Los Angeles Times

Threat of bright Russian minds

Re “Obama vows to retaliate over hacking,” Dec. 17

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President Obama makes a compelling case about Russian interferen­ce with our presidenti­al election.

But while belittling Russia as a “smaller country” whose economy produces only “oil and gas and and arms,” he misses an important emerging element: Russia’s ability to directly influence the democratic process that underpins the United States — and probably that of many other countries.

Hacking may not be an acceptable way to boost a nation’s economy, but my guess is that brilliant minds (Russian or otherwise) are now becoming the No. 1 element in a nation’s economy. Witness

the importance of Silicon Valley here in the United States. Kathy Landis

Laguna Woods

Obama’s threat of cyber retaliatio­n against Russia for hacking of the Democratic National Committee and Hillary Clinton’s advisors is a very dangerous move. Does he think that if the U.S. launches some cyberattac­k against the Russians, they will just say, “OK, we’re even”?

What Obama isn’t keeping in mind are the number of security breakins that have taken place against all types of businesses. Does he want to risk financial institutio­ns, safety systems, the power grid or other Internetco­nnected business being attacked?

He needs to think about these things before he considers any retributio­n against the Russians. Les Hartzman

Los Angeles

On July 28, 1974, my husband and I drove into Lviv (today part of Ukraine) in the Soviet Union. Arriving at a campground we were greeted by a very young KGB officer, who engaged us in a debate about democracy, which he called “anarchism.”

I have always remembered his confident prediction: “We will not dominate you through another world war; we will dominate you through subversion.”

After our eight-month camping trip through Russia and Europe, we came home to find in our mail a letter from the Soviet government and a copy of Soviet Life asking us to subscribe. We had no mailing address before returning to the United States. How we were tracked down confounded us.

Now, 42 years later, President-elect Donald Trump calls the idea of Russian hacking “ridiculous”? I don’t think so. Vivien Irving

Huntington Beach

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