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NYT
WASHINGTON
Russia's interference in the 2016 presidential election fits into a nearly two-decade pattern of meddling with governments around the world, and the US response to its brazen attack is being hindered by President Donald Trump, a new report prepared by Senate Democrats concludes.
The report, which is to be released Wednesday, is one of the most extensive to date on foreign interference by Russia and President Vladimir Putin. It tracks Russian efforts in 19 countries, chronicling misinformation campaigns, the funding of far-right political causes and the manipulation of energy supplies long before 2016 in an attempt to glean lessons for US officials considering how to counteract similar efforts here. In total, the report offers more than 30 recommendations to safeguard the country's electoral process and to work with allies, primarily in Europe, to establish new standards to address these types of threats.
They include new sanctions to punish states that initiate cyberattacks on elections or critical infrastructure, an international summit meeting centered on such threats, an allied commitment of mutual defense against cyberattacks, as well as forcing social media companies to disclose the sources of funding for political ads. But the report begins by calling on Trump to"assert presidential leadership" to establish a governmentwide response to the Russian efforts, including setting up an interagency center modeled after the National Counterterrorism Center to coordinate the US response to threats and policy related to their deterrence.
"Never before in American history has so clear a threat to national security been so clearly ignored by a US president," the report asserts. Sen. Benjamin Cardin of Maryland, who is the top Democrat on the Foreign Relations Committee and commissioned the report, was no less stark in his assessment."While President Trump stands practically idle, Mr. Putin continues to refine his asymmetric arsenal and look for future opportunities to disrupt governance and erode support for the democratic and international institutions," he said.
US spy agencies have concluded that Putin directed a multifaceted campaign using hacking and propaganda to try to sway the 2016 presidential election against Trump's opponent, Hillary Clinton, and, eventually, in favour of his campaign.
Trump's response to those findings has varied. After Congress overwhelmingly passed new sanctions in August retaliating against Russia over a range of issues including the election interference, Trump was forced to sign the measure into law despite his own objections. In November, after speaking with Putin, Trump said he believed that the Russian leader was sincere in his denials of interfering with the 2016 race.
On Wednesday, he insisted that there was"no collusion" between his campaign and the Russians and described investigations studying the issue as"the single greatest Witch Hunt in American history" invented by the Democrats."Russia & the world is laughing at the stupidity they are witnessing," he wrote on Twitter.
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11/01/2018
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