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Russian interference in the 2016 United States elections

The Russian government interfered in the 2016 United States elections with the goals of sabotaging the presidential campaign of Hillary Clinton, boosting the presidential campaign of Donald Trump, and increasing political and social discord in the United States. According to the U.S. intelligence community, the operation—code named Project Lakhta[3][4]—was ordered directly by Russian president Vladimir Putin.[5][6] The 448-page Mueller Report, made public in April 2019, examined over 200 contacts between the Trump campaign and Russian officials but concluded that there was insufficient evidence to bring any conspiracy or coordination charges against Trump or his associates.

Russian interference in the 2016 United States elections
Part of 2016 U.S. presidential election
ODNI declassified assessment of "Russian activities and intentions in recent U.S. elections"
DateMay 2014[1][2] – November 8, 2016
Also known asProject Lakhta
Motive
  • Destabilization of the United States
  • Election of Donald Trump
PerpetratorRussian government
Outcome

The Internet Research Agency (IRA), based in Saint Petersburg, Russia, and described as a troll farm, created thousands of social media accounts that purported to be Americans supporting radical political groups and planned or promoted events in support of Trump and against Clinton. They reached millions of social media users between 2013 and 2017. Fabricated articles and disinformation were spread from Russian government-controlled media, and promoted on social media. Additionally, computer hackers affiliated with the Russian military intelligence service (GRU) infiltrated information systems of the Democratic National Committee (DNC), the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee (DCCC), and Clinton campaign officials, notably chairman John Podesta, and publicly released stolen files and emails through DCLeaks, Guccifer 2.0, and WikiLeaks during the election campaign. Several individuals connected to Russia contacted various Trump campaign associates, offering business opportunities to the Trump Organization and proffering damaging information on Clinton. Russian government officials have denied involvement in any of the hacks or leaks.

Russian interference activities triggered strong statements from U.S. intelligence agencies, a direct warning by then-U.S. president Barack Obama to Russian president Vladimir Putin, renewed economic sanctions against Russia, and closures of Russian diplomatic facilities and expulsion of their staff. The Senate and House Intelligence Committees conducted their own investigations into the matter. Donald Trump denied the interference had occurred.

The Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) opened the Crossfire Hurricane investigation of Russian interference in July 2016, including a special focus on links between Trump associates and Russian officials and spies and suspected coordination between the Trump campaign and the Russian government. Russian attempts to interfere in the election were first disclosed publicly by members of the United States Congress in September 2016, confirmed by US intelligence agencies in October 2016, and further detailed by the Director of National Intelligence office in January 2017. The dismissal of James Comey, the FBI director, by President Trump in May 2017, was partly because of Comey's investigation of the Russian interference.

The FBI's work was taken over in May 2017 by former FBI director Robert Mueller, who led a special counsel investigation until March 2019.[7] Mueller concluded that Russian interference was "sweeping and systematic" and "violated U.S. criminal law", and he indicted twenty-six Russian citizens and three Russian organizations. The investigation also led to indictments and convictions of Trump campaign officials and associated Americans, on unrelated charges. The Mueller report, made public in April 2019, examined numerous contacts between the Trump campaign and Russian officials but concluded that, though the Trump campaign welcomed the Russian activities and expected to benefit from them, there was insufficient evidence to bring any conspiracy or coordination charges against Trump or his associates.

The Republican-led Senate Intelligence Committee investigation submitted the first in their five-volume 1,313-page report in July 2019. The committee concluded that the January 2017 intelligence community assessment alleging Russian interference was "coherent and well-constructed". The first volume also concluded that the assessment was "proper", learning from analysts that there was "no politically motivated pressure to reach specific conclusions". The final and fifth volume, which was the result of three years of investigations, was released in August 2020,[8] ending one of the United States "highest-profile congressional inquiries".[9][10] The Committee report found that the Russian government had engaged in an "extensive campaign" to sabotage the election in favor of Trump, which included assistance from some of Trump's own advisers.[9]

In November 2020, newly released passages from the Mueller special counsel investigation's report indicated: "Although WikiLeaks published emails stolen from the DNC in July and October 2016 and Stone—a close associate to Donald Trump—appeared to know in advance the materials were coming, investigators 'did not have sufficient evidence' to prove active participation in the hacks or knowledge that the electronic thefts were continuing."[11]

Background and Russian actors

Prior Russian election interference in Ukraine

The May 2014 Ukrainian presidential election was disrupted by cyberattacks over several days, including the release of hacked emails, attempted alteration of vote tallies, and distributed denial-of-service attacks to delay the final result. They were found to have been launched by pro-Russian hackers.[12][13] Malware that would have displayed a graphic declaring far-right candidate Dmytro Yarosh the electoral winner was removed from Ukraine's Central Election Commission less than an hour before polls closed. Despite this, Channel One Russia falsely reported that Yarosh had won, broadcasting the same fake graphic that had been planted on the election commission's website.[12][14] Political scientist Peter Ordeshook said in 2017, "These faked results were geared for a specific audience in order to feed the Russian narrative that has claimed from the start that ultra-nationalists and Nazis were behind the revolution in Ukraine."[12] The same Sofacy malware used in the Central Election Commission hack was later found on the servers of the Democratic National Committee (DNC).[14] Around the same time as Russia's attempt to hack the 2014 elections, the Obama administration received a report suggesting that the Kremlin was building a disinformation program which could be used to interfere in Western politics.[13]

Vladimir Putin

 
American intelligence agencies concluded that Russian president Vladimir Putin personally ordered the covert operation, code named Project Lakhta, while Putin denied the allegations.[15] At the 2018 Helsinki summit, Putin said that he wanted Trump to win because he talked about normalizing the U.S.–Russia relationship.[16]

In December 2016, two unidentified senior intelligence officials told several U.S. news media outlets[Note 1] that they were highly confident that the operation to interfere in the 2016 presidential election was personally directed by Vladimir Putin.[5] Under Putin's direction, the goals of the operation are reported to have evolved from first undermining American trust in their own democracy to undermining Clinton's campaign, and by the fall of 2016 to directly helping Trump's campaign, possibly because Putin believed Trump would ease economic sanctions.[19][20] Her presidential campaign's Russia policy advisor was Richard Lourie.

The officials believe Putin became personally involved after Russia accessed the DNC computers,[5] because such an operation would require high-level government approval.[21] White House Press Secretary Josh Earnest[22] and Obama foreign policy advisor and speechwriter Ben Rhodes agreed with this assessment, with Rhodes saying operations of this magnitude required Putin's consent.[19]

In January 2017, the Office of the Director of National Intelligence,[23] delivered a declassified report, (representing the work of the FBI, the CIA and the NSA) with a similar conclusion:

President Vladimir Putin ordered an influence campaign in 2016 aimed at the U.S. presidential election. Russia's goals were to undermine public faith in the U.S. democratic process, denigrate Secretary Clinton, and harm her electability and potential presidency. We further assess Putin and the Russian Government developed a clear preference for president-elect Trump. We have high confidence in these judgments.[24]: 7 

Putin blamed Clinton for the 2011–2012 mass protests in Russia against his rule, according to the report[24]: 11  (Clinton was U.S. Secretary of State at the time).[25][26] FBI Director James Comey also has testified that Putin disliked Clinton and preferred her opponent,[27] and Clinton herself has accused Putin of having a grudge against her.[26] Michael McFaul, who was U.S. ambassador to Russia, said the operation could be a retaliation by Putin against Clinton.[28] Russian security expert Andrei Soldatov has said, "[The Kremlin] believes that with Clinton in the White House it will be almost impossible to lift sanctions against Russia. So it is a very important question for Putin personally. This is a question of national security."[29]

Russian officials have denied the allegations multiple times. In June 2016, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov denied any connection of Russia to the DNC hacks.[30] In December 2016, when U.S. intelligence officials publicly accused Putin of being directly involved in the covert operation,[5] Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov said he was "astonished" by this "nonsense".[31] Putin also has denied any Kremlin involvement in the election campaign, though in June 2017 he told journalists that "patriotically minded" Russian hackers may have been responsible for the campaign cyberattacks against the U.S.,[32] and in 2018 he stated that he had wanted Trump to win the election "because he talked about bringing the U.S.-Russia relationship back to normal."[33]

U.S. counter-disinformation team

The United States Department of State planned to use a unit formed with the intention of combating disinformation from the Russian government, but it was disbanded in September 2015 after department heads missed the scope of propaganda before the 2016 U.S. election.[34] The unit had been in development for eight months prior to being scrapped.[34] Titled the Counter-Disinformation Team, it would have been a reboot of the Active Measures Working Group set up by the Reagan Administration.[35] It was created under the Bureau of International Information Programs.[35] Work began in 2014, with the intention of countering propaganda from Russian sources such as TV network RT (formerly called Russia Today).[35] A beta website was ready, and staff were hired by the U.S. State Department for the unit prior to its cancellation.[35] U.S. Intelligence officials explained to former National Security Agency analyst and counterintelligence officer John R. Schindler writing in The New York Observer (published at the time by Jared Kushner) that the Obama Administration decided to cancel the unit, as they were afraid of antagonizing Russia.[35] A State Department representative told the International Business Times after being contacted regarding the closure of the unit, that the U.S. was disturbed by propaganda from Russia, and the strongest defense was sincere communication.[34] U.S. Undersecretary of State for Public Diplomacy Richard Stengel was the point person for the unit before it was canceled.[35] Stengel had written in 2014 that RT was engaged in a disinformation campaign about Ukraine.[36]

Russian Institute for Strategic Studies

 
The Russian Institute for Strategic Studies began working for the Russian presidency after 2009.

