Tag: David Tennat

Donald Trump’s win against Clinton had nothing to do with Russians: aide

Reacting to reports that Russia had helped Donald Trump win the election, a top aide to the president-elect on Sunday said that he won in an electoral landslide that had nothing to do with any Russians.

“Donald Trump won in an electoral landslide that had nothing to do with the Russians,” Reince Priebus, who has been nominated by Trump as his White House Chief of Staff, told ABC News in an interview.

Priebus claimed that the stories based on unnamed sources in the intelligence community are not authentic and that it was not true that the Republic National Committee’s servers were also hacked.

“It is unbelievable that the press would run with unnamed sources about something, that they agree was inconclusive, but ignore the fact that the actual people involved on the other side of this story are telling you it’s not true,” Priebus said and asserted that the 17 intelligence agencies in October did not conclude that the hacking was done by Russia.

They didn’t conclude it was Russia. I don’t care if it’s Russia or whoever, they shouldn’t – we’re going to protect Americans. We don’t want these countries or whoever else these people are hacking our country, our parties, we protect our Americans. We don’t like it. We’re against it,” he said.

“But what I can’t do is have an intelligent conversation with you about a report in ‘The New York Times’ that is unnamed, inconclusive, and based on something that isn’t true,” he added.

Priebus said that Trump has full trust in CIA.

“He trusts the CIA. This is about 17 or so unnamed Russian Hackers agencies in an unnamed report that based the report on something that is totally false,” he said.

“The RNC was not hacked. So the report is basically trying to make the case that the RNC was hacked, the DNC was hacked, and the only emails that came out were DNC emails, so therefore, this is the conclusive report that the Russians or whoever was doing the hacking wanted to unfairly change the election,” Priebus said.

Team Trump rejects CIA claims of Russia’s interference in US polls

US President-elect Donald Trump’s transition team has totally rejected the validity of a report by the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) that says Russia tried to help Trump win the US presidency.

“These are the same people that said Saddam Hussein had weapons of mass destruction,” The Independent quoted the Trump team, as saying in a statement.

“The election ended a long time ago in one of the biggest electoral college victories in history. “It’s now time to move on and ‘Make America Great Again’,” the statement added.

US intelligence officials found that Russia had provided Wikileaks with countless hacked emails from the Democratic National Committee and others, including Hillary Clinton’s campaign chairman John Podesta.

Cyber security experts, as well as intelligence officials, had found evidence of the massive leak of thousands of emails of Clinton’s campaign linked to Russia.

A senior American intelligence official said that report was to review Russia’s aim of favouring one candidate over the other.

In September, a secret briefing was held between officials and congressional leaders on the issue but the legitimacy of the assessment was doubted by House Majority Leader Mitch McConnell.

An intelligence official said that agency officials had last week informed the US senate in a briefing that it was clear that Russia wanted Trump as the next president.

However, some officials from all 17 intelligence agencies do have some disagreement over the lack of evidence showing a direct link between Russia and Wikileaks.

Wikileaks founder Julian Assange had claimed in an interview with Australian television that Russia was not the source of the leaks.

The President’s Obama’s counterterrorism and homeland security adviser, Lisa Monaco said that a “full review” of election-related hacking has been ordered by the Obama administration and he expects a full report before he leaves office on January 20.

“We may have crossed into a new threshold and it is incumbent upon us to take stock of that, to review, to conduct some after-action, to understand what has happened Democratic National Committee and to impart some lessons learned,” she said.

Russia was accused by the US officials from the Department of Homeland Security and the Office of the Director of National Intelligence officially of hacking the DNC and other organisations “to interfere with the US election process”.

To Russia with love: Trump’s precarious path on hacking and intelligence

There is little indication or even robust suggestion that Russia directly manipulated electronic voting machines and tampered with the vote count for the US presidential election on Tuesday, November 8, 2016.

So it remains debatable to what extent Russian intervention had boosted Trump’s popularity and worked to indirectly affect the overall election outcome. But a key point is that the CIA, the Director of National Intelligence and the Secretary of Homeland Security have drawn identical conclusions about Russian motives for hacking and propaganda during the 2016 race – to support a Trump victory.

It has also been widely reported that Russian security services allegedly penetrated the servers and computer systems of the Republican National Committee, but chose to hold back on releasing the stolen contents from these systems. One alarming and unresolved concern is whether the Russians calculated to hoard this stolen information to gain some form of future leverage against the RNC – or Trump himself.

Nonetheless, the CIA has been blunt in its most recent statement of foreign criminal hacking calculations:

It is the assessment of the intelligence community that Russia’s goal here was to favour one candidate over the other, to help Trump get elected.

