Los Angeles Times

Russia backs Trump, targets Biden, U.S. assessment says

- By Chris Megerian

WASHINGTON — Russia has continued its support for President Trump by actively trying to undermine the candidacy of Joe Biden, the presumptiv­e Democratic nominee, according to a U.S. intelligen­ce assessment released Friday that suggested wide-ranging foreign threats to the November election.

It was a striking warning from Trump’s own top intelligen­ce officials, further eroding his repeated attempts to downplay or deny Moscow’s well-documented help for his campaign in the last election.

It also suggests that an effort by Republican­s in Congress to investigat­e Biden for his previous work in Ukraine could become a vehicle for Russian disinforma­tion.

Trump brushed off the intelligen­ce report during a news conference at his New Jersey golf club on Friday evening.

“The last person that Russia wants to see in office is Donald Trump,” he said. When a reporter pointed out that contradict­ed his own administra­tion, Trump said, “I don’t care what anybody says.”

The unclassifi­ed “election threat update” said Russia is using a “range of measures” to denigrate Bid

en, whom the Kremlin blames for supporting prodemocra­cy groups opposed to Russian President Vladimir Putin while Biden served as President Obama’s vice president.

The statement stops short of accusing Russia of directly working to elect Trump, but notes that some “Kremlin-linked actors” are seeking to boost Trump’s reelection campaign on social media and Russian television.

Two other American adversarie­s are also trying to influence U.S. politics, and not for Trump’s benefit, according to the intelligen­ce assessment.

It said China “prefers” that Trump, which Beijing sees as “unpredicta­ble,” lose his reelection bid, but did not accuse Beijing of direct meddling.

Intelligen­ce officials concluded that Beijing is weighing “the risks and benefits of aggressive action” as its public rhetoric grows increasing­ly critical of Trump’s actions, including his targeting of social media platforms like TikTok and his harsh criticism of China’s handling of the coronaviru­s outbreak that originated in Wuhan.

“Beijing recognizes that all of these efforts might affect the presidenti­al race,” the report noted.

Iran also is seeking to undermine Trump and U.S. democratic institutio­ns, and is expected to spread disinforma­tion on social media and recirculat­e anti-American content, the assessment warned.

It offered few details but said Iran is motivated by a belief that Trump’s reelection “would result in a continuati­on of U.S. pressure on

Iran in an effort to foment regime change.”

“Our election should be our own,” said William Evanina, director of the National Counterint­elligence and Security Center, which issued the assessment. “Foreign efforts to influence or interfere with our elections are a direct threat to the fabric of our democracy.”

Evanina, a former FBI official, works under John Ratcliffe, a Trump loyalist and former Republican congressma­n from Texas who was confirmed as director of national intelligen­ce in May.

Democratic lawmakers, alarmed by disclosure­s in classified briefings, have pressed Evanina to release more to the public about foreign interferen­ce in the 2020 race. Although Friday’s announceme­nt represents the most detailed public assessment so far, some were unsatisfie­d.

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-San Francisco) and Rep. Adam B. Schiff (DBurbank), chair of the House Intelligen­ce Committee, said intelligen­ce officials should release more details to the public, and faulted them for suggesting Russia, China and Iran pose equal threats.

They highlighte­d “Russia’s malign interferen­ce campaign” as significan­tly more dangerous than the others.

Last summer, Trump asked Ukraine’s president to investigat­e Biden’s former involvemen­t in anti-corruption prosecutio­ns — a request that led to Trump’s impeachmen­t by the House of Representa­tives in December — and some Republican­s on Capitol Hill are also probing Biden’s Ukrainian connection­s.

Some of the allegation­s against Biden have been disseminat­ed by Andriy Derkach, a pro-Kremlin Ukrainian member of parliament who has met with Trump’s lawyer Rudolph W. Giuliani, former mayor of New York.

Derkach has publicized leaked phone calls from when Biden was spearheadi­ng U.S. diplomatic efforts aimed at pushing democratic reforms and curbing corruption in the Eastern European nation.

Sen. Ron Johnson (RWis.), who is leading a Republican probe into Biden, has denied receiving any informatio­n from Derkach and has rejected criticism that he’s amplifying Russian disinforma­tion.

But Pelosi and Senate Minority Leader Charles E. Schumer (D-N.Y.) recently said that Congress appears to be the target of “a concerted foreign interferen­ce campaign, which seeks to launder and amplify disinforma­tion in order to influence congressio­nal activity, public debate and the presidenti­al election in November.”

Biden has faced scrutiny because his son Hunter served on the board of a Ukrainian energy company while Biden was vice president. Despite allegation­s of a conflict of interest, Biden’s critics have not establishe­d that he took any improper action.

Russia’s decision to target Biden echoes Moscow’s covert campaign against former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, the Democratic presidenti­al nominee four years ago.

Russian military intelligen­ce hacked and released thousands of Democratic Party emails during the 2016 campaign, and Kremlinlin­ked operatives spread misinforma­tion on social media aimed at discrediti­ng her candidacy. Trump’s campaign welcomed the Russian assistance but prosecutor­s working for former special counsel Robert

S. Mueller III did not establish a criminal conspiracy.

Sens. Marco Rubio (RFla.) and Mark R. Warner (D-Va.), the chair and vice chair of the Senate Intelligen­ce Committee, praised officials for Friday’s public warning of foreign meddling in the election.

“Everyone — from the voting public, local officials and members of Congress — needs to be aware of these threats,” they said in a joint statement. “And all of us should endeavor to prevent outside actors from being able to interfere in our elections, influence our politics and undermine confidence in our democratic institutio­ns.”

Trump’s campaign issued a statement focusing on the threat from China and Iran.

“If anyone should face questions about foreign interferen­ce in 2020, it’s Joe Biden’s campaign,” said Tim Murtaugh, communicat­ions director for the Trump campaign. “We don’t need or want foreign interferen­ce, and President Trump will beat Joe Biden fair and square.”

The former vice president’s campaign slammed Trump in return.

“Donald Trump has publicly and repeatedly invited, emboldened and even tried to coerce foreign interferen­ce in American elections,” said Tony Blinken, a senior advisor to Biden’s campaign.

“Joe Biden, on the other hand, has led the fight against foreign interferen­ce for years, and has refused to accept any foreign materials intended to help him in this election — something that Donald Trump and his campaign have repeatedly failed to do,” he added.

 ?? Matt Slocum Associated Press ?? A U.S. INTELLIGEN­CE report says Russia is actively trying to denigrate the campaign of Joe Biden, pictured at left at a Pennsylvan­ia metal fabricator in July.
Matt Slocum Associated Press A U.S. INTELLIGEN­CE report says Russia is actively trying to denigrate the campaign of Joe Biden, pictured at left at a Pennsylvan­ia metal fabricator in July.
 ?? Matt Slocum Associated Press ?? JOE BIDEN kneels to talk with a child in his hometown of Scranton, Pa., in July. Russia’s alleged targeting of Biden echoes its actions in the 2016 election.
Matt Slocum Associated Press JOE BIDEN kneels to talk with a child in his hometown of Scranton, Pa., in July. Russia’s alleged targeting of Biden echoes its actions in the 2016 election.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States