In April 2017, Reuters cited several unnamed U.S. officials as having stated that the Russian Institute for Strategic Studies (RISS) had developed a strategy to sway the U.S. election to Donald Trump and, failing that, to disillusion voters.[37] The development of strategy was allegedly ordered by Putin and directed by former officers of Russian Foreign Intelligence Service (SVR), retired SVR general Leonid Petrovich Reshetnikov being head of the RISS at the time. The Institute had been a part of the SVR until 2009, whereafter it has worked for the Russian Presidential Administration.[38]

The U.S. officials said the propaganda efforts began in March 2016. The first set of recommendations, issued in June 2016, proposed that Russia support a candidate for U.S. president more favorable to Russia than Obama had been, via Russia-backed news outlets and a social media campaign. It supported Trump until October, when another conclusion was made that Hillary Clinton was likely to win, and the strategy should be modified to work to undermine U.S. voters′ faith in their electoral system and a Clinton presidency by alleging voter fraud in the election.[37] RISS director Mikhail Fradkov and Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov denied the allegations.[39]

Preparation

According to a February 2018 criminal indictment,[40] more than two years before the election, two Russian women obtained visas for what the indictment alleged was a three-week reconnaissance tour of the United States, including battleground states such as Colorado, Michigan, Nevada and New Mexico, to gather intelligence on American politics. The 2018 indictment alleged that another Russian operative visited Atlanta in November 2014 on a similar mission.[40] In order to establish American identities for individuals and groups within specific social media communities,[41] hundreds of email, PayPal and bank accounts and fraudulent driver's licenses were created for fictitious Americans—and sometimes real Americans whose Social Security numbers had been stolen.[40]

Social media and Internet trolls

According to the special counsel investigation's Mueller Report (officially named "Report on the Investigation into Russian Interference in the 2016 Presidential Election"),[42] the first method of Russian interference used the Internet Research Agency (IRA), a Kremlin-linked troll farm, to wage "a social media campaign that favored presidential candidate Donald J. Trump and disparaged presidential candidate Hillary Clinton".[43] The Internet Research Agency also sought to "provoke and amplify political and social discord in the United States".[44]

By February 2016, internal IRA documents showed an order to support the candidacies of Donald Trump and Bernie Sanders, while IRA members were to "use any opportunity to criticize" Hillary Clinton and the rest of the candidates.[45] From June 2016, the IRA organized election rallies in the U.S. "often promoting" Trump's campaign while "opposing" Clinton's campaign.[46] The IRA posed as Americans, hiding their Russian background, while asking Trump campaign members for campaign buttons, flyers, and posters for the rallies.[47]

 
Initially in 2016 Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg said, "I think the idea that fake news on Facebook influenced the election in any way, I think is a pretty crazy idea."[48]

Russian use of social media to disseminate propaganda content was very broad. Facebook and Twitter were used, but also Reddit, Tumblr, Pinterest, Medium, YouTube, Vine, and Google+ (among other sites). Instagram was by far the most used platform, and one that largely remained out of the public eye until late 2018.[49][50] The Mueller report lists IRA-created groups on Facebook including "purported conservative groups" (e.g. 'Tea Party News'), "purported Black social justice groups" (e.g. 'Blacktivist'), "LGBTQ groups" ('LGBT United'), and "religious groups" ('United Muslims of America').[47] The IRA Twitter accounts included @TEN_GOP (claiming to be related to the Tennessee Republican Party), @jenn_abrams and @Pamela_Moore13; both claimed to be Trump supporters and both had 70,000 followers.[51]

Several Trump campaign members (Donald J. Trump Jr., Eric Trump, Kellyanne Conway, Brad Parscale and Michael T. Flynn) linked or reposted material from the IRA's @TEN_GOP Twitter account listed above. Other people who responded to IRA social media accounts include Michael McFaul, Sean Hannity, Roger Stone and Michael Flynn Jr.[52]

Advertisements bought by Russian operatives for the Facebook social media site are estimated to have reached 10 million users. But many more Facebook users were contacted by accounts created by Russian actors. 470 Facebook accounts are known to have been created by Russians during the 2016 campaign. Of those accounts six generated content that was shared at least 340 million times, according to research done by Jonathan Albright, research director for Columbia University's Tow Center for Digital Journalism.[53] The most strident Internet promoters of Trump were paid Russian propagandists/trolls, who were estimated by The Guardian to number several thousand.[54] (By 2017 the U.S. news media was focusing on the Russian operations on Facebook and Twitter and Russian operatives moved on to Instagram.)[50] The Mueller Report found the IRA spent $100,000 for more than 3,500 Facebook advertisements from June 2015 to May 2017,[55] which included anti-Clinton and pro-Trump advertisements.[47] In comparison, Clinton and Trump campaigns spent $81 million on Facebook ads.[56][57]

Fabricated articles and disinformation[58] were spread from Russian government-controlled outlets, RT and Sputnik to be popularized on pro-Russian accounts on Twitter and other social media.[58] Researchers have compared Russian tactics during the 2016 U.S. election to the "active measures" of the Soviet Union during the Cold War,[58] but made easier by the use of social media.[58][59]

Monitoring 7,000 pro-Trump social media accounts over a 2+12-year period, researchers J. M. Berger, Andrew Weisburd and Clint Watts[60] found the accounts denigrated critics of Russian activities in Syria and propagated falsehoods about Clinton's health.[61] Watts found Russian propaganda to be aimed at fomenting "dissent or conspiracies against the U.S. government and its institutions",[62] and by autumn of 2016 amplifying attacks on Clinton and support for Trump, via social media, Internet trolls, botnets, and websites.[58]

 
Former site of the Internet Research Agency in Saint Petersburg, Russia

Monitoring news on Twitter directed at one state (Michigan) prior to the election, Philip N. Howard found about half of it fabricated or untrue; the other half came from real news sources.[63] In continued analysis after the election, Howard and other researchers found the most prominent methods of misinformation were ostensibly "organic posting, not advertisements", and influence operation activity increased after the 2016 and was not limited to the election.[64]

Facebook originally denied that fake news on their platform had influenced the election and had insisted it was unaware of any Russian-financed advertisements but later admitted that about 126 million Americans may have seen posts published by Russia-based operatives.[65][66][67] Criticized for failing to stop fake news from spreading on its platform during the 2016 election,[68] Facebook originally thought that the fake-news problem could be solved by engineering, but in May 2017 it announced plans to hire 3,000 content reviewers.[69][failed verification]

According to an analysis by BuzzFeed News, the "20 top-performing false election stories from hoax sites and hyperpartisan blogs generated 8,711,000 shares, reactions, and comments on Facebook."[70] In September 2017, Facebook told congressional investigators it had discovered that hundreds of fake accounts linked to a Russian troll farm had bought $100,000 in advertisements targeting the 2016 U.S. election audience.[66] The ads, which ran between June 2015 and May 2017, primarily focused on divisive social issues; roughly 25% were geographically targeted.[71][72] Facebook has also turned over information about the Russian-related ad buys to Special Counsel Robert Mueller.[73] Approximately 3,000 adverts were involved, and these were viewed by between four and five million Facebook users prior to the election.[74] On November 1, 2017, the House Intelligence Committee released a sample of Facebook ads and pages that had been financially linked to the Internet Research Agency.[75] A 2019 analysis by The Washington Post's "Outlook" reviewed a number of troll accounts active in 2016 and 2018, and found that many resembled organic users. Rather than wholly negative and obvious, many confirmed troll accounts deployed humor and were "astute in exploiting questions of culture and identity and are frequently among the first to push new divisive conversations", some of which moved quickly to mainstream print media.[76]

In January 2023, a study from New York University's Center for Social Media and Politics about the influence of Russian trolls on Twitter found they had little influence on 2016 voters' attitudes, polarization, or voting behavior. The study was limited to Twitter and did not examine other social media, such as the much larger Facebook. It did not address the Russian hack-and-leak operations: "Another major study in 2018 by University of Pennsylvania communications professor Kathleen Hall Jamieson suggested those probably played a significant role in the 2016 race's outcome. Lastly, it doesn't suggest that foreign influence operations aren't a threat at all." It found that voters who were already favorably disposed to Trump were exposed the most. "Only 1 percent of Twitter users accounted for 70 percent of the exposure to accounts that Twitter identified as Russian troll accounts. Highly partisan Republicans were exposed to nine times more posts than non-Republicans."[77][78]

