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		Senate gives limited resources to Russia 
		election-meddling probe 
		
		 
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		 [April 25, 2017] 
		By Dustin Volz 
		 
		WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The Senate's main 
		investigation into allegations of Russian meddling in the 2016 U.S. 
		presidential election is equipped with a much smaller staff than 
		previous high-profile intelligence and scandal probes in Congress, which 
		could potentially affect its progress, according to sources and a 
		Reuters review of public records. 
		 
		With only seven staff members initially assigned to the Senate 
		Intelligence Committee's three-month-old investigation, progress has 
		been sluggish and minimal, said two sources with direct knowledge of the 
		matter, who requested anonymity. 
		 
		A committee aide, also speaking on condition of anonymity, said two more 
		staff members were being added and a few others were involved less 
		formally. 
		 
		"We need to pick up the pace," Senator Martin Heinrich, a committee 
		Democrat, told Reuters on Monday. "It is incumbent on us to have the 
		resources to do this right and expeditiously, and I think we need 
		additional staff." 
		 
		While some directly involved in the investigation disputed 
		characterizations of the probe as off track, the appearance of a weak 
		Senate investigation could renew calls by some Democrats and other Trump 
		critics for a commission independent of the Republican-led Congress to 
		investigate the allegations. 
		 
		The intelligence committees of the Senate and House of Representatives 
		have taken the lead in Congress in examining whether Russia tried to 
		influence the election in Republican Trump's favor, mostly by hacking 
		Democratic operatives' emails and releasing embarrassing information, or 
		possibly by colluding with Trump associates. Russia has denied such 
		meddling. 
		
		
		  
		
		With the House intelligence panel's investigation for weeks stymied by 
		partisan squabbles, the Senate committee's parallel probe had appeared 
		to be the more serious of the two, with Republican Chairman Richard Burr 
		and top Democrat Mark Warner promising a thorough and bipartisan effort. 
		 
		Burr, a member of Congress since 1995, last month called the Russia 
		probe one of the biggest investigations undertaken in Congress during 
		his tenure. 
		 
		Previous investigations of national security matters have been much 
		larger in terms of staffing than the one Burr is overseeing, according 
		to a review of official reports produced by those inquiries, which 
		traditionally name every staff member involved. (Graphic: 
		http://tmsnrt.rs/2oYtUs8) 
		 
		A House committee formed to investigate the 2012 attacks on a U.S. 
		diplomatic mission in Benghazi, Libya, that killed four Americans had 46 
		staffers and eight interns. 
		 
		The Senate Intelligence Committee's years-long study of the CIA's 
		"enhanced" interrogation techniques during President George W. Bush's 
		administration had 20 staff members, according to the panel's official 
		report. 
		 
		A special commission separate from Congress that reviewed the 
		intelligence that wrongly concluded former Iraqi President Saddam 
		Hussein possessed weapons of mass destruction ahead of the 2003 invasion 
		of Iraq involved 88 staffers. 
		 
		A special Senate committee's 1970s investigation into Watergate-era 
		surveillance practices tapped 133 staffers. 
		 
		A joint House-Senate probe of the 1980s Iran-Contra affair during Ronald 
		Reagan's presidency involving secret sales of arms to Iran to try to win 
		the release of American hostages, with proceeds going to Nicaraguan 
		rebels, had 181 staffers. 
		 
		
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			Senate Intelligence Committee Chairman Sen. Richard Burr (R-NC), 
			accompanied by Senator Mark Warner (D-VA), vice chairman of the 
			committee, speaks at a news conference to discuss their probe of 
			Russian interference in the 2016 election on Capitol Hill in 
			Washington, D.C., U.S., March 29, 2017. REUTERS/Aaron P. 
			Bernstein/File Photo 
            
			  
			Spokeswomen for Burr and for Warner declined to comment on the 
			staffing levels. 
			 
			'INDICATORS OF A COMMITMENT' 
			 
			The listed sizes of various investigations may be an imperfect 
			comparison because not all staffers listed may have actually had a 
			substantial role, congressional sources said. Investigations often 
			grow in size over time, and a committee aide said the panel had 
			secured $1.2 million in additional funding for the Russia election 
			investigation. 
			 
			But the numbers are still broadly "relevant as indicators of a 
			commitment to an investigation," said Steven Aftergood, a secrecy 
			expert with the Federation of American Scientists. 
			 
			"For this investigation to be successful, the committee must 
			recognize the enormity of the job and provide the resources to 
			tackle it," Senator Ron Wyden, another committee Democrat, said in a 
			statement. 
			 
			Wyden sent a letter last month to Burr and Warner requesting that 
			the probe include a thorough review of any financial ties between 
			Russia and Trump and his associates. 
			 
			None of the staffers possess substantial investigative experience or 
			a background in Russian affairs, two of the sources said. 
			 
			The investigation has not yet conducted interviews with Trump 
			associates suspected of having links to Russian intelligence 
			services, two sources and the aide said. 
			 
			The investigators have focused on reviewing thousands of pages of 
			documents supporting a previous U.S. intelligence agency finding 
			that Russia interfered to help Trump, and have spoken with 
			intelligence officials in preparation for interviewing key 
			witnesses, they said. 
			 
			The House intelligence panel's chairman, Republican Devin Nunes, who 
			was a member of Trump's presidential transition team, on April 6 
			stepped aside from leading that probe because he was under 
			investigation by the House ethics committee for allegedly disclosing 
			classified information. 
			
			
			  
			
			The Federal Bureau of Investigation is also conducting a wide 
			ranging counter-intelligence investigation into alleged Russian 
			interference and potential collusion with Trump associates, though 
			its findings may never become public. 
			 
			(Reporting by Dustin Volz; Additional reporting by Patricia 
			Zengerle; Editing by Jonathan Weber and Will Dunham) 
			
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