/Top U.S. intel official: China wants Trump defeated, Russia is sabotaging Biden

Top U.S. intel official: China wants Trump defeated, Russia is sabotaging Biden

WASHINGTON — Kremlin-linked operatives are trying to boost President Donald Trump’s candidacy while China wants to see him defeated, the top U.S. counterintelligence official said Friday in a strikingly detailed update on American intelligence assessments about foreign preferences in the upcoming presidential election.

Bill Evanina, a former FBI agent who is leading election security efforts at the Office of the Director of National Intelligence, provided new information about what U.S. intelligence analysts have determined regarding the election interference goals of China, Russia and Iran.

Evanina said the Russians, in a reprise of the 2016 presidential election, were once again trying to help Trump by sabotaging his opponent.

President Donald Trump meets with Russian President Vladimir Putin in Helsinki, Finland, on July 16, 2018.Kevin Lamarque / Reuters file

“We assess that Russia is using a range of measures to primarily denigrate former Vice President Biden and what it sees as an anti-Russia ‘establishment,'” Evanina said, adding that a pro-Russia Ukrainian parliamentarian, Andriy Derkach “is spreading claims about corruption — including through publicizing leaked phone calls — to undermine former Vice President Biden’s candidacy and the Democratic Party.”

Evanina added that “some Kremlin-linked actors are also seeking to boost President Trump’s candidacy on social media and Russian television.”

Derkach has met with Trump’s personal lawyer, Rudy Giuliani, to discuss his claims about Biden, and a Republican senator, Ron Johnson of Wisconsin, has sought to draw attention to those claims in congressional inquiries.

The statement by Evanina marks the most detailed assessment yet by a Trump appointee of Russian activities designed to damage Trump’s opponent and boost his election prospects. Trump has dismissed the idea that Russia tried to help him, and at times has questioned whether Russia intervened in the 2016 election at all.

The Trump campaign responded to the release of the intelligence assessment in a statement. “We don’t need or want foreign interference, and President Trump will beat Joe Biden fair and square,” said the campaign. “The intelligence community’s assessment that both China and Iran are trying to stop President Trump’s re-election is concerning, but clearly because he has held them accountable after years of coddling by politicians like Joe Biden.”

Evanina wrote that China, which intelligence officials say does not interfere as actively or as purposely as Russia, “prefers that President Trump — whom Beijing sees as unpredictable — does not win reelection.”

“China has been expanding its influence efforts ahead of November 2020 to shape the policy environment in the United States, pressure political figures it views as opposed to China’s interests, and deflect and counter criticism of China,” Evanina added.

Iran, he said, “seeks to undermine U.S. democratic institutions, President Trump, and to divide the country in advance of the 2020 elections.”

Iran will do so, he said, by “spreading disinformation on social media and recirculating anti-U.S. content. Tehran’s motivation to conduct such activities is, in part, driven by a perception that President Trump’s reelection would result in a continuation of U.S. pressure on Iran in an effort to foment regime change.”

Evanina’s statement did not describe Russia and China’s activities in similar detail.

As a general matter, he said, foreign governments “will continue to use covert and overt influence measures in their attempts to sway U.S. voters’ preferences and perspectives, shift U.S. policies, increase discord in the United States, and undermine the American people’s confidence in our democratic process.”

These campaigns “may also seek to compromise our election infrastructure for a range of possible purposes, such as interfering with the voting process, stealing sensitive data, or calling into question the validity of the election results,” he added, but “it would be difficult for our adversaries to interfere with or manipulate voting results at scale.”

The heads of the Senate Intelligence Committee issued a bipartisan statement praising Evanina’s disclosures. That was in contrast to the reaction to a far less detailed statement Evanina released last month, after which Democrats accused him of underplaying the threat from Russia.

“NCSC Director Evanina’s statement today builds on and provides additional context to his previous statement two weeks ago,” said the statement from acting chairman Marco Rubio, R-Fla., and vice chairman Mark Warner, D-Va. “We thank him for providing this additional information to the American people, and we look forward to his continued engagement, along with other members of the Intelligence Community and the Administration, with the public over the next 87 days.”

Rubio and Warner added: “Evanina’s statement highlights some of the serious and ongoing threats to our election from China, Russia, and Iran. Everyone — from the voting public, local officials, and members of Congress — needs to be aware of these threats. And all of us should endeavor to prevent outside actors from being able to interfere in our elections, influence our politics, and undermine confidence in our democratic institutions.”

Original Source