Cyberattack on Democrats

Hillary Clinton at the 2016 Democratic National Convention

According to the Mueller Report, the second method of Russian interference saw the Russian intelligence service, the GRU, hacking into email accounts owned by volunteers and employees of the Clinton presidential campaign, including that of campaign chairman John Podesta, and also hacking into "the computer networks of the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee (DCCC) and the Democratic National Committee (DNC)". As a result, the GRU obtained hundreds of thousands of hacked documents, and the GRU proceeded by arranging releases of damaging hacked material via the WikiLeaks organization and also GRU's personas "DCLeaks" and "Guccifer 2.0".[79][80][81]

Starting in March 2016, the Russian military intelligence agency GRU sent "spearphishing" emails targeted more than 300 individuals affiliated with the Democratic Party or the Clinton campaign, according to the Special Counsel's July 13, 2018 Indictment. Using malware to explore the computer networks of the DNC and DCCC,[82] they harvested tens of thousands of emails and attachments and deleted computer logs and files to obscure evidence of their activities.[83] These were saved and released in stages to the public during the three months before the 2016 election.[84] Some were released strategically to distract the public from media events that were either beneficial to the Clinton campaign or harmful to Trump's.

The first tranche of 19,000 emails and 8,000 attachments was released on July 22, 2016, three days before the Democratic convention. The resulting news coverage created the impression that the Democratic National Committee was biased against Clinton's Democratic primary challenger Bernie Sanders (who received 43% of votes cast in the Democratic presidential primaries) and forced DNC Chairwoman Debbie Wasserman Schultz to resign, disrupting the plans of the Clinton campaign.[85][86] A second tranche was released on October 7, a few hours after the Obama Administration released a statement by the Department of Homeland Security and the director of National Intelligence accusing the Russian government of interfering in the election through hacking, and just 29 minutes after The Washington Post reported on the Access Hollywood videotape where Trump boasted about grabbing women "by the pussy". The stolen documents effectively distracted media and voter attention from both stories.[85][84][87]

Stolen emails and documents were given both to platforms created by hackers—a website called DCLeaks and a persona called Guccifer 2.0 claiming to be a lone hacker—and to an unidentified organization believed to be WikiLeaks.[86] (The Russians registered the domain dcleaks.com,[88] using principally Bitcoin to pay for the domain and the hosting.)[88]

Podesta hack

John Podesta, Chairman of Hillary Clinton's presidential campaign, received a phishing email on March 19, 2016, sent by Russian operatives purporting to alert him of a "compromise in the system", and urging him to change his password "immediately" by clicking on a link.[89] This allowed Russian hackers to access around 60,000 emails from Podesta's private account.[90]

John Podesta, later told Meet the Press that the FBI spoke to him only once regarding his hacked emails and that he had not been sure what had been taken until a month before the election on October 7 "when [WikiLeaks' Julian] Assange ... started dumping them out and said they would all dump out, that's when I knew that they had the contents of my email account."[91]

The WikiLeaks October 7 dump started less than an hour after The Washington Post released the Donald Trump and Billy Bush recording Access Hollywood tape, WikiLeaks announced on Twitter that it was in possession of 50,000 of Podesta's emails, and a few hours after the Obama Administration released a statement by the Department of Homeland Security and the director of National Intelligence stating "The U.S. Intelligence Community (USIC) is confident that the Russian Government directed the recent compromises of e-mails from U.S. persons and institutions, including from U.S. political organizations."[92]

It initially released 2,050 of these.[93] The cache included emails containing transcripts of Clinton's paid speeches to Wall Street banks, controversial comments from staffers about Catholic voters, infighting among employees of the Clinton campaign, as well as potential vice-presidential picks for Clinton.[94][95] The Clinton campaign did not confirm or deny the authenticity of the emails but emphasized they were stolen and distributed by parties hostile to Clinton and that "top national security officials" had stated "that documents can be faked as part of a sophisticated Russian misinformation campaign."[96]

Podesta's e-mails, once released by WikiLeaks, formed the basis for Pizzagate, a debunked conspiracy theory that falsely posited that Podesta and other Democratic Party officials were involved in a child trafficking ring based out of pizzerias in Washington, D.C.[97][98]

DNC hack

 
Debbie Wasserman Schultz resigned her position as chairperson of the DNC.[99]

The United States Intelligence Community concluded by January 2017 that the GRU (using the names Cozy Bear and Fancy Bear) had gained access to the computer network of the Democratic National Committee (DNC)—the formal governing body of the Democratic Party—in July 2015 and maintained it until at least June 2016,[100][101] when they began leaking the stolen information via the Guccifer 2.0 online persona, DCLeaks.com and Wikileaks.[102] Debbie Wasserman Schultz resigned as DNC chairwoman following the release of e-mails by WikiLeaks that showed DNC officials discussing Bernie Sanders and his presidential campaign in a derisive and derogatory manner.[103] Emails leaked included personal information about Democratic Party donors, with credit card and Social Security numbers,[104][105] emails by Wasserman Schultz calling a Sanders campaign official a "damn liar".[106]

Following the July 22 publication of a large number of hacked emails by WikiLeaks, the FBI announced that it would investigate the theft of DNC emails.[107][108]

Intelligence analysis of attack

In June and July 2016, cybersecurity experts and firms, including CrowdStrike,[109] Fidelis, FireEye,[110] Mandiant, SecureWorks,[111] Symantec[110] and ThreatConnect, stated the DNC email leaks were part of a series of cyberattacks on the DNC committed by two Russian intelligence groups, called Fancy Bear and Cozy Bear,[112][113] also known respectively as APT28 and APT29 / The Dukes.[114][115][109][116] ThreatConnect also noted possible links between the DC Leaks project and Russian intelligence operations because of a similarity with Fancy Bear attack patterns.[117] SecureWorks added that the actor group was operating from Russia on behalf of the Russian government.[118][119] de Volkskrant later reported that Dutch intelligence agency AIVD had penetrated the Russian hacking group Cozy Bear in 2014, and observed them in 2015 hack the State Department in real time, while capturing pictures of the hackers via a security camera in their workspace.[120][121] American, British, and Dutch intelligence services had also observed stolen DNC emails on Russian military intelligence networks.[122]

Intelligence reaction and indictment

On October 7, 2016, Secretary Johnson and Director Clapper issued a joint statement that the intelligence community is confident the Russian Government directed the recent compromises of e-mails from U.S. persons and institutions, including from U.S. political organizations, and that the disclosures of hacked e-mails on sites like DCLeaks.com and WikiLeaks are consistent with the Russian-directed efforts.[123]

In the July 2018 indictment by the Justice Department of twelve Russian GRU intelligence officials posing as "a Guccifer 2.0 persona" for conspiring to interfere in the 2016 elections[124][125] was for hacking into computers of the Clinton campaign, the Democratic National Committee, state election boards, and secretaries of several states. The indictment describes "a sprawling and sustained cyberattack on at least three hundred people connected to the Democratic Party and the Clinton campaign". The leaked stolen files were released "in stages", a tactic wreaking "havoc on the Democratic Party throughout much of the election season."[125][84]

One collection of data that hackers obtained and that may have become a "devastating weapon" against the Clinton campaign was the campaign's data analytics and voter-turnout models,[126] extremely useful in targeting messages to "key constituencies" that Clinton needed to mobilize.[84] These voters were later bombarded by Russian operatives with negative information about Clinton on social media.[84]

WikiLeaks

 
WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange

In April 2017, CIA Director Mike Pompeo said WikiLeaks was a hostile intelligence agency aided by foreign states including Russia, and that the U.S. Intelligence Community concluded that Russia's "propaganda outlet", RT, had conspired with WikiLeaks.[127]

WikiLeaks[128] and its founder Julian Assange[129][130] have made a number of statements denying that the Russian government was the source of the material. However, an anonymous CIA official said that Russian officials transferred the hacked e-mails to WikiLeaks using "a circuitous route" from Russia's military intelligence services (GRU) to WikiLeaks via third parties.[131]

In a leaked private message on Twitter, Assange wrote that in the 2016 election "it would be much better for GOP to win", and that Hillary Clinton was a "sadistic sociopath".[132][133]

Hacking of Congressional candidates

Hillary Clinton was not the only Democrat attacked. Caches of Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee documents stolen by "Guccifer 2.0" were also released to reporters and bloggers around the U.S. As one Democratic candidate put it, "Our entire internal strategy plan was made public, and suddenly all this material was out there and could be used against me." The New York Times noted, "The seats that Guccifer 2.0 targeted in the document dumps were hardly random: They were some of the most competitive House races in the country."[134]

