Sanders blasts Russia for reportedly trying to boost his presidential
campaign
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[February 22, 2020]
By Susan Heavey and Simon Lewis
WASHINGTON/LAS VEGAS (Reuters) - Democratic
presidential candidate Bernie Sanders warned Russia on Friday to stay
out of 2020 White House elections after U.S. officials had told him
Moscow was trying to aid his campaign.
"The intelligence community is telling us they are interfering in this
campaign, right now, in 2020. And what I say to Mr. Putin, if elected
president, trust me you are not going to be interfering in American
elections," Sanders told reporters in Bakersfield, California.
Sanders, 78, a democratic socialist U.S. senator from Vermont, is
considered the front-runner for the Democratic nomination and is favored
to win the Nevada caucuses on Saturday.
The Washington Post on Friday, citing people familiar with the matter,
said U.S. officials had told Sanders about the Russian effort and had
also informed Republican President Donald Trump and U.S. lawmakers.
It was not clear what form the Russian assistance took, the paper said.
A congressional source confirmed intelligence officials have told
lawmakers Russia appears to be engaging in disinformation and propaganda
campaigns to boost the 2020 campaigns of both Sanders and Trump.
The source, however, cautioned that the findings are very tentative.
Sanders said he was briefed about a month ago. His campaign noted the
briefing was classified.
"We were told that Russia, maybe other countries, are going to get
involved in this campaign," Sanders told reporters. "Look, here is the
message: To Russia, stay out of American elections."
"What they are doing, by the way, the ugly thing that they are doing -
and I've seen some of their tweets and stuff - is they try to divide us
up," he said. "They are trying to cause chaos. They're trying to cause
hatred in America."
MOSCOW DENIES
The Kremlin on Friday denied Russia was interfering in the U.S.
presidential campaign to boost Trump's re-election chances, following
reports that American intelligence officials warned Congress about the
election threat last week.
"These are more paranoid announcements which, to our regret, will
multiply as we get closer to the (U.S.) election," Kremlin spokesman
Dmitry Peskov told reporters. "They have nothing to do with the truth."
U.S. intelligence officials told members of the House of Representatives
Intelligence Committee in a classified briefing that Russia was again
interfering in American politics ahead of November's election, as it did
in 2016, a person familiar with the discussion told Reuters on Thursday.
Since that briefing, Trump has ousted the acting intelligence chief,
replacing him with a political loyalist in an abrupt move as Democrats
and former U.S. officials raised the alarm over national security
concerns.
A senior administration official said the nation was better positioned
than in 2016 to defend against foreign attempts to influence elections.
"President Trump has made clear that any efforts or attempts by Russia,
or any other nation, to influence or interfere with our elections, or
undermine U.S. democracy will not be tolerated," the official said.
Some of Sanders' rivals for the Democratic nomination said they had
neither received similar briefings nor word that Russia was working to
boost their campaigns.
Former Vice President Joe Biden told CNN on Friday: "I know Russia
doesn't want me to win. It's really clear that Putin doesn't want me to
be the nominee, and Donald Trump doesn't want me to be the nominee."
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President Donald Trump arrives to speak at a "Hope for Prisoners"
graduation ceremony at the Metropolitan Police Department
headquarters in Las Vegas, Nevada, U.S., February 20, 2020.
REUTERS/Kevin Lamarque
U.S. Senator Elizabeth Warren, while campaigning in Las Vegas, said
there should be "as much transparency as possible" to block Russia
from having "too much influence" in U.S. elections.
"This is about disinformation and the way to fight disinformation is
to call it out, show what it is and give everyone full information
as quickly as possible," Warren told reporters.
RUSSIAN ACCOUNTS
Facebook declined to comment on whether it has seen any evidence of
Russian assistance to Sanders' campaign. In October, the company
took down Russian-backed accounts that pretended to be from
political battleground states.
Some of those accounts used Instagram to praise Sanders. Another
used the #BlackLivesMatter hashtag and faulted Biden on race issues.
Jessica Brandt of the Alliance for Securing Democracy, an
organization that monitors foreign interference in U.S. politics,
said Russian state media and official social media accounts have
been working to help Sanders by amplifying conspiracy theories that
his Democratic rivals, the Democratic National Committee and the
"corporate media" have been "rigging the system" against him.
"We can say with certainty that this is what the Russian government
is pushing," she told Reuters. "We've seen for some time Russian
official channels promoting division within the Democratic Party."
Graham Brookie, director of the Atlantic Council's Digital Forensic
Research Lab, which works with Facebook to analyze state-backed
information operations, said "Russian influence operations are equal
opportunity hyperpartisan, with the overarching goal to drive
Americans further away from each other."
U.S. officials have long warned that Russia and other countries
would seek to interfere in the Nov. 3 presidential election,
following Russia's meddling in the 2016 campaign that ended with
Trump's surprise victory over Democratic rival Hillary Clinton.
U.S. intelligence agencies concluded that the Kremlin used
disinformation operations, cyber attacks and other methods in its
2016 operation in an effort to boost Trump, an allegation that
Russia denies. Trump, sensitive to doubts over the legitimacy of his
win, has also questioned that finding and repeatedly criticized
American intelligence agencies.
Russia's alleged interference sparked a two-year-long U.S.
investigation headed by Special Counsel Robert Mueller.
Mueller found no conclusive evidence of coordination between Russia
and the Trump campaign. He also pointed at 10 instances in which
Trump may have attempted to obstruct his investigation, as Democrats
alleged, but left any finding of obstruction to Congress.
(Additional reporting by Anastasia Teterevleva and Maria Kiselyova
in Moscow, Makini Brice, Amanda Becker, Mark Hosenball, Eric Beech
and Jonathan Landay in Washington, and Steve Holland and Simon Lewis
in Las Vegas; Writing by James Oliphant; Editing by Mary Milliken,
Jonathan Oatis and Daniel Wallis)
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