USA TODAY US Edition

Lawmaker urges retaliatio­n on Russia

Member of House panel says U.S. has to keep Moscow out of elections

-

Rep. Adam Schiff, the top Democrat on the House Intelligen­ce Committee, called on President Obama to retaliate against Russia for interferen­ce in the presidenti­al election — meddling the California congressma­n said is designed to “sow discord” in American politics and to help elect Donald Trump.

“What makes this new and troubling is not just the intelligen­ce-gathering of hacking into a political party,” Schiff told Capital Download on Wednesday, “but the attempt to interfere with the election process by dumping informatio­n in an effort, I think, to be disruptive, to sow discord in the United States, to cause people to question both the fairness of elections and maybe even the election results, as well as to potentiall­y tip things in the direction of a favored candidate by the Kremlin.”

Schiff, 56, who has served on the Intelligen­ce Committee for a decade, told USA TODAY’s weekly video newsmaker series it is clear from publicly disclosed informatio­n that computer hacking of the Democratic National Committee, the Democratic Congressio­nal Campaign Committee and state election offices in Arizona and Illinois can be traced to the Russian government or hackers sanctioned by it.

This week, the president declined to threaten Moscow or even directly declare it responsibl­e.

“We’ve had problems with cyber intrusions from Russia in the past, from other countries in the past,” Obama said after meeting with Russian President Vladimir Putin. He didn’t suggest retaliatio­n. “Our goal is not to suddenly in the cyber arena duplicate a cycle of escalation that we saw when it comes to other arms races ... but rather to start institutin­g some norms so that everybody’s acting responsibl­y.”

Schiff called on the administra- tion to “really call out Russia on this” and consider taking additional action in coordinati­on with European countries that have been targeted. That could include indicting the hackers and imposing sanctions against Russian institutio­ns or individual­s, restrictin­g their access to assets and ability to travel abroad.

“We know at least two states have been the subject of hacking already, so the question is not whether they have the ability, only whether they have the will to do it,” he said of the prospect of tampering with election returns. “Right now, because they paid so little price for the hack of the DNC and the DCCC, there’s little to deter them.”

Florida Rep. Debbie Wasserman Schultz was forced to step down as the party’s national chair on the eve of the Democratic convention in July because of the leak of hacked emails.

The administra­tion may be reluctant to act while Secretary of State John Kerry negotiates with Russia over Syria, Schiff said. “The other factor the administra­tion may be considerin­g is ... would it give the appearance that they were trying to tip the scales for Hillary Clinton? I don’t think that concern over the appearance ought to outweigh the fact that the American people ... need to know if an adversaria­l power is trying to tip the scales of an American election.”

 ?? JACK GRUBER, USA TODAY ?? Rep. Adam Schiff of California is the ranking Democratic on the House Intelligen­ce Committee.
JACK GRUBER, USA TODAY Rep. Adam Schiff of California is the ranking Democratic on the House Intelligen­ce Committee.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States