Hacking of Republicans

On January 10, 2017, FBI Director James Comey told the Senate Intelligence Committee that Russia succeeded in "collecting some information from Republican-affiliated targets but did not leak it to the public".[135] In earlier statements, an FBI official stated Russian attempts to access the RNC server were unsuccessful,[136] or had reportedly told the RNC chair that their servers were secure,[137] but that email accounts of individual Republicans (including Colin Powell) were breached. (Over 200 emails from Colin Powell were posted on the website DC Leaks.)[136][138][137][139] One state Republican Party (Illinois) may have had some of its email accounts hacked.[140]

Civil DNC lawsuit against Russian Federation

On April 20, 2018, the Democratic National Committee filed a civil lawsuit in federal court in New York, accusing the Russian Government, the Trump campaign, WikiLeaks, and others of conspiracy to alter the course of the 2016 presidential election and asking for monetary damages and a declaration admitting guilt. The lawsuit was dismissed by the judge, because New York "does not recognize the specific tort claims pressed in the suit"; the judge did not make a finding on whether there was or was not "collusion between defendants and Russia during the 2016 presidential election".[141]

Calls by Trump for Russians to hack or find Clinton's deleted emails

At a news conference on July 27, 2016, Trump publicly called on Russia to hack and release Hillary Clinton's deleted emails from her private server during her tenure in the State Department.[142][143]

Russia, if you're listening, I hope you're able to find the 30,000 emails that are missing, I think you will probably be rewarded mightily by our press.[142]

Trump's comment was condemned by the press and political figures, including some Republicans;[144] he replied that he had been speaking sarcastically.[145] Several Democratic Senators said Trump's comments appeared to violate the Logan Act,[146][147] and Harvard Law School professor Laurence Tribe added that Trump's call could be treasonous.[148]

The July 2018 federal indictment of Russian GRU agents said that the first, and unsuccessful, attempt by Russian hackers to infiltrate the computer servers inside Clinton's offices took place on the same day (July 27, 2016) Trump made his "Russia if you're listening" appeal.[149] While no direct link with Trump's remark was alleged in the indictment,[149] journalist Jane Mayer called the timing "striking".[84]

Trump asserted in March 2019 that he had been joking when he made the remark. Katy Tur of NBC News had interviewed Trump immediately after the 2016 remark, noting she gave him an opportunity to characterize it as a joke, but he did not.[150][151]

Targeting of important voting blocs and institutions

In her analysis of the Russian influence on the 2016 election, Kathleen Hall Jamieson argues that Russians aligned themselves with the "geographic and demographic objectives" of the Trump campaign, using trolls, social media, and hacked information to target certain important constituencies.[152]

Attempts to suppress African American votes and spread alienation

According to Vox, the Russian Internet Research Agency (IRA) focused on the culture of Muslims, Christians, Texas, and LGBTQ people, to engage those communities as part of a broader strategy to deepen social and political divisions within the U.S., but no other group received as much attention as Black Americans,[49] whose voter turnout has been historically crucial to the election of Democrats. Russia's influence campaign used an array of tactics aiming to reduce their vote for Hillary Clinton, according to a December 2018 report (The Tactics & Tropes of the Internet Research Agency)[153] commissioned by the Senate Intelligence Committee.[50]

A total 30 Facebook pages targeting Black Americans and 10 YouTube channels that posted 571 videos related to police violence against African-Americans.[154] The covertly Russian Instagram account @blackstagram had more than 300,000 followers.[50] A variety of Facebook pages targeting African Americans and later determined to be Russian amassed a total of 1.2 million individual followers, the report found.[50] The Facebook page for (the Russian) Blacktivist, garnered more hits than Black Lives Matter's (non-Russian) Facebook page.[84]

Influence operations included recruiting typically unknowing assets who would stage events and spread content from Russian influencers, spreading videos of police abuse and spreading misleading information about how to vote and whom to vote for.[84][50] The attempt to target Black Americans has been compared to the KGB's attempt to foster racial tensions during Operation INFEKTION.[155]

Arousing conservative voters

At least 25 social media pages drawing 1.4 million followers were created by Russian agents to target the American political right and promote the Trump candidacy.[50] An example of the targeting was the adding of Blue Lives Matter material to social media platforms by Russian operatives after the Black Lives Matter movement moved to the center of public attention in America and sparked a pro-police reaction.[50]

Jamieson[156] noted there was reason to believe Donald Trump would under-perform among two normally dependable conservative Republican voting blocs—churchgoing Christians and military service members and their families. It was thought pious Christians were put off by Trump's lifestyle as a Manhattan socialite,[157] known for his three marriages and many affairs but not for any religious beliefs, who had boasted of groping women.[158] Military personnel might lack enthusiasm for a candidate who avoided service in Vietnam[158] but who described himself as a "brave soldier" in having to face his "personal Vietnam" of the threat of sexually transmitted diseases,[159] and who mocked Gold Star parents and former prisoner of war John McCain. To overcome Trump's possible poor reputation among evangelicals and veterans, Russian trolls created memes that exploited typical conservative social attitudes about people of color, Muslims, and immigrants. One such meme juxtaposed photographs of a homeless veteran and an undocumented immigrant, alluding to the belief that undocumented immigrants receive special treatment.[160][84][152]: 84  CNN exit polls showed that Trump led Clinton among veterans by 26 percentage points and won a higher percentage of the evangelical vote than either of the two previous Republican presidential nominees, indicating that this tactic may have succeeded.[84]

Intrusions into state election systems

A 2019 report by the Senate Intelligence Committee[161] found "an unprecedented level of activity against state election infrastructure" by Russian intelligence in 2016.[162] The activity occurred in "all 50 states" and is thought by "many officials and experts" to have been "a trial run ... to probe American defenses and identify weaknesses in the vast back-end apparatus—voter-registration operations, state and local election databases, electronic poll books and other equipment" of state election systems.[163] The report warned that the United States "remains vulnerable" in the 2020 election.[162]

Of "particular concern" to the committee report was the Russians' hacking of three companies "that provide states with the back-end systems that have increasingly replaced the thick binders of paper used to verify voters' identities and registration status."[163]

Intrusions into state voter-registration systems

During the summer and fall of 2016, Russian hackers intruded into voter databases and software systems in 39 different states, alarming Obama administration officials to the point that they took the unprecedented step of contacting Moscow directly via the Moscow–Washington hotline and warning that the attacks risked setting off a broader conflict.[164]

As early as June 2016, the FBI sent a warning to states about "bad actors" probing state-elections systems to seek vulnerabilities.[165] In September 2016, FBI Director James Comey testified before the House Judiciary Committee that the FBI was investigating Russian hackers attempting to disrupt the 2016 election and that federal investigators had detected hacker-related activities in state voter-registration databases,[166] which independent assessments determined were soft targets for hackers.[167] Comey stated there were multiple attempts to hack voter database registrations.[165] Director of National Intelligence James Clapper attributed Russian hacking attempts to Vladimir Putin.[168]

 
Part of the 2017 NSA report as published by The Intercept.[169]

In August 2016, the FBI issued a nationwide "flash alert" warning state election officials about hacking attempts.[167] In September 2016, U.S. Department of Homeland Security officials and the National Association of Secretaries of State announced that hackers had penetrated, or sought to penetrate, the voter-registration systems in more than 20 states over the previous few months.[166] Federal investigators attributed these attempts to Russian government-sponsored hackers,[165] and specifically to Russian intelligence agencies.[167] Four of the intrusions into voter registration databases were successful, including intrusions into the Illinois and Arizona databases.[168] Although the hackers did not appear to change or manipulate data,[166][165] Illinois officials said information on up to 200,000 registered voters was stolen.[167] The FBI and DHS increased their election-security coordination efforts with state officials as a result.[165][166] Homeland Security Secretary Jeh Johnson reported that 18 states had requested voting-system security assistance from DHS.[165] The department also offered risk assessments to the states, but just four states expressed interest, as the election was rapidly approaching.[166] The reports of the database intrusions prompted alarm from Senate Minority Leader Harry Reid, Democrat of Nevada, who wrote to the FBI saying foreign attempts to cast doubt on free and fair elections was a danger to democracy not seen since the Cold War.[168]

A June 5, 2017, article in The Intercept described how "a top-secret National Security Agency report" (dated May 5, 2017) "details a months-long Russian hacking effort against the U.S. election infrastructure". The NSA did not draw conclusions but reported "the possibility that Russian hacking may have breached at least some elements of the voting system, with disconcertingly uncertain results". The NSA report revealed that the Russian military's GRU hackers used spearfishing attacks to successfully get employee login credentials and login information at VR Systems, an election software vendor. That information "can be used to penetrate 'corporate VPNs, email, or cloud services,' allowing access to internal corporate data". Two months later, a second attack used "trojanized" Microsoft Word documents that were supposedly from a VR systems employee. They targeted officials at local government organizations who were "involved in the management of voter registration systems". This type of attack gave the hackers the same unlimited access and capabilities as trusted users. The NSA was uncertain about the results of this attack. The report detailed other Russian attacks.[169]

