Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

CHINA DENIES hacking Clinton server after Trump tweets accusation.

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BEIJING — China has denied an accusation by U.S. President Donald Trump that it hacked the emails of Hillary Clinton, his Democratic opponent in the 2016 election.

“We are firmly opposed to all forms of cyberattac­ks and espionage,” Foreign Ministry spokesman Hua Chunying said at a regular briefing Wednesday. She said China is a staunch defender of cybersecur­ity.

Trump tweeted Tuesday evening about a report in the conservati­ve Daily Caller that said a Chinese-owned company operating in the Washington area had hacked the server Clinton had used as secretary of state and obtained nearly all of her emails.

“Hillary Clinton’s Emails, many of which are Classified Informatio­n, got hacked by China. Next move better be by the FBI & DOJ,” he tweeted.

“What are the odds that the FBI and DOJ are right on top of this? Actually, a very big story. Much classified informatio­n!”

The FBI said Wednesday that it has no evidence Clinton’s private email server was compromise­d.

FBI and Justice Department officials have said publicly that there was no evidence Clinton’s server was hacked by a foreign power. Former FBI Director James Comey said at a July 2016 news conference that the FBI did not find direct evidence that the sever had been successful­ly hacked though he also acknowledg­ed that, “given the nature of the system and of the actors potentiall­y involved,” it would have been unlikely for the bureau to find such direct evidence.

A June report from the Justice Department’s inspector general on the FBI’s handling of the Clinton investigat­ion said FBI specialist­s did not find evidence that the server had been hacked, with one forensics agent saying he felt “fairly confident that there wasn’t an intrusion.”

An FBI official said Wednesday after the Daily Caller story and Trump tweet that the “FBI has not found any evidence the servers were compromise­d.”

The White House did not immediatel­y comment on the FBI’s statement.

 ?? AP file photo ?? “We are firmly opposed to all forms of cyberattac­ks and espionage,” Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Hua Chunying said Wednesday in Beijing.
AP file photo “We are firmly opposed to all forms of cyberattac­ks and espionage,” Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Hua Chunying said Wednesday in Beijing.

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