The Post

Russia targeting Biden, says FBI chief

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Russia is seeking to denigrate former Vice President Joe Biden’s presidenti­al campaign, primarily by using social media and influence operations, FBI Director Christophe­r Wray warned yesterday.

Russia is carrying out efforts to sow discord in the US – primarily to hurt Biden – because Moscow views him as part of an anti-Russian American establishm­ent, Wray told lawmakers during a House Homeland Security Committee hearing yesterday on threats to the nation.

‘‘Russia continues to try to influence our elections, primarily through what we callmalign foreign influence,’’ Wray said. It’s an assessment sharply at odds with President Donald Trump, who still dismisses as a hoax the intelligen­ce community’s finding that Russia worked to help him win the White House in 2016.

US national security agencies

haven’t yet seen Russia trying to break into election infrastruc­ture as it did in 2016 when it hacked voting databases, Wray said.

In addition to Russia, China is

among adversarie­s that are trying to interfere in the presidenti­al campaign, primarily through disinforma­tion, Wray said.

US agencies previously focused on ‘‘efforts to combat malign foreign influence focused solely on the threat posed by Russia,’’ Wray said, but now the FBI is ‘‘widening its aperture’’ leading into the November 3 election ‘‘to confront malign foreign operations of China, Iran, and other global adversarie­s.’’

In prepared testimony, Wray said, ‘‘This year’s election cycle, amid the Covid-19 pandemic, provides ample opportunit­y for hostile foreign actors to conduct disinforma­tion campaigns and foreign influence operations in an effort to mislead, sow discord and, ultimately, undermine confidence in our democratic institutio­ns and values.’’

Under questionin­g, Wray also declined to say that the anarchist movement Antifa, cited often by Trump and Attorney General William Barr, is the biggest domestic threat.

‘‘We don’t think of threats in terms of left or right,’’ Wray added. ‘‘We’re focused on the violence, not the ideology.’’

The hearing opened with controvers­y, as Acting Homeland Secretary Chad Wolf declined to appear even after the Democratic-led committee subpoenaed him. Wolf has cited his pending nomination for the secretary’s position and the tradition of nominees not commenting before their Senate confirmati­on hearings.

In a statement on Thursday, Ken Cuccinelli, who’s serving as Wolf’s deputy, denounced ‘‘this transparen­t and brazen attempt at Beltway political theatre.’’

Democratic Rep. Bennie Thompson of Mississipp­i, the committee’s chairman, calledWolf’s absence ‘‘an appropriat­e metaphor for the

Trump administra­tion’s derelictio­n of duty’’ on homeland security issues. He noted Wolf has made public comments, including in appearance­s on Fox News.

Brian Murphy, who was the Department of Homeland Security’s intelligen­ce chief until he was demoted, has filed a whistle-blower complaint asserting that Trump administra­tion officials suppressed intelligen­ce on Russian election interferen­ce and the threat from white supremacis­ts.

Murphy said the department’s chief of staff sent him an email directing him to stop disseminat­ion of intelligen­ce products about Russian disinforma­tion efforts because it ‘‘made the president look bad,’’ according to the complaint filed with the DHS inspector general.

Wolf has said Murphy fabricated his allegation­s after he was demoted for conducting surveillan­ce of reporters covering protests.

‘‘This year’s election cycle, amid the Covid-19 pandemic, provides ample opportunit­y for hostile foreign actors to conduct disinforma­tion campaigns and foreign influence operations in an effort to mislead, sow discord and, ultimately, undermine confidence in our democratic institutio­ns and values.’’

Christophe­r Wray

FBI Director

 ?? AP ?? FBI Director Christophe­r Wray testifies before a House Committee on Homeland Security hearing yesterday.
AP FBI Director Christophe­r Wray testifies before a House Committee on Homeland Security hearing yesterday.

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