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		U.S. intel report identifies Russians who 
		gave emails to WikiLeaks: officials 
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		 [January 07, 2017] 
		WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The CIA has 
		identified Russian officials who fed material hacked from the Democratic 
		National Committee and party leaders to WikiLeaks at the direction of 
		Russian President Vladimir Putin through third parties, according to a 
		new U.S. intelligence report, senior U.S. officials said on Thursday. 
 The officials, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said the Central 
		Intelligence Agency and others have concluded that the Russian 
		government escalated its efforts from discrediting the U.S. election 
		process to assisting President-elect Donald Trump's campaign.
 
 The intelligence assessment was presented to President Barack Obama on 
		Thursday and will be briefed to Trump on Friday. Trump has rejected the 
		broad intelligence community's assessment that Russia staged cyber 
		attacks during the election campaign to undermine Democratic rival 
		Hillary Clinton.
 
 Russia has rejected the hacking allegations.
 
 "By October, it had become clear that the Russians were trying to help 
		the Trump campaign,” said one official familiar with the full report 
		speaking on the condition of anonymity because the complete version is 
		Top Secret.
 
 In some cases, one official said, the material followed what was called 
		“a circuitous route” from the GRU, Russia’s military intelligence 
		agency, to WikiLeaks in an apparent attempt to make the origins of the 
		material harder to trace, a common practice used by all intelligence 
		agencies, including U.S. ones.
 
		
		 
		These handoffs, the officials said, enabled WikiLeaks founder Julian 
		Assange to say the Russian government or state agencies were not the 
		source of the material published on his website.
 In an interview with Fox News this week, Assange said he did not receive 
		emails stolen from the DNC and Clinton aide John Podesta from "a state 
		party." Assange did not rule out the possibility that he got the 
		material from a third party.
 
 Details of the report emerged as the top U.S. intelligence official, 
		James Clapper, said on Thursday he was "even more resolute" in his 
		belief that Russia staged cyber attacks on Democrats during the 2016 
		election campaign.
 
 Not all 17 intelligence agencies participated in preparing the 
		assessment. An unclassified version of the report is expected to be 
		released on Friday morning, two officials said.
 
 The report contains some of what the officials called “minor footnotes” 
		about open questions and other uncertainties, in part because some of 
		the evidence supporting the conclusion is inferential.
 
		
		 
		
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			President-elect Donald Trump speaks briefly to reporters between 
			meetings at the Mar-a-lago Club in Palm Beach, Florida, U.S. 
			December 28, 2016. REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst 
            
			 
		One such example, the officials said, was that intercepted messages and 
		conversations among senior Russian officials in Putin’s inner circle 
		indicated they were aware of the hacking campaign and celebrated Trump’s 
		election as a victorious end to the campaign. 
			The officials declined to discuss the nature of the communications, 
			including whether they were domestic, international, or both.
 "People who knew what this was about were celebrating a victory over 
			the United States,” said one official.
 
 Another example of inferential evidence, the officials said, was 
			that as time passed and the early leaks attracted media attention 
			that undermined or eclipsed Clinton’s campaign, the Russians 
			increasingly focused their hacking “almost exclusively” on 
			Democratic rather than Republican targets.
 
 There was also strong resemblance -- including the use of the same 
			computer malware -- the Russians have used against targets in Europe 
			and the marriage of traditional espionage tactics used by Soviet and 
			Russian intelligence such as bribery, blackmail and internet 
			vulnerabilities, which they said Putin has devoted increasing 
			resources and attention to exploiting.
 
 For example, one official said, the Democratic databases and email 
			servers the Russians hacked also contained personal information that 
			WikiLeaks has not published.
 
 Such information could be used to search for financial, medical, 
			browsing history and other records that can be used to target 
			individuals for recruiting efforts by Russian spies.
 
 (Reporting by Washington newsroom; Editing by Lisa Shumaker)
 
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