This is more unequivocal than previous analyses of what might be driving ongoing and meddlesome behaviour by Russia. It was linked to a more all-purpose interpretation that presumed a hostile Russian campaign of interference was to sabotage and discredit the US democratic process itself.

In response to the CIA and interconnected findings from several other sources, Trump has openly rejected this intelligence feedback. Instead, alongside his persistent defence of Russia, Trump has slammed the professionalism of the CIA and pointed the finger elsewhere. The origin of the leaks, Trump said, could be “be some guy in his home in New Jersey”.

In this sense, Trump’s deep-rooted scepticism of the intelligence agencies’ investigations appears two-fold.

Firstly, he seems to have picked a highly expedient pathway by implying that the intelligence professionals who analysed the hacks were “politically driven”.

This disturbing response, which threatens to split the intelligence sector, is a repeated claim for which he has delivered no comprehensive rationale. Perhaps as a precursor to the kind of tactics to be used by a Trump White House over the next four years, his team has instead attempted to muddy the waters and snub a major national security issue.

This has relied on a sweeping and misplaced revival of past controversies in US espionage operations to cast doubt on the work of intelligence agencies. The abrupt message, Federal Bureau of Investigation in an unsigned statement, highlighted that “these are the same people that said Saddam Hussein had weapons of mass destruction”.

At the heart of such a debate is whether intelligence shapes policy, or policy shapes intelligence, or both. While mistakes have been made, the intelligence community can likewise serve as a convenient scapegoat for the biased preferences of policymakers.

Secondly, in the search for a more generous assessment of Trump’s rationale, the downplaying of consistent and numerous intelligence reports could be linked to a preference for a less robust assessment by the only dissenting voice in the intelligence sector – the FBI. But with a slight variation. The FBI is not sold on the view that Russian cyber-attacks had a particular intention outside an ad hoc effort to disrupt the election. A senior FBI official has stated:

There’s no question that [Russian] efforts went one way, but it’s not clear that they have a specific goal or mix of related goals.

However, this line of defence still has plenty of holes. Again, the FBI does not deny that a covert Russian hacking and disinformation strategy attempted to influence the US election. This remains in stark contrast to Trump, who continues to downplay Russia’s espionage, mainly via his Twitter feed.

The FBI’s departure from other agencies in its avoidance of making any hard and fast statement about the specific purpose of Russian ambitions is most likely connected to its organisational culture. This is founded on criminal standards and court proceedings – the notion of demonstrating proof beyond reasonable doubt.

Yet intelligence is often not akin to legal standard evidence. It can be speculative and draw inferences from incomplete information.

The inherently imprecise and uncertain nature of intelligence can work in a government’s favour. A government can therefore justify policy actions (“we trusted the intelligence in good faith”) or dismiss intelligence outright (“we could not trust the intelligence because it was too thin”).

In this instance, despite the fluidity of what intelligence can and cannot do, the high confidence of the CIA should not be automatically ignored or discredited. The fact that Trump has continued to belittle the agency and its widely echoed findings indicates a president-elect who either does not pay attention to the intelligence product, or does not understand how intelligence operates.

White House, Donald Trump team clash over alleged Russian hacking

The White House on Thursday clashed with President-elect Donald Trump’s transition team over alleged Russian interference in the 2016 presidential election.

“It is just a fact that the Republican nominee for President was encouraging Russia to hack his opponent because he believed it would help his campaign,” Xinhua news agency quoted White House spokesman Josh Earnest as saying during the daily briefing.

The remarks came one day after Earnest suggested on Wednesday’s briefing that Donald Trump was aware before Election Day that Russia was involved and “their involvement was having a negative impact on his opponent’s campaign”.

Senior Trump adviser Kellyanne Conway on Thursday took a shot at Earnest, calling his remarks on Wednesday “incredibly irresponsible”.

“He essentially stated that the President-elect had knowledge of this (hacking), maybe even fanned the flames,” said Conway in an interview with Fox News. “It’s incredibly irresponsible and I wonder if his boss, President Obama agrees.”

During his campaign, Trump at one of his news conferences in July did encourage the Russians to hack his rival Democrat Hillary Clinton’s e-mail system and reveal the contents.

“I will tell you this, Russia: if you’re listening, I hope you’re able to find the 30,000 e-mails that are missing,” said Trump, referring to half of the e-mails deleted from Clinton’s private e-mail server because they were claimed by Clinton as containing private information.

The Trump team later characterised that remark as a joke.