New York Post

Don camp: Don’t have a (Mos)cow

Scoffs at Russ elex-meddle uproar

- By AARON SHORT and MARY KAY LINGE

Top Republican­s blasted reports from anonymous US intelligen­ce sources that Russia hacked Democratic e-mail accounts with the intention of swaying Americans to vote for Donald Trump.

Republican National Committee spokesman Sean Spicer demanded Saturday that the Central Intelligen­ce Agency show evidence Russia intervened in the election.

“What proof does anyone have that they affected the outcome? Because I’ve heard zero. OK?” he told CNN. “So show me what facts have actually shown that anything undermined that election.”

“If [the CIA] is so certain it happened, why won’t they go on the record and say it?”

Intelligen­ce sources told The New York Times and The Wash- ington Post that they have “high confidence” that Russian cyberspies accessed Republican National Committee, Democratic National Committee and Clinton campaign records, but only forwarded Democratic messages to WikiLeaks in an attempt to diminish Clin- ton and help Trump win the presidency.

Spicer insisted the reports were wrong and claimed the RNC account was never hacked. He accused intelligen­ce officials of being “upset with the outcome of the election” and “pushing a personal agenda.”

Democrats fired back, accusing the FBI of knowing Russia was trying to help Trump win and “deliberate­ly kept the informatio­n a secret” anyway.

“This is not fake news. Intelligen­ce officials are hiding connection­s to the Russian government. There is no question,” outgoing Democratic Senate Minority Leader Harry Reid said in an interview with MSNBC Saturday.

On Friday, President Obama ordered a full review of Russia’s role in the DNC leaks and the presidenti­al election. Incoming Senate Democratic Leader Chuck Schumer demanded a congressio­nal probe.

But the Trump transition team compared reports on alleged foreign hacking to claims that Saddam Hussein had weapons of mass destructio­n and said it was time for the country to “move on.”

 ??  ?? MEET THE NEW BOSS: President-elect Donald Trump greets Army cadets before Saturday’s Army-Navy football game in Baltimore.
MEET THE NEW BOSS: President-elect Donald Trump greets Army cadets before Saturday’s Army-Navy football game in Baltimore.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States