Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

QUOTE OF THE DAY

- COMPILED BY DEMOCRAT-GAZETTE STAFF

“If that’s our best election defense, we might as well just mail our ballot boxes to Moscow.”

U.S. Rep. Adam Schiff, D-Calif., criticizin­g a proposed U.S.-Russia cybersecur­ity unit

WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump said Sunday that “it is time to move forward in working constructi­vely with Russia” and that he’d discussed creating a cybersecur­ity unit with Russian President Vladimir Putin.

Speaking in a series of tweets the morning after returning from Germany, Trump said he “strongly pressed” Putin twice over allegation­s of Russian meddling in the 2016 presidenti­al election during their meeting Friday on the sidelines of the Group of 20 world leaders’ summit in Hamburg.

Trump said Putin “vehemently denied” the conclusion­s of American intelligen­ce agencies that Russian hackers and propagandi­sts tried to sway the election in Trump’s favor. Trump did not say whether he believed Putin, tweeting only that he’s “already given my opinion.”

Trump has said he thinks Russia probably hacked the emails of the Democratic National Committee and candidate Hillary Clinton’s staff members, but that “other people and/or countries” were likely involved as well. He said ahead of the meeting that “nobody knows for sure.”

White House Chief of Staff Reince Priebus affirmed that on Fox News Sunday.

“Yes, he believes that Russia probably committed all of these acts that we’ve been told of,” Priebus said. “But he also believes that other countries also participat­ed in this activity.”

Trump on Sunday said President Barack Obama had done “nothing” after learning of the Russian hacking before the election, though the Obama administra­tion on Oct. 7 formally and publicly blamed Russia for the hacking. Trump also said, in the context of his meeting with Putin, that “questions were asked” about the level of cooperatio­n between U.S. intelligen­ce agencies and the Democratic National Committee. The Democrats’ email server was among those that the agencies said were compromise­d by the Russians. Trump said the CIA and FBI had asked the Democratic National Committee 13 times for its server, and “still don’t have it.”

Putin said Saturday that

he left the meeting thinking that Trump had believed his in-person denials of campaign meddling.

“He asked questions, I replied. It seemed to me that he was satisfied with the answers,” Putin said.

U.S. officials responded on Sunday to whether Trump had accepted Putin’s denials.

“Why would President Trump broadcast exactly what he said in the meeting? Strategica­lly that makes no sense,” Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin said on ABC’s This Week. “He’s made it very clear how he feels. He’s made it very clear that he addressed it straight on.”

Priebus took issue with Putin’s characteri­zation.

“The president absolutely didn’t believe the denial of President Putin,” Priebus said, adding that Trump had spent a “large part of the meeting on the subject,” but wanted to move on to other issues, including the civil war in Syria.

Critics of the president took issue with Trump’s comment that Putin “vehemently denied” Russian meddling.

“When pursuing a corrupt politician, mobster or murderer on strong FBI evidence, if he ‘vehemently denied it,’ we just dropped it usually,” former U.S. Attorney Preet Bharara joked in a tweet.

John Brennan, who served as CIA director under Obama and ran the agency’s response to Russia’s election interferen­ce, chastised Trump on Sunday for repeatedly casting doubt on the conclusion­s of the intelligen­ce community, including at a news conference last week in Poland.

“I seriously question whether or not Mr. Putin heard from Mr. Trump what he needed to about the assault on our democratic institutio­ns,” Brennan said on NBC’s Meet the Press.

Brennan added of Trump, “He said it’s an ‘honor’ to meet President Putin. An honor to meet the individual who carried out the assault against our election? To me, it was a dishonorab­le thing

to say.”

CYBERSECUR­ITY UNIT

Trump said Sunday that he was eager to work with Putin on what he described as an “impenetrab­le Cyber Security unit” the two men discussed forming “so that election hacking, & many other negative things, will be guarded.”

Secretary of State Rex Tillerson explained the unit as a “framework under which we might begin to have agreement on how to deal with these very complex issues of cyberthrea­ts, cybersecur­ity, cyber intrusions.”

Hours after his original tweet, Trump clarified, referring to Syria: “The fact that President Putin and I discussed a Cyber Security unit doesn’t mean I think it can happen. It can’t — but a ceasefire can, & did!”

The tweet about the cybersecur­ity unit came after a day in which the idea was denounced by both Democrats and Republican­s.

On the Republican side, Sens. John McCain of Arizona, Lindsey Graham of South Carolina

and Marco Rubio of Florida said Sunday that Trump’s eagerness to partner with Putin was dangerous for the United States.

“It’s not the dumbest idea I’ve ever heard, but it’s pretty close,” Graham said on Meet the Press. “When it comes to Russia, [Trump’s] got a blind spot. To forgive and forget when it comes to Putin regarding cyberattac­ks is to empower Putin, and that’s exactly what he’s doing.”

Rubio tweeted that Putin “will never be a trusted ally or a reliable constructi­ve partner,” and that working with him to address cybersecur­ity threats was akin to partnering with Syrian President Bashar Assad to protect against chemical weapons.

McCain, meanwhile, said Russia has faced “no penalty whatsoever” from the Trump administra­tion for its hacking.

“We know that Russia tried to change the outcome of our election last November, and they did not succeed, but there was really sophistica­ted attempts to do so,” McCain said

on CBS’s Face the Nation. “So far, they have not paid a single price for that.”

Invoking the language of Trump’s tweet, McCain added, “Yes, it’s time to move forward, but there has to be a price to pay.”

Graham agreed, saying, “This whole idea about moving forward without punishing Russia is undercutti­ng his entire presidency.”

Former Defense Secretary Ashton Carter, who served under Obama at the time of Russia’s interferen­ce, said in a CNN interview that a cybersecur­ity unit with Russia was “like the guy who robbed your house proposing a working group on burglary.”

Rep. Adam Schiff, D-Calif., the top Democrat on the House Intelligen­ce Committee, said that expecting Russia to be a credible partner in any cybersecur­ity initiative “would be dangerousl­y naive for this country.”

“If that’s our best election defense, we might as well just mail our ballot boxes to Moscow,” he said.

Nikki Haley, the U.S. ambassador to the United Nations, defended Trump’s cooperatio­n with Putin, saying that “we won’t ever trust Russia” but that working with Russia on cybersecur­ity will “keep them in check.”

“From a cyber standpoint, we need to get together with Russia, we need to tell them what we think should happen, shouldn’t happen, and if we talk to them about it, hopefully, we can cut this out and get them to stop,” Haley said Sunday on CNN’s State of the Union.

She continued: “It doesn’t mean we’ve ever taken our eyes off of the ball. It doesn’t mean we ever trust Russia. We can’t trust Russia and we won’t ever trust Russia. But you keep those that you don’t trust closer, so that you can always keep an eye on them and keep them in check, and I think that’s what we’re trying to do with Russia right now.”

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