Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

U.K. cites 2019 vote-meddling try

‘Russian actors’ accused of utilizing government documents

- PAN PYLAS

LONDON — The British government Thursday accused “Russian actors” of seeking to interfere in the U.K.’s last general election, and a powerful committee of lawmakers confirmed that within days it would publish a long-awaited report on previous allegation­s of interferen­ce by Moscow.

British Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab said in a written statement to lawmakers that it is “almost certain” that the unnamed individual­s “sought to interfere” in the December 2019 election by amplifying online “illicitly acquired and leaked government documents.” Raab also said there was an “ongoing criminal investigat­ion” into how the documents were obtained.

The documents, relating to U.K.-U.S. trade talks, were used by the then-leader of the main opposition Labour Party, Jeremy Corbyn, to back up his claims that the Conservati­ve government was preparing to “sell off” the National Health Service.

The papers were believed

to have appeared online some months earlier but gained little traction until picked up by the Labour campaign and highlighte­d at a news conference in November. After they were revealed, online discussion site Reddit said its own investigat­ion linked their appearance to a previous Russian disinforma­tion campaign.

Russian Foreign Ministry spokeswoma­n Maria Zakharova slammed Raab’s statement as “vague and contradict­ory” and called on the U.K. to “produce facts” supporting the allegation­s.

“On the one hand, there is no proof; on the other, some possible retaliator­y measures are mentioned,” Zakharova said at her weekly media briefing. “These are mutually exclusive things.”

The U.K. also joined the United States and Canada on Thursday in accusing Russia of trying to steal informatio­n from researcher­s seeking a coronaviru­s vaccine. Russia rejected the accusation­s.

Raab’s statement on the alleged election interferen­ce came as the newly installed Intelligen­ce and Security Committee in Parliament said it would release the report on previous allegation­s of Russian interferen­ce before Parliament’s summer break starts next week. The committee has a wide-ranging and largely secretive role overseeing the U.K.’s intelligen­ce and security services.

It was unable to publish the report since it was compiled last year after Conservati­ve Prime Minister Boris Johnson refused to clear it for release ahead of the December election. The report needs government approval before it can be made public.

Johnson has been dogged by questions about the unpublishe­d report for months, especially over what it says about any Russian involvemen­t in the 2016 Brexit campaign, which saw Britain vote to leave the European Union.

The Labour Party has accused the government of failing to publish the report because it would lead to other questions about links between Russia and the Brexit campaign, which was spearheade­d by Johnson.

The decision to publish the report came a day after the Intelligen­ce and Security Committee for the current parliament­ary term was formed. The committee’s first action was to reject the government’s preferred candidate to lead it.

The nine-member committee elected lawmaker Julian Lewis as chairman. The job had been expected to go to a former minister, Chris Grayling, who is a loyal supporter of Johnson.

A political storm ensued and Lewis was kicked out of the party’s caucus in Parliament. Lewis said the decision to strip him of his Conservati­ve status was “strange” given that the committee is meant to be outside the influence of government.

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