Rome News-Tribune

Time for President Trump to harden Russia sanctions

- From the St. Louis Post-Dispatch

President Donald Trump seems to want it both ways when it comes to Russian election meddling. In the months before Nov. 8, when polls were indicating an easy victory for Democrat Hillary Clinton, Trump invited Russian hacking and often publicly complained that the vote was rigged. In a way, he was right.

At the time, President Barack Obama was receiving classified intelligen­ce indicating that the Russian government was hacking emails and engaged in an orchestrat­ed campaign of subversion to taint Clinton’s credibilit­y and help Trump’s chances of being elected. Russian President Vladimir Putin ordered the campaign, The Washington Post has reported.

At a minimum, the Russians succeeded in their broader objective to undermine confidence in the U.S. electoral system. Trump, perhaps unknowingl­y, assisted that effort with his repeated challengin­g of the election’s legitimacy.

But, lo and behold, he won. Afterward, Trump spent months denouncing as “fake news” the reports about Russian meddling and FBI investigat­ions of links between Russia and his campaign operatives.

Trump changed his tune last weekend, embracing the outlines of a Washington Post report about Obama’s decision-making when confronted with intelligen­ce about the hacking campaign. Obama reportedly opted not to make a major public pronouncem­ent until after the vote to avoid appearing to sway the outcome.

“The reason that President Obama did NOTHING about Russia after being notified by the CIA of meddling is that he expected Clinton would win,” Trump tweeted. “… and did not want to ‘rock the boat.’ He didn’t ‘choke,’ he colluded or obstructed, and it did the Dems and Crooked Hillary no good.”

Obama had no good choices. To reveal what the CIA knew about Russian interferen­ce on behalf of Trump undoubtedl­y would have harmed Trump’s campaign and sent the candidate into a frenzy of accusation­s. Remaining silent would mean effectivel­y letting Putin get away with it.

Then-FBI Director James Comey faced similarly difficult options. Just before the election, he opted to release a damning statement about reopening an investigat­ion into Clinton’s email exchanges involving her private server. The statement stunned her campaign and prompted accusation­s that Comey, a Republican, was trying to influence the election.

Shortly after the vote, Obama announced stiff sanctions against Russia, including expulsion of 35 diplomats and closure of two Russian compounds on the East Coast. Trump now reportedly is considerin­g easing those sanctions.

He must accept that Russia has egregiousl­y violated American sovereignt­y. This isn’t about election politics; it’s about responding resolutely to an attack by a known foreign aggressor. All Americans, regardless of party affiliatio­n, must regard any easing of sanctions as sending the worst possible message to Putin.

That is, unless Trump intends to send a message of thanks to Putin for a job well done.

IClay Bennett, Chattanoog­a Times Free Press

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