “I was taken by a U.S. representa­tive to the White House. I was scanned, patted down, and then sniffed by canines,” Scherbak wrote. Inside the Oval Office, he was accompanie­d by an official White House photograph­er, he said. “I took only two cameras to the photo shoot, I left all my stuff, including my cellphone, in another room as I was told to do.”

On Friday, the Russian Journalist­s’ Union issued a statement in support of Scherbak, suggesting that he had “become another target of attacks by CNN journalist­s.”

Wednesday’s White House meeting with Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov and other officials, including Russian Ambassador Sergey Kislyak, came at a time of renewed scrutiny over ties between the Trump campaign and Russia. Kislyak in particular has featured in one of the new administra­tion’s most notable controvers­ies, with national security adviser Michael Flynn forced to resign in February after misleading Vice President Mike Pence about his contacts with the ambassador last year.

U.S. intelligen­ce agencies concluded with “high confidence” that Russia tried to affect the outcome of the 2016 election, an allegation Lavrov has denied repeatedly.

The Post reported after the meeting that although all visitors entering the White House were subjected to a security screening, some former intelligen­ce officials suggested that such a screening could not detect a sophistica­ted device. Todd Morris, founder and chief executive of the countersur­veillance advisory company BrickHouse Security, told The Post that a covert device could be as small as a matchbook and that though it might eventually be found, it could transmit its data quickly.

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