On September 22, 2017, federal authorities notified the election officials of 21 states that their election systems had been targeted.[170] "In most cases, states said they were told the systems were not breached."[171] Over a year after the initial warnings, this was the first official confirmation many state governments received that their states specifically had been targeted.[172] Moreover, top elections officials of the states of Wisconsin and California have denied the federal claim. California Secretary of State Alex Padilla said, "California voters can further rest assured that the California Secretary of State elections infrastructure and websites were not hacked or breached by Russian cyber actors ... Our notification from DHS last Friday was not only a year late, it also turned out to be bad information."[173]

In May 2018, the Senate Intelligence Committee released its interim report on election security.[174] The committee concluded, on a bipartisan basis, that the response of the U.S. Department of Homeland Security to Russian government-sponsored efforts to undermine confidence in the U.S. voting process was "inadequate". The committee reported that the Russian government was able to penetrate election systems in at least 18, and possibly up to 21, states, and that in a smaller subset of states, infiltrators "could have altered or deleted voter registration data", although they lacked the ability to manipulate individual votes or vote tallies. The committee wrote that the infiltrators' failure to exploit vulnerabilities in election systems could have been because they "decided against taking action" or because "they were merely gathering information and testing capabilities for a future attack".[174] To prevent future infiltrations, the committee made a number of recommendations, including that "at a minimum, any machine purchased going forward should have a voter-verified paper trail and no WiFi capability".[174][175]

Investigation into financial flows

By January 2017, a multi-agency investigation, conducted by the FBI, the CIA, the NSA, the Justice Department, the Financial Crimes Enforcement Network and representatives of the DNI, was underway looking into how the Russian government may have secretly financed efforts to help Trump win the election had been conducted over several months by six federal agencies.[176] Investigations into Carter Page, Paul Manafort and Roger Stone were underway on January 19, the eve of the presidential inauguration.[177]

Money funneled through the NRA

By January 2018, the FBI was investigating the possible funneling of illegal money by Aleksandr Torshin, a deputy governor of the Central Bank of Russia, through the National Rifle Association of America, which was then used to help Donald Trump win the presidency.[178][179] Torshin is known to have close connections both to Russia's president Vladimir Putin and to the NRA, and he has been charged with money laundering in other countries.[178]

The NRA reported spending $30 million to support the 2016 Trump campaign, three times what it spent on Mitt Romney in 2012, and spent more than any other independent group including the leading Trump superPAC.[180] Sources with connections to the NRA have stated that the actual amount spent was much higher than $30 million. The subunits within the organization which made the donations are not generally required to disclose their donors.[178]

Spanish special prosecutor José Grinda Gonzalez has said that in early 2018 the Spanish police gave wiretapped audio to the FBI of telephone discussions between Torshin, and convicted money launderer and mafia boss Alexander Romanov. Torshin met with Donald Trump Jr. at an NRA event in May 2016 while attempting to broker a meeting between Donald Trump and Vladimir Putin.[181]

Maria Butina, a Russian anti-gun control activist who has served as a special assistant to Torshin and came to the U.S. on a student visa to attend university classes in Washington, claimed both before and after the election that she was part of the Trump campaign's communications with Russia.[182] Like Torshin, she cultivated a close relationship with the NRA.[183] In February 2016, Butina started a consulting business called Bridges LLC with Republican political operative Paul Erickson.[184] During Trump's presidential campaign Erickson contacted Rick Dearborn, one of Trump's advisors, writing in an email that he had close ties both to the NRA and to Russia, and asking how a back-channel meeting between Trump and Putin could be set up. The email was later turned over to federal investigators as part of the inquiry into Russia's meddling in the presidential election.[185] On July 15, 2018, Butina was arrested by the Federal Bureau of Investigation and charged with conspiring to act as an unregistered Russian agent who had attempted to create a backchannel of communications between American Republicans/conservatives and Russian officials by infiltrating the National Rifle Association, the National Prayer Breakfast, and conservative religious organizations.[186]

Money from Russian oligarchs

As of April 2018, Mueller's investigators were examining whether Russian oligarchs directly or indirectly provided illegal cash donations to the Trump campaign and inauguration. Investigators were examining whether oligarchs invested in American companies or think tanks having political action committees connected to the campaign, as well as money funneled through American straw donors to the Trump campaign and inaugural fund. At least one oligarch, Viktor Vekselberg, was detained and his electronic devices searched as he arrived at a New York area airport on his private jet in early 2018.[187][188] Vekselberg was questioned about hundreds of thousands of dollars in payments made to Michael Cohen after the election, through Columbus Nova, the American affiliate of Vekselberg's Renova Group.[189] Another oligarch was also detained on a recent trip to the United States, but it is unclear if he was searched. Investigators have also asked a third oligarch who has not traveled to the United States to voluntarily provide documents and an interview.[citation needed]

Intelligence analysis and reports

Non-U.S. intelligence

 
John O. Brennan, Assistant to the President for Counterterrorism and Homeland Security, in the Oval Office, January 4, 2010

In part because U.S. intelligence agencies cannot surveil U.S. citizens without a warrant, they were slow to recognize the pattern of Russia's efforts. From late 2015 until the summer of 2016, during routine surveillance of Russians, several countries discovered "suspicious 'interactions' between figures connected to Trump and known or suspected Russian agents". The UK, Germany, Estonia, Poland, and Australia (and possibly the Netherlands and France) relayed their discoveries to the U.S.[190]

Because the materials were highly sensitive, GCHQ director Robert Hannigan contacted CIA director John O. Brennan directly to give him information.[190] Concerned, Brennan gave classified briefings to U.S. Congress' "Gang of Eight" during late August and September 2016.[191] Referring only to intelligence allies and not to specific sources, Brennan told the Gang of Eight he had received evidence that Russia might be trying to help Trump win the U.S. election.[190] It was later revealed that the CIA had obtained intelligence from "sources inside the Russian government" that stated that Putin gave direct orders to disparage Clinton and help Trump.[192]

On May 23, 2017, Brennan stated to the House Intelligence Committee that Russia "brazenly interfered" in the 2016 U.S. elections. He said he first picked up on Russia's active meddling "last summer",[193] and that he had on August 4, 2016, warned his counterpart at Russia's FSB intelligence agency, Alexander Bortnikov, against further interference.[194]

The first public U.S. government assertion of Russian efforts to influence the 2016 election came in a joint statement on September 22, 2016, by Senator Dianne Feinstein and Representative Adam Schiff, the top Democrats on the Senate and House Intelligence Committees, respectively.[195][196]

October 2016 ODNI / DHS joint statement

 
James R. Clapper

At the Aspen security conference in summer 2016, Director of National Intelligence James Clapper said Vladimir Putin wanted to retaliate against perceived U.S. intervention in Russian affairs with the 2011–13 Russian protests and the ousting of Viktor Yanukovych in the Revolution of Dignity.[197] In July 2016, consensus grew within the CIA that Russia had hacked the DNC.[198] In a joint statement on October 7, 2016, the Department of Homeland Security and the Office of the Director of National Intelligence expressed confidence that Russia had interfered in the presidential election by stealing emails from politicians and U.S. groups and publicizing the information.[199] On December 2, intelligence sources told CNN they had gained confidence that Russia's efforts were aimed at helping Trump win the election.[200]

On October 7, the U.S. government formally accused Russia of hacking the DNC's computer networks to interfere in the 2016 presidential election with the help of organizations like WikiLeaks. The Department of Homeland Security and Office of the Director of National Intelligence on Election Security claimed in their joint statement, "The recent disclosures of alleged hacked e-mails on sites like DCLeaks.com and WikiLeaks and by the Guccifer 2.0 online persona are consistent with the methods and motivations of Russian-directed efforts."[201] This was corroborated by a report released by the Office of the Director of National Intelligence (ODNI), in conjunction with the CIA, the FBI, and the NSA on January 6, 2017.[202]

December 2016 CIA report

On December 9, the CIA told U.S. legislators the U.S. Intelligence Community had concluded, in a consensus view, that Russia conducted operations to assist Donald Trump in winning the presidency, stating that "individuals with connections to the Russian government", previously known to the intelligence community, had given WikiLeaks hacked emails from the DNC and John Podesta.[203] The agencies further stated that Russia had hacked the RNC as well, but did not leak information obtained from there.[136] These assessments were based on evidence obtained before the election.[204]

FBI inquiries

FBI has been investigating the Russian government's attempt to influence the 2016 presidential election—including whether campaign associates of Donald Trump's were involved in Russia's efforts—since July 31, 2016.[205]

Following the July 22 publication of a large number of emails by WikiLeaks, the FBI announced that it would investigate the theft of DNC emails.[107][108]

