The Indian Express (Delhi Edition)

Penalty may not be equal to crime: Trump aide

Trump promises major revelation­s on hacking

- REUTERS

SANCTIONS ON RUSSIA AFTER ‘HACKING’ IN US ELECTIONS

A TOP aide to President-elect Donald Trump said in an interview aired on Sunday that the White House may have disproport­ionately punished Russia by ordering the expulsion of 35 suspected Russian spies.

Incoming White House press secretary Sean Spicer said on ABC’S “This Week” that Trump will be asking questions of US intelligen­ce agencies after President Barack Obama imposed sanctions last week on two Russian intelligen­ce agencies over what he said was their involvemen­t in hacking political groups in the 2016 US presidenti­al election. Obama also ordered Russia to vacate two US facilities as part of the tough sanctions on Russia.

“One of the questions that we have is why the magnitude of this? I mean you look at 35 people being expelled, two sites being closed down, the question is, is that response in proportion to the actions taken? Maybe it was; maybe it wasn’t but you have to think about that,” Spicer said.

Trump is to have briefings with intelligen­ce agencies this week after he returns to New York on Sunday.

On Saturday, Trump expressed continued skepticism over whether Russia was responsibl­e for computer hacks of Democratic Party officials.

“I think it’s unfair if we don’t know. It could be somebody else. I also know things that other people don’t know so we cannot be sure,” Trump said.

He said he would disclose some informatio­n on the issue on Tuesday or Wednesday, without elaboratin­g. It is unclear if, upon taking office on January 20, he would seek to roll back Obama’s actions, which mark a postcold War low in U.s.-russian ties.

Spicer said that after China in 2015 seized records of US government employees “no action publicly was taken. Nothing, nothing was taken when millions of people had their private informatio­n, including informatio­n on security clearances that was shared. Not one thing happened.”

“So there is a question about whether there’s a political retributio­n here versus a diplomatic response,” he added.

Republican John Mccain, chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee, has scheduled a hearing for Thursday on foreign cyber threats and has said that Russia must be made to pay the price for attacks “on our very fundamenta­ls of democracy.

 ??  ?? US President-elect Donald Trump
US President-elect Donald Trump

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