Los Angeles Times

Putin accused of 2020 meddling

Iran tried to interfere too, but U.S. findings show foreign efforts didn’t disrupt voting.

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Intelligen­ce report says the Russian leader OKd schemes to help Trump win election.

Russian President Vladimir Putin authorized influence operations to help then-President Trump in November’s presidenti­al election, according to a declassifi­ed intelligen­ce assessment that found broad efforts by the Kremlin and Iran to shape the outcome of the race, but ultimately no evidence that any foreign actor changed votes or otherwise disrupted the voting process.

The report, released Tuesday by the Office of the Director of National Intelligen­ce, is a detailed assessment of the array of foreign threats to the 2020 election. These included efforts by Iran to undermine confidence in the vote and harm Trump’s reelection prospects, as well as Moscow operations that used Trump’s allies to smear Democratic rival Joe Biden, the eventual winner.

Despite those threats, though, intelligen­ce officials found “no indication­s that any foreign actor attempted to interfere in the 2020 US elections by altering any technical aspect of the voting process, including voter registrati­on, ballot casting, vote tabulation, or reporting results.”

The report is the latest official affirmatio­n of the integrity of the election, even as Trump supporters continue to make false claims of interferen­ce, from foreign or domestic actors, and refuse to accept President Biden’s victory. Multiple courts and even Trump’s officials in the Justice Department refuted claims of widespread fraud.

The document makes clear that although Trump has cried foul about the legitimacy of the election, intelligen­ce officials believe Russia leaned on his associates to try to tip the outcome of the vote in his favor.

The report wades into the politicall­y freighted assessment­s of ferreting out which foreign adversarie­s supported which candidates during the 2020 presidenti­al election. Trump, whose 2016 election effort benefited from hacking by Russian intelligen­ce officers and a Russian covert social media campaign, had seized on an intelligen­ce community assessment from August that said China preferred a Biden presidency to Trump’s reelection. And his intelligen­ce director faced blowback from some Democrats for a hastily called news conference on Iranian efforts he said were aimed against Trump.

Tuesday’s report says China ultimately did not interfere on either side and “considered but did not deploy” influence operations aimed at affecting the outcome. U.S. officials say they determined that Beijing valued a stable relationsh­ip with the U.S. and did not consider either election outcome as advantageo­us enough for it to risk getting caught interferin­g.

The primary threats instead came from Russia and Iran, albeit with different intentions and through different means, according to intelligen­ce officials.

Russia, the report says, sought to undermine Biden’s candidacy because it viewed his presidency as disadvanta­geous to the Kremlin, though it probably took some steps to prepare for a Democratic administra­tion as the election neared.

The report says Putin authorized influence operations aimed at denigratin­g Biden, boosting Trump, underminin­g confidence in the election and exacerbati­ng social divisions in the United States.

Central to that effort was the reliance on proxies linked to Russian intelligen­ce “to launder influence narratives” by using media organizati­ons and people close to Trump to push “false” and “misleading” smear campaigns against Biden.

Intelligen­ce officials did not single out any Trump ally as being involved in that effort, but Trump personal lawyer and longtime associate Rudolph W. Giuliani met repeatedly with Ukrainian lawmaker Andrii Derkach, who released heavily edited recordings of Biden, while he was vice president, speaking with Ukraine’s then-president — an effort to link the Democrat to unsubstant­iated corruption. U.S. officials have said they regard Derkach as an active Russian agent, and Tuesday’s report said Putin is believed to have “purview” over his activities.

Notably, though, Russia was not as aggressive as in past election cycles in trying to hack election infrastruc­ture, and the report says that Russian cyberopera­tions that targeted state and local government networks last year were probably not focused on the election and were instead part of a broader effort to target U.S. and global entities.

Iran, meanwhile, carried out its own influence campaign aimed at harming Trump’s reelection bid, an effort U.S. officials say was approved by Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.

One “highly targeted operation” — the subject of an October news conference by then-Director of National Intelligen­ce John Ratcliffe and FBI Director Christophe­r A. Wray — involved a flurry of emails to Democratic voters in battlegrou­nd states that falsely purported to be from the far-right group Proud Boys and threatened the recipients if they didn’t vote for Trump.

Iran’s efforts, which officials say were more aggressive than in past elections and continued even after the contest was over, were focused on sowing discord in the United States, probably because Tehran believed that would hurt Trump’s reelection chances.

Though Iran sought to exploit the vulnerabil­ities of state election websites, and did “compromise US entities associated with election infrastruc­ture as a part of a broad targeting effort across multiple sectors worldwide,” it did not attempt to manipulate votes or affect election infrastruc­ture, the report says.

The 15-page document is a declassifi­ed version of a broader election interferen­ce report that was provided to Trump on Jan. 7, one day after an assault on the U.S. Capitol while Congress was gathered to certify the election results.

A separate document released Tuesday from the department­s of Justice and Homeland Security reached a similar conclusion about the integrity of the election.

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