Russia says report of interference in US, Europe is unfounded
MOSCOW » The Kremlin on Thursday dismissed a new report by U. S. Senate Democrats describing Russian interference in the U. S. and throughout Europe as unfounded and President Vladimir Putin accused the United States of “aggressive” overreaction. Some European politicians said they are mindful of Moscow’s meddling.
The 200- page report commissioned by Sen. Ben Cardin of Maryland, the top Democrat on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, is the first from Congress to detail alleged Russian efforts to undermine democracies since the 2016 U.S. presidential election.
Putin’s spokesman, Dmitry Peskov, said of the report that “the accusations of alleged meddling leveled against our country are absolutely unfounded.”
Speaking on a conference call Thursday with reporters, Peskov said that “such paranoid concerns not only hurt bilateral relations, but the U.S. itself.”
“When it grows into an obsession, it doesn’t create comfortable conditions for normal social development and life,” he said.
Speaking at a televised meeting with Russian newspaper editors, Putin pointed at what he described as U.S. meddling in other countries’ affairs, adding that “if they poke their nose everywhere theymust be able to respond to certain challenges they provoke themselves.”
“But please don’t interpret it like a recognition of our meddling, we haven’t meddled,” he added. “I want to underline again — it’s sheer nonsense. There has been no collusion, no interference on our part.”
“No one likes interference in their internal political issues and affairs; our American friends especially do not like it,” Putin said. “We see their reaction to unreliable information about our intervention, how sharp it is, I would even say how aggressive it is.”
The Russian leader didn’t specifically mention the Cardin report.