Santa Fe New Mexican

Putin hints at meddling by ‘patriotica­lly minded’ Russians.

Russian president says ‘patriotica­lly minded’ hackers could have acted to help Trump

- By Andrew Higgins

MOSCOW — Shifting from his previous blanket denials, President Vladimir Putin of Russia said on Thursday that “patriotica­lly minded” private Russian hackers could have been involved in cyberattac­ks last year to help the presidenti­al campaign of Donald Trump.

While Putin continued to deny any state role, his comments to reporters in St. Petersburg were a departure from the Kremlin’s previous position: that Russia had played no role whatsoever in the hacking of the Democratic National Committee and that, after Trump’s victory, the country had become the victim of anti-Russia hysteria among crestfalle­n Democrats.

Raising the possibilit­y of attacks by what he portrayed as free-spirited Russian patriots, Putin said that hackers “are like artists” who choose their targets depending how they feel “when they wake up in the morning.”

“If they are patriotica­lly minded, they start making their contributi­ons to the fight against those who say bad things about Russia,” he added.

His remarks echoed ones by Trump, who has dismissed accusation­s of Russian meddling and said that the person responsibl­e for the attack on the Democratic National Committee “could be somebody sitting on their bed that weighs 400 pounds.”

All the same, Putin stuck firmly to earlier denials that Russian state bodies or employees had been involved, an accusation leveled by U.S. intelligen­ce agencies.

“We’re not doing this on the state level,” Putin said Thursday.

Perhaps worried that U.S. intelligen­ce agencies could release evidence linking last year’s cyberattac­ks to Russia, Putin also put forward a theory that modern technology could easily be manipulate­d to create a false trail back to Russia.

“I can imagine that someone is doing this purposeful­ly — building the chain of attacks so that the territory of the Russian Federation appears to be the source,” Putin said.

In this, Putin appeared to be repeating an argument he put forward earlier in the week in an interview with the French newspaper Le Figaro.

“I think that he was totally right when he said it could have been someone sitting on their bed or somebody intentiona­lly inserted a flash drive with the name of a Russian national, or something like that,” Putin told Le Figaro, referring to Trump. “Anything is possible in this virtual world. Russia never engages in activities of this kind, and we do not need it. It makes no sense for us to do such things.”

 ??  ?? Vladimir Putin
Vladimir Putin

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