An earlier event investigated by the FBI was a May 2016 meeting between the Donald Trump campaign foreign policy advisor, George Papadopoulos, and Alexander Downer in a London wine bar, where Papadopoulos disclosed his inside knowledge of a large trove of Hillary Clinton emails that could potentially damage her campaign.[206]

Papadopoulos had gained this knowledge on March 14, 2016, when he held a meeting with Joseph Mifsud,[207] who told Papadopoulos the Russians had "dirt" on Clinton in the form of thousands of stolen emails. This occurred before the hacking of the DNC computers had become public knowledge,[207][208] and Papadopoulos later bragged "that the Trump campaign was aware the Russian government had dirt on Hillary Clinton".[209] In February 2019, Michael Cohen implicated Trump before the U.S. Congress, writing that Trump had knowledge that Roger Stone was communicating with WikiLeaks about releasing emails stolen from the DNC in 2016.[210][211]

John Podesta later testified before the House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence that in April 2016, the DNC did not know their computers had been hacked, leading Adam Schiff to state: "So if the [Clinton] campaign wasn't aware in April that the hacking had even occurred, the first campaign to be notified the Russians were in possession of stolen emails would have been the Trump campaign through Mr. Papadopoulos."[212]

In June 2016, the FBI notified the Illinois Republican Party that some of its email accounts may have been hacked.[213] In December 2016, an FBI official stated that Russian attempts to access the RNC server were unsuccessful.[136] In an interview with George Stephanopoulos of ABC News, RNC chair Reince Priebus stated they communicated with the FBI when they learned about the DNC hacks, and a review determined their servers were secure.[137] On January 10, 2017, FBI Director James Comey told the Senate Intelligence Committee that Russia succeeded in "collecting some information from Republican-affiliated targets but did not leak it to the public".[135]

On October 31, 2016, The New York Times said the FBI had been examining possible connections between the Trump campaign and Russia, but did not find any clear links.[214] At the time, FBI officials thought Russia was motivated to undermine confidence in the U.S. political process rather than specifically support Trump.[214] During a House Intelligence Committee hearing in early December, the CIA said it was certain of Russia's intent to help Trump.[215] On December 16, 2016, CIA Director John O. Brennan sent a message to his staff saying he had spoken with FBI Director James Comey and Director of National Intelligence James Clapper, and that all agreed with the CIA's conclusion that Russia interfered in the presidential election with the motive of supporting Donald Trump's candidacy.[216]

On December 29, 2016, the FBI and the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) released an unclassified report[116] that gave new technical details regarding methods used by Russian intelligence services for affecting the U.S. election, government, political organizations and private sector.[217][218]

The report included malware samples and other technical details as evidence that the Russian government had hacked the Democratic National Committee.[219] Alongside the report, DHS published Internet Protocol addresses, malware, and files used by Russian hackers.[217] An article in the Süddeutsche Zeitung discussed the difficulty of proof in matters of cybersecurity. One analyst told the Süddeutsche Zeitung that U.S. intelligence services could be keeping some information secret to protect their sources and analysis methods.[220] Clapper later said the classified version contained "a lot of the substantiation that could not be put in the [public] report".[221]

On March 20, 2017, during public testimony to the House Intelligence Committee, FBI director James Comey confirmed the existence of an FBI investigation into Russian interference and Russian links to the Trump campaign, including the question of whether there had been any coordination between the campaign and the Russians.[222] He said the investigation began in July 2016.[223] Comey made the unusual decision to reveal the ongoing investigation to Congress, citing benefit to the public good.[224] On October 7, 2016, Secretary Johnson and Director Clapper issued a joint statement that the intelligence community is confident the Russian Government directed the recent compromises of e-mails from U.S. persons and institutions, including from U.S. political organizations, and that the disclosures of hacked e-mails on sites like DCLeaks.com and WikiLeaks are consistent with the Russian-directed efforts. The statement also noted that the Russians have used similar tactics and techniques across Europe and Eurasia to influence public opinion there. On December 29, 2016, DHS and FBI released a Joint Analysis Report (JAR) which further expands on that statement by providing details of the tools and infrastructure used by Russian intelligence services to compromise and exploit networks and infrastructure associated with the recent U.S. election, as well as a range of U.S. government, political and private sector entities.[123]

January 2017 Intelligence Community Assessment

On January 6, 2017, after briefing the president, the president-elect, and members of the Senate and House, the Office of the Director of National Intelligence (ODNI) released a de-classified version of the report on Russian activities.[24] The intelligence community assessment (ICA), produced by the CIA, the FBI, the NSA, and the ODNI, asserted that Russia had carried out a massive cyber operation ordered by Russian president Putin with the goal to sabotage the 2016 U.S. elections.[225] The agencies concluded that Putin and the Russian government tried to help Trump win the election by discrediting Hillary Clinton and portraying her negatively relative to Trump, and that Russia had conducted a multipronged cyber campaign consisting of hacking and the extensive use of social media and trolls, as well as open propaganda on Russian-controlled news platforms.[226] The ICA contained no information about how the data was collected and provided no evidence underlying its conclusions.[227][228] Clapper said the classified version contained substantiation that could not be made public.[221] A large part of the ICA was dedicated to criticizing Russian TV channel RT America, which it described as a "messaging tool" for a "Kremlin-directed campaign to undermine faith in the U.S. Government and fuel political protest."[229]

On March 5, 2017, James Clapper said, in an interview with Chuck Todd on Meet the Press that the January 2017 ICA did not have evidence of collusion, but that it might have become available after he left the government. He agreed with Todd that the "idea of collusion" was not proven at that time.[230] On May 14, 2017, in an interview with George Stephanopoulos, Clapper explained more about the state of evidence for or against any collusion at the time of the January IC assessment, saying "there was no evidence of any collusion included in that report, that's not to say there wasn't evidence". He also stated he was also unaware of the existence of the formal investigation at that time.[231] In November 2017, Clapper explained that at the time of the Stephanopoulos interview, he did not know about the efforts of George Papadopoulos to set up meetings between Trump associates and Kremlin officials, nor about the meeting at Trump Tower between Donald Trump Jr., Jared Kushner, Paul Manafort and a Russian lawyer.[232]

In June 2017, E. W. Priestap, the assistant director of the FBI Counterintelligence Division, told the PBS Newshour program that Russian intelligence "used fake news and propaganda and they also used online amplifiers to spread the information to as many people as possible" during the election.[233]

James Comey testimony

In testimony to the Senate Intelligence Committee on June 8,[234] former FBI Director James Comey said he had "no doubt" Russia interfered in the 2016 election and that the interference was a hostile act.[235][236] Concerning the motives of his dismissal, Comey said, "I take the president at his word that I was fired because of the Russia investigation. Something about the way I was conducting it, the president felt, created pressure on him he wanted to relieve." He also said that, while he was director, Trump was not under investigation.[236]

U.S. government response

At least 17 distinct investigations were started to examine aspects of Russian interference in the 2016 United States elections.[237]

U.S. Senate

Members of the U.S. Senate Intelligence Committee traveled to Ukraine and Poland in 2016 and learned about Russian operations to influence their elections.[238]

Senator McCain called for a special select committee of the U.S. Senate to investigate Russian meddling in the election,[239][240] and called election meddling an "act of war".[241]

The Senate Intelligence Committee began work on its bipartisan inquiry in January 2017.[242] In May, the committee voted unanimously to give both chairmen solo subpoena power.[243][244] Soon after, the committee issued a subpoena to the Trump campaign for all Russia-related documents, emails, and telephone records.[245] In December, it was also looking at the presidential campaign of Green Party's Jill Stein for potential "collusion with the Russians".[246]

In May 2018, the Senate Intelligence Committee released the interim findings of their bipartisan investigation, finding that Russia interfered in the 2016 election with the goal of helping Trump gain the presidency, stating: "Our staff concluded that the [intelligence community's] conclusions were accurate and on point. The Russian effort was extensive, sophisticated, and ordered by President Putin himself for the purpose of helping Donald Trump and hurting Hillary Clinton."[247]

On January 10, 2018, Senator Ben Cardin of the United States Senate Foreign Relations Committee released, "Putin's Asymmetric Assault on Democracy in Russia and Europe: Implications for U.S. National Security."[248] The report said the interference in the 2016 United States elections was a part of Putin's "asymmetric assault on democracy" worldwide, including targeting elections in a number of countries, such as Britain, France and Germany, by "Moscow-sponsored hacking, internet trolling and financing for extremist political groups".[249]

2018 committee reports

The Senate Intelligence Committee commissioned two reports that extensively described the Russian campaign to influence social media during the 2016 election.[50][154]

