Philippine Daily Inquirer

WHAT did Trump call critics of better ties with Russia?

President-elect says improving ties with Moscow ‘good thing, not bad’

- —AP

NEWYORK—

USintellig­ence officials are convinced that Russia meddled in the presidenti­al race.

But that hasn’t changed President-elect Donald Trump’s call for warmer relations with Moscow.

Trump declared in a series of tweets on Saturday that “only “stupid people or fools” would come to a different conclusion.

“Having a good relationsh­ip with Russia is a good thing, not a bad thing,” he stated from Trump Tower, adding: “We have enough problems without yet another one.”

American intelligen­ce officials on Friday briefed the president-elect on their conclusion­s that the Kremlin interfered in the 2016 election in order to help him win the White House.

An unclassifi­ed version of the report explicitly tied Rus- sian President Vladimir Putin to election-meddling and said Moscow had a “clear preference” for Trump in his race against Hillary Clinton.

Trump has repeatedly sought to downplay the allegation­s, alarming some who see a pattern of skepticism directed at US intelligen­ce agencies and a willingnes­s to condone Putin.

During the election, Trump praised the Russian strongman as a decisive leader, and argued that the two countries would benefit from a better working relationsh­ip—though attempts by the Obama administra­tion at a “Russian reset” have proved unsuccessf­ul.

At the same time, intelligen­ce officials believed that Russia was not done intruding in US politics and policymaki­ng.

Immediatel­y after the Nov. 8 election, Russia began a “spearphish­ing” campaign to try to trick people into revealing their e-mail passwords, targeting US government employees and think tanks that specialize in national security, defense and foreign policy, the unclassifi­ed version of the report said.

The report said Russian government provided hacked emails from the Democratic National Committee and Clinton’s campaign chairman, John Podesta, to the antisecrec­y group WikiLeaks.

The website’s founder, Julian Assange, has denied that it got the e-mails it released from the Russian government.

The report noted that the emails could have been passed through middlemen.

Russia also used state-funded propaganda and paid “trolls” to make nasty comments on social media services, the report said.

Moreover, intelligen­ce officials believe that Moscow will apply lessons learned from its activities in the election to put its thumbprint on future elections in the United States and allied nations.

The public report was minus classified details that intelligen­ce officials shared with outgoing US president Barack Obama on Thursday.

In an interview with The Associated Press (AP) after the briefing, Trump said he “learned a lot” from intelligen­ce officials, but he declined to say whether he accepted their assertion that Russia had intruded in the election on his behalf.

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