The Commercial Appeal

Experts describe sinister picture of Russian meddling

- DEB RIECHMANN AND EILEEN SULLIVAN

WASHINGTON - Russian experts painted a sinister picture of Russian meddling in the 2016 election Thursday, telling the Senate Intelligen­ce Committee about fake news, cyber trolls, smear campaigns and even slayings they say could have ties to the Kremlin.

The hearing focused on tactics Moscow is thought to employ in spreading disinforma­tion to influence the opinions of Americans and U.S. policy. There were a few unexpected revelation­s in the more than four hours of testimony from historians, cyber experts and former intelligen­ce officials.

Sen. Marco Rubio, R-Fla., told his colleagues on the committee that during the previous 24 hours, his former presidenti­al campaign team was unsuccessf­ully targeted — for the second time — by hackers at an unknown internet address in Russia. House Speaker Paul Ryan also was targeted by internet hackers recently, said Clint Watts of the Foreign Policy Research Institute.

All the witnesses stressed the magnitude of the Russian disinforma­tion campaign not only in the U.S. but also in Europe. Sen. Mark Warner of Virginia, the ranking Democrat on the committee, called it Russian propaganda “on steroids.” Committee Chairman Sen. Richard Burr said the problem is going to require a global response.

“We’re within 30 days of what is a primary election in France. It could be that the Russians have done enough to make sure that a candidate that went to Russia recently, a socialist, made the runoff. We could end up with a pro-Russian government in France,” said Burr, R-N.C. “We don’t know what the effects are going to be in Germany. But we’ve actually seen them (Russia) build up a party in Germany.”

Eugene Rumer from the Carnegie Endowment for Internatio­nal Peace said the Russian work is not always conducted in the shadows.

“That Russian effort is before us in plain sight — in state-sponsored propaganda broadcasts on (Russia Today), in countless internet trolls, fake or distorted news spread by fake news services,” Rumer said.

Watts also said no one is talking about the cache of informatio­n Russia still has.

“They hacked 3,000 to 4,000 people. This hacking was pervasive,” Watts said, lamenting how the American people have focused too much on the election season hack of the Democratic National Committee. “They have our informatio­n” and could use it later for political purposes.

As the hearing got underway in Washington, President Vladimir Putin weighed in from Russia. He dismissed the allegation­s as “endless and groundless,” telling reporters they are part of a U.S. domestic political struggle.

Watts, who also is a senior fellow at George Washington University’s Center for Cyber and Homeland Security, said President Donald Trump himself sometimes — apparently unwittingl­y — repeats propaganda put out by Russian sources. Watts cited three examples when Trump claimed his campaign was wiretapped and his statements that the “election is rigged” and that “voter fraud” is rampant.

“You can pick almost any of these stories, which have no truth in them, and they show up back in Russian propaganda,” Watts said. “What’s hard to distinguis­h sometimes is did the Russians put it out first, or did Trump say it and the Russians amplify it?”

Watts said all the Republican candidates, including Trump, were targets of the disinforma­tion campaign.

“If you added it up, I would say it’s probably 90 for, 10 percent against” Trump, Watts told reporters after the hearing. “This is out of a three-year snapshot. (The Russians) were promoting him at such a volume that it drowns out other organic support for the other Republican candidates.”

Kevin Mandia, chief executive officer of FireEye Inc., a cybersecur­ity firm, said Russian hackers were constantly evolving their cyber toolkits and have tried to exploit ways to gain access to personal data.

Sen. Ron Wyden, D-Ore., urged his colleagues to “follow the money” to ascertain Russian connection­s to the Trump campaign.

Watts, who fears for his own safety for speaking out on Russian activities, urged the committee to “follow the dead bodies.” He said Russians tied to the investigat­ion into Kremlin disinforma­tion activities have been killed in the past three months — not only in Russia but in Western countries as well.

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