One report (The Tactics & Tropes of the Internet Research Agency) was produced by the New Knowledge cybersecurity company aided by researchers at Columbia University and Canfield Research LLC.[153] Another (The IRA, Social Media and Political Polarization in the United States, 2012-2018) by the Computational Propaganda Project of Oxford University along with the social media analysis company Graphika.[250] The New Knowledge report highlighted "the energy and imagination" of the Russian effort to "sway American opinion and divide the country", and their focus on African-Americans.[50][154] The report identified more than 263 million "engagements" (likes, comments, shares, etc.) with Internet Research Agency content and faulted U.S. social media companies for allowing their platforms to be co-opted for foreign propaganda".[154] Examples of efforts included "campaigning for African American voters to boycott elections or follow the wrong voting procedures in 2016", "encouraging extreme right-wing voters to be more confrontational", and "spreading sensationalist, conspiratorial, and other forms of junk political news and misinformation to voters across the political spectrum."[64]

2020 committee report

On April 21, 2020, the Senate Intelligence Committee released a unanimous, heavily redacted report reviewing the January 2017 intelligence community assessment on Russian interference.[251][252][253] The committee felt that the assessment brought a "coherent and well-constructed intelligence basis for the case of unprecedented Russian interference in the 2016 U.S. presidential election", specifically that the interference was unprecedented in its "manner and aggressiveness".[253][254] The Senate committee heard "specific intelligence reporting to support the assessment that Putin and the Russian Government demonstrated a preference for candidate Trump", and that Putin "approved and directed" the interference.[254]

The committee praised the assessment as an "impressive accomplishment", noting that the assessment "reflects proper analytic tradecraft" despite a limited timeframe.[255][254] The committee also stated that "interviews with those who drafted and prepared the ICA affirmed that analysts were under no political pressure to reach specific conclusions."[256] A disagreement between the CIA and the NSA of the agencies' confidence level of Russia's preference for Trump "was reasonable, transparent, and openly debated among the agencies and analysts."[252] Additionally, the committee found that the Steele dossier was not used by the assessment to "support any of its analytic judgments".[255]

On August 17, 2020, the Republican-controlled Senate Intelligence Committee released the fifth and final volume of their 996-page report,[8] ending one of the United States "highest-profile congressional inquiries."[9][10] The Committee report, which was based on three years of investigations, found that the Russian government had engaged in an "extensive campaign" to sabotage the election in favor of Trump, which included assistance from some members of Trump's own advisers.[9] Volume 5 said the Trump administration had used "novel claims" of executive privilege to obstruct the inquiry.[257] The report said that Trump's 2016 campaign staff were eager to accept Russia's help,[257][258] however after the release of the report, acting Senate Intelligence Committee Chair Marco Rubio issued a statement stating the committee "found absolutely no evidence that then-candidate Donald Trump or his campaign colluded with the Russian government to meddle in the 2016 election."[259][260]

U.S. House of Representatives

After bipartisan calls to action in December 2016,[261][262] the House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence launched an investigation in January 2017 about Russian election meddling, including possible ties between Trump's campaign and Russia. The Senate Intelligence Committee launched its own parallel probe in January as well.[263] Fifteen months later, in April 2018, the House Intelligence Committee's Republican majority released its final report, amid harsh criticism from Democratic members of the committee.[264] The report found "no evidence" of collusion between the Russian government and the Trump campaign.[265]

On February 24, 2017, Republican Congressman Darrell Issa called for a special prosecutor to investigate whether Russia meddled with the U.S. election and was in contact with Trump's team during the presidential campaign, saying it would be improper for Trump's appointee, former Attorney General Jeff Sessions, to lead the investigation.[266][267] In March 2017, Democratic ranking committee member Adam Schiff said there was sufficient evidence to warrant further investigation,[268] and claimed to have seen "more than circumstantial evidence" of collusion.[269]

On April 6, 2017, Republican committee chairman Devin Nunes temporarily recused himself from the investigation after the House Ethics Committee announced that it would investigate accusations that he had disclosed classified information without authorization. He was replaced by Representative Mike Conaway.[270] Nunes was cleared of wrongdoing on December 8, 2017[271]

The committee's probe was shut down on March 12, 2018,[272][273] acknowledging that Russians interfered in the 2016 elections through an active measures campaign[274] promoting propaganda and fake news,[272] but rejecting the conclusion of intelligence agencies that Russia had favored Trump in the election[272][274] (although some Republican committee members distanced themselves from this assertion).[275] The committee's report did not find any evidence of collusion between the Trump campaign and the Russian government's efforts; Conaway said they had uncovered only "perhaps some bad judgment, inappropriate meetings".[272][274][276]

Democrats on the committee objected to the Republicans' closure of the investigation and their refusal to press key witnesses for further testimony or documentation which might have further established complicity of the Trump campaign with Russia.[277] Schiff issued a 21-page "status report" outlining plans to continue the investigation, including a list of additional witnesses to interview and documents to request.[278]

Obama administration

 
President Barack Obama ordered the United States Intelligence Community to investigate election hacking attempts since 2008.[279]

U.S. president Obama and Vladimir Putin had a discussion about computer security issues in September 2016, which took place over the course of an hour and a half.[280] During the discussion, which took place as a side segment during the then-ongoing G20 summit in China, Obama made his views known on cyber security matters between the U.S. and Russia.[280] Obama said Russian hacking stopped after his warning to Putin.[281] One month after that discussion the email leaks from the DNC cyber attack had not ceased, and President Obama decided to contact Putin via the Moscow–Washington hotline, commonly known as the red phone, on October 31, 2016. Obama emphasized the gravity of the situation by telling Putin: "International law, including the law for armed conflict, applies to actions in cyberspace."[282]

On December 9, 2016, Obama ordered the U.S. Intelligence Community to investigate Russian interference in the election and report before he left office on January 20, 2017.[279] U.S. Homeland Security Advisor and chief counterterrorism advisor to the president Lisa Monaco announced the study, and said foreign intrusion into a U.S. election was unprecedented and would necessitate investigation by subsequent administrations.[283] The intelligence analysis would cover malicious cyberwarfare occurring between the 2008 and 2016 elections.[284][285] A senior administration official said the White House was confident Russia interfered in the election.[286] The official said the order by President Obama would be a lessons learned report, with options including sanctions and covert cyber response against Russia.[286]

On December 12, 2016, White House Press Secretary Josh Earnest was critical of Trump's rejection of the conclusions of the U.S. Intelligence Community[287] that Russia used cyberattacks to influence the election.[287] United States Secretary of State John Kerry spoke on December 15, 2016, about President Obama's decision to approve the October 2016 joint statement by the Department of Homeland Security and the Office of the Director of National Intelligence.[19]

Obama said the U.S. government would respond to Russia via overt and covert methods, in order to send an unambiguous symbol to the world that any such interference would have harsh consequences in a December 15, 2016, interview by NPR journalist Steve Inskeep.[280] He added that a motive behind the Russian operation could better be determined after completion of the intelligence report he ordered.[280] Obama emphasized that Russian efforts caused more harm to Clinton than to Trump during the campaign.[280] At a press conference the following day, he highlighted his September 2016 admonition to Putin to cease engaging in cyberwarfare against the U.S.[288] Obama explained that the U.S. did not publicly reciprocate against Russia's actions due to a fear such choices would appear partisan.[288] President Obama stressed cyber warfare against the U.S. should be a bipartisan issue.[289]

In the last days of the Obama administration, officials pushed as much raw intelligence as possible into analyses and attempted to keep reports at relatively low classification levels as part of an effort to widen their visibility across the federal government. The information was filed in many locations within federal agencies as a precaution against future concealment or destruction of evidence in the event of any investigation.[290]

Punitive measures imposed on Russia

On December 29, 2016, the U.S. government announced a series of punitive measures against Russia.[291][292] The Obama administration imposed sanctions on four top officials of the GRU and declared persona non grata 35 Russian diplomats suspected of spying; they were ordered to leave the country within 72 hours.[293][Note 2] On December 30, two waterfront compounds used as retreats by families of Russian embassy personnel were shut down on orders of the U.S. government, citing spying activities: one in Upper Brookville, New York, on Long Island, and the other in Centreville, Maryland, on the Eastern Shore.[292][295] Further sanctions against Russia were undertaken, both overt and covert.[219][296][297] A White House statement said that cyberwarfare by Russia was geared to undermine U.S. trust in democracy and impact the election.[298] President Obama said his decision was taken after previous warnings to Russia.[299] In mid-July 2017, the Russian foreign ministry said the U.S. was refusing to issue visas to Russian diplomats to allow Moscow to replace the expelled personnel and get its embassy back up to full strength.[300]

Initially Putin refrained from retaliatory measures to the December 29 sanctions and invited all the children of the U.S. diplomats accredited in Russia to New Year's and Christmas celebrations at the Kremlin. He also said that steps for restoring Russian-American relations would be built on the basis of the policies developed by the Trump administration.[301][302] Later in May 2017, Russian banker Andrey Kostin, an associate of President Vladimir Putin, accused "the Washington elite" of purposefully disrupting the presidency of Donald Trump.[303]

Countering America's Adversaries Through Sanctions Act

 
German Chancellor Angela Merkel criticized the CAATSA sanctions against Russia, targeting EU–Russia energy projects.[304]

