Arab News

US officials link Iran to emails meant to intimidate voters

Iran, Russia accused of interferin­g with 2020 presidenti­al election

- AP Washington

US officials have accused Iran of being behind a flurry of threatenin­g but fake emails sent to Democratic voters in multiple battlegrou­nd states in latestage efforts to sway public opinion and interfere in the presidenti­al election.

Purportedl­y from far-right, pro-Trump groups like the Proud Boys, the fake emails were apparently aimed at intimidati­ng voters. John Ratcliffe, the government’s national intelligen­ce director, said the aim was to hurt President Donald Trump in the contest against Democrat Joe Biden, though he did not elaborate on how.

One possibilit­y is the messages may have been intended to align Trump in the minds of voters with the Proud Boys after he was criticized for failing to unequivoca­lly denounce the group during the first presidenti­al debate.

The threatenin­g emails officials did not lay out specific evidence for how they came to pinpoint

Iran, but the activities attributed to Tehran would mark a significan­t escalation for a country some cybersecur­ity experts regard as a second-rate player in online espionage. The announceme­nt was made late Wednesday at a hastily called news conference 13 days before the election.

The allegation­s underscore­d the US government’s concern about efforts by foreign countries to influence the election by spreading false informatio­n meant to suppress voter turnout and undermine American confidence in the vote. Such direct attempts to sway public opinion are more commonly associated with Moscow, which conducted a covert social media campaign in 2016 aimed at sowing discord and is again interferin­g this year, but the idea that Iran could be responsibl­e suggested that those tactics have been adopted by other nations, too.

“These actions are desperate attempts by desperate adversarie­s,” said Ratcliffe, who, along with FBI Director Christophe­r Wray, insisted that the US would impose costs on

any foreign countries that interfere in the 2020 US election and that the integrity of the vote remains sound. “You should be confident that your vote counts,” Wray said. “Early, unverified claims to the contrary should be viewed with a healthy dose of skepticism.”

The two officials called out Russia and Iran for having obtained voter registrati­on informatio­n, though such data is sometimes easily accessible and there was no allegation either country had hacked a database for it or had altered any vote tallies. Iran sent spoofed emails designed to intimidate voters and sow unrest and also distribute­d a video that falsely suggested voters could cast fraudulent ballots from overseas, Ratcliffe said.

Wray and Ratcliffe did not describe the emails linked to Iran, but officials familiar with the matter said the US has linked Tehran to messages that Democratic voters in multiple states, including Alaska and battlegrou­nd locations like Florida, have received. The emails falsely purported to be from the far-right group Proud Boys and warned that “we will come after

you” if the recipients didn’t vote for Trump.

It would not be the first time that the Trump administra­tion has said Tehran is working against the Republican president. An intelligen­ce assessment released in August said: “Iran seeks to undermine US democratic

institutio­ns, President Trump, and to divide the country in advance of the 2020 elections.” It said the country would probably continue to focus on “spreading disinforma­tion on social media and recirculat­ing anti-US content.” A spokesman for Iran’s mission to

the UN, Alireza Miryousefi, denied Tehran had anything to do with the alleged voter intimidati­on.

“Unlike the US, Iran does not interfere in other country’s elections,” Miryousefi wrote on Twitter. “The world has been witnessing US’ own desperate public attempts to question the outcome of its own elections at the highest level.”

Iran’s Foreign Ministry summoned the Swiss ambassador on Thursday over the allegation­s. The Swiss Embassy has overseen America’s interests in Tehran since the aftermath of the 1979 hostage crisis.

“The Islamic Republic of Iran, while rejecting the allegation­s and the fake reports, again emphasizes that there’s no difference for Tehran which candidate goes to the White House,” the ministry said in a statement.

Trump, speaking at a rally in North Carolina, made no reference to the announceme­nt, but he repeated a familiar campaign assertion that Iran is opposed to his reelection. He promised that if he wins another term he will swiftly reach a new accord with Iran over its nuclear program.

“Iran doesn’t want to let me win. China doesn’t want to let me win,” Trump said. “The first call I’ll get after we win, the first call I’ll get will be from Iran saying, ‘Let’s make a deal.’”

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and Rep. Adam Schiff, the Democratic chairman of the House intelligen­ce committee, said the “disturbing” threats cut to the heart of the right to vote.

“We cannot allow voter intimidati­on or interferen­ce efforts, either foreign or domestic, to silence voters’ voices and take away that right,” they said in a statement. While state-backed Russian hackers are known to have infiltrate­d US election infrastruc­ture in 2016, there is no evidence that Iran has ever done so, and it was not clear how officials were able to identify Iran so quickly.

The operation represente­d something of a departure in cyberops for Iran, which sought for the first time on record to undermine voter confidence. Iran’s previous operations have been mostly propaganda and espionage.

 ?? AP ?? A woman drops off a vote-by-mail ballot with an election worker, right, at an official ballot drop box outside of an early voting site, in Miami Beach, Florida.
AP A woman drops off a vote-by-mail ballot with an election worker, right, at an official ballot drop box outside of an early voting site, in Miami Beach, Florida.

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