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Saturday, 14 July 2018
US indicts 12 Russians for hacking DNC emails during the 2016 election
Rod Rosenstein holds a news conference to announce the indictments on Friday in Washington DC.
Photograph: Leah Millis/Reuters
A dozen Russians were criminally charged on Friday with hacking and
leaking the emails of senior Democrats during the 2016 presidential
election campaign.
Grand jury indictments against the 12 alleged Russian intelligence
officials were announced by Rod Rosenstein, the deputy US attorney
general, at a press conference in Washington.
“The internet allows foreign adversaries to attack America in new and
unexpected ways,” said Rosenstein. Lamenting what he called “partisan
warfare” in the US around the ongoing Russia inquiry, Rosenstein said: “The blame for election interference belongs to the criminals who committed election interference.”
The charges were filed in Washington by Robert Mueller, the special
counsel, who is investigating Russian interference in the election and
possible collusion with members of Donald Trump’s campaign team.
They were announced just as Trump arrived at Windsor Castle to meet
the Queen, and as he prepared to meet Vladimir Putin, Russia’s
president, on Monday. Rosenstein said he had briefed Trump on the
developments.
Rosenstein said those charged were operatives of the GRU, a Russian
military intelligence agency. He said they had “corresponded with
several Americans through the internet”, including an associate of the
Trump campaign.
Roger Stone, a longtime adviser to Trump, previously acknowledged
that he had exchanged messages with one of the online personas accused
on Friday of being a front for Russian intelligence, but he denied
knowing that true identity.
Stone told the Guardian on Friday that his correspondence about the
hacked documents was “benign based on its content, context and timing”
and “provides evidence no of collaboration or collusion”.
Russia inquiry: how Trump's inner circle could bring him down – video explainer
Thousands of emails taken from the accounts of staff at the the
Democratic National Committee (DNC) and John Podesta, Hillary Clinton’s
campaign chairman, were published by outlets including WikiLeaks during
the 2016 campaign.
The
leaks threw the Democratic party into turmoil. The disclosure of
embarrassing internal memos prompted the resignation of Debbie Wasserman
Schultz, the DNC chairwoman, on the eve of the party’s convention in
July 2016.
US intelligence agencies concluded that the accounts were hacked as
part of a wide-ranging operation ordered by Putin to damage Clinton’s
bid for the presidency and assist Trump’s campaign.
Trump has consistently tried to cast doubt over the conclusions of
the intelligence agencies that he now controls, and highlighted denials
from Putin about the election interference. He continued on Friday to
dismiss Mueller’s inquiry as a “witch-hunt”.
The indicted Russians were on Friday also accused of hacking
into the computer systems of American state election authorities and of
companies that produced software used by states for running elections.
Rosenstein said there was no evidence of any vote tallies being
affected.
The Russians used techniques including “spearphishing” and spying
software, before publishing the emails through well-known online
accounts including Guccifer 2.0 and DCLeaks, which purported to be
independent American and Romanian hackers. Rosenstein said both personas
were in fact operated by the GRU.
In February this year, Mueller’s team filed criminal charges against 13 Russians and three Russian companies for interfering in the presidential campaign, using social media and coordinating with low-level Trump campaign activists.
Rosenstein said at the time that the Russians had waged “information
warfare” against the US during the 2016 campaign, with the aim of
“spreading distrust towards the candidates and the political system in
general”.
Mueller’s team has also charged Paul Manafort, Trump’s former
campaign chairman, with financial crimes. Three other Trump campaign
aides have pleaded guilty to lying to the FBI.
The Kremlin did not immediately respond to questions about the US
indictment, which was released just as an aide to the Russian president
was briefing reporters on Monday’s summit between Putin and Trump.
The two leaders will hold a closed tête-à-tête on Monday morning,
followed by a larger meeting between the two delegations. Yuri Ushakov,
the aide to Putin, did not bring up the hacking accusations while
discussing a list of likely topics for Monday’s talks.
The indictment targeted 12 Russian military officers in two
cyberwarfare units in the Military Intelligence Directorate, or GRU, up
to the rank of colonel. The Russians are charged with conspiracies
against the US, aggravated identity theft and money laundering.
Both GRU units are based in Moscow and traditionally charged with
deciphering foreign military communications. Publicly available
documents and contracts confirm that one of those indicted, Viktor
Netyshko, heads the 85th Main Center for special service.
The
United States has already sanctioned six officers from the GRU
leadership, including Igor Korobov, the directorate’s head. None of
those officers were included in Friday’s criminal indictment.
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