In June 2017, the Senate voted 98 to 2 for a bill that had been initially drafted in January by a bipartisan group of senators over Russia's continued involvement in the wars in Ukraine and Syria and its meddling in the 2016 election that envisaged sanctions on Russia as well as Iran, and North Korea;[305] the bill would expand the punitive measures previously imposed by executive orders and convert them into law.[306][307] An identical bill, introduced by Democrats in the House in July,[308] passed 419 to 3.[309]

The law forbids the president from lifting earlier sanctions without first consulting Congress, giving them time to reverse such a move. It targets Russia's defense industry by harming Russia's ability to export weapons, and allows the U.S. to sanction international companies that work to develop Russian energy resources.[310] The proposed sanctions also caused harsh criticism and threats of retaliatory measure on the part of the European Union, Germany and France.[304][311][312] On January 29, 2018, the Trump administration notified Congress that it would not impose additional sanctions on Russia under 2017 legislation designed to punish Moscow's meddling in the 2016 U.S. election. The administration insisted that the mere threat of the sanctions outlined in the Countering America's Adversaries Through Sanctions Act would serve as a deterrent, and that implementing the sanctions would therefore be unnecessary.[313]

Counter-sanctions by Russia

On July 27, as the sanctions bill was being passed by the Senate, Putin pledged a response to "this kind of insolence towards our country".[314] Shortly thereafter, Russia's foreign ministry Sergey Lavrov demanded that the U.S. reduce its diplomatic and technical personnel in the Moscow embassy and its consulates in St Petersburg, Ekaterinburg and Vladivostok to 455 persons—the same as the number of Russian diplomats posted in the U.S., and suspended the use of a retreat compound and a storage facility in Moscow.[315] Putin said he had made this decision personally, and confirmed that 755 employees of the U.S. diplomatic mission must leave Russia.[316][315]

Impact on election result

As of October 2018, the question of whether Donald Trump won the 2016 election because of the Russian interference had not been given much focus. The question has been declared impossible to answer or has been ignored in favor of other factors that led to Trump's victory.[84][126] Joel Benenson, the Clinton campaign's pollster, has said that the answer to this question will probably never be known, while Richard Burr, the Republican chairman of the Senate Intelligence Committee, said "we cannot calculate the impact that foreign meddling and social media had on this election". Michael V. Hayden, a former director of the CIA and the NSA, has asserted that the Russian attacks were "the most successful covert influence operation in history", but that their impact is "not just unknown, it's unknowable".[84] Statistician Nate Silver, writing in February 2018, described himself as "fairly agnostic" on the question, but noted that "thematically, the Russian interference tactics were consistent with the reasons Clinton lost".[317]

Clinton supporters have been more likely to blame her defeat on factors like campaign mistakes or Comey's reopening of the criminal investigation into Clinton's emails than to blame it on Russian interference. They have also drawn attention to the issue of whether Trump colluded with Russia in connection with the campaign.[84] In their book Shattered: Inside Hillary Clinton's Doomed Campaign, reporters Jonathan Allen and Amie Parnes reported that immediately after the election, Robby Mook and John Podesta decided to assert that Russian hacking was the real reason for the defeat.[318]

Several high-level Republicans,[who?] including those who would have benefited from Russia's efforts, have asserted that Russian interference did not determine the election's outcome. President Trump has asserted that "the Russians had no impact on our votes whatsoever",[319] and Vice President Pence has claimed that "it is the universal conclusion of our intelligence communities that none of those efforts had any impact on the outcome of the 2016 election."[320] Secretary of State Mike Pompeo added that "the intelligence community's assessment is that the Russian meddling that took place did not affect the outcome of the election".[321][85] In fact, the official intelligence assessment of January 2017 did not evaluate whether Russian activities had any impact on the election's outcome,[322] and CIA spokesman Dean Boyd said Pompeo's remark was erroneous.[323] House Speaker Paul Ryan claimed that it was "clear" that the Russian interference "didn't have a material effect on our elections".[126][85]

On the other hand, a number of former intelligence and law enforcement officials, at least one political scientist and one former U.S. president argue that Russian interference was decisive. In support of this argument, they point to the sophistication of the Russian propaganda on social media, the hacking of Democratic Party emails and the timing of their public release, the small shift in voter support needed to achieve victory in the Electoral College, and the relatively high number of undecided voters (who may have been more readily influenced).[85][126][84] James Clapper, the former director of National Intelligence, told Jane Mayer, "it stretches credulity to think the Russians didn't turn the election ... I think the Russians had more to do with making Clinton lose than Trump did".[84] Ex-FBI agent Clint Watts has written that "without the Russian influence ... I believe Trump would not have even been within striking distance of Clinton on Election Day".[85][324] Former president Jimmy Carter has publicly said he believes Trump would not have been elected without the Russian interference.[325] Carter has said, "Trump didn't actually win the election in 2016. He lost the election, and he was put into office because the Russians interfered on his behalf". When questioned, Carter agreed that Trump was an "illegitimate president".[326][327]

Three states where Trump won by very close margins—margins significantly less than the number of votes cast for third-party candidates in those states—gave him an Electoral College majority. Mayer writes that if only 12% of these third-party voters "were persuaded by Russian propaganda—based on hacked Clinton-campaign analytics—not to vote for Clinton", this would have been enough to win the election for Trump.[84] Political scientist Kathleen Hall Jamieson, in a detailed forensic analysis concludes that Russian trolls and hackers persuaded enough Americans "to either vote a certain way or not vote at all" to affect the election results.[84][328] Specifically, Jamieson argued that two factors that caused a drop in intention to vote for Clinton reported to pollsters can be traced to Russian work: The publicizing of excerpts of speeches by Clinton made to investment banks for high fees and disinformation on FBI head Comey's public denunciation of Clinton's actions as "extremely careless" (see above).[84]

A Columbia study published in 2022 saw changes on election betting markets around Russian holidays, when trolls would be less active.[329] An NYU study published in 2023 found Russian Twitter trolls, specifically, had no measurable impact.[77]

2017 developments

Dismissal of FBI Director James Comey

On May 9, 2017, Trump dismissed Comey, attributing his action to recommendations from United States Attorney General Jeff Sessions and Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein.[330] Trump had been talking to aides about firing Comey for at least a week before acting, and had asked Justice Department officials to come up with a rationale for dismissing him.[331][332] After he learned that Trump was about to fire Comey, Rosenstein submitted to Trump a memo critical of Comey's conduct in the investigation about Hillary Clinton's emails.[333][334] Trump later confirmed that he had intended to fire Comey regardless of any Justice Department recommendation.[335] Trump himself also tied the firing to the Russia investigation in a televised interview, stating, "When I decided to [fire Comey], I said to myself, I said, 'You know, this Russia thing with Trump and Russia is a made up story, it's an excuse by the Democrats for having lost an election that they should have won.'"[336][337]

The dismissal came as a surprise to Comey and most of Washington, and was described as immediately controversial and having "vast political ramifications" because of the Bureau's ongoing investigation into Russian activities in the 2016 election.[338] It was compared to the Saturday Night Massacre, President Richard Nixon's termination of special prosecutor Archibald Cox, who had been investigating the Watergate scandal,[339][340] and to the dismissal of Sally Yates in January 2017.[341] Comey himself stated "It's my judgment that I was fired because of the Russia investigation. I was fired in some way to change, or the endeavor was to change, the way the Russia investigation was being conducted."[342]

During a meeting with Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov and Ambassador Sergey Kislyak on May 10, 2017, in the Oval Office, Trump told the Russian officials that firing the F.B.I. director, James Comey, had relieved "great pressure" on him, according to a White House document. Trump stated, "I just fired the head of the F.B.I. He was crazy, a real nut job ... I faced great pressure because of Russia. That's taken off."[343] In 2019, The Washington Post revealed that Trump also told Lavrov and Kislyak during this meeting that he wasn't concerned about Russia interfering in American elections.[344]

Investigation by special counsel

 
Special counsel Robert Mueller directed the FBI from 2001 to 2013.

On May 17, 2017, Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein appointed former FBI Director Robert Mueller as special counsel to direct FBI agents and Department of Justice prosecutors investigating election interference by Russia and related matters.[345][346][347] As special counsel, Mueller has the power to issue subpoenas,[348] hire staff members, request funding, and prosecute federal crimes in connection with his investigation.[349]

Mueller assembled a legal team.[350] Trump engaged several attorneys to represent and advise him, including his longtime personal attorney Marc Kasowitz[351] as well as Jay Sekulow, Michael Bowe, and John M. Dowd.[352][353] All but Sekulow have since resigned.[354][355] In August 2017 Mueller was using a grand jury.[356]

2017 charges

In October 2017 Trump campaign adviser George Papadopoulos pleaded guilty earlier in the month to making a false statement to FBI investigators about his connections to Russia.[357] In the first guilty plea of special counsel Robert Mueller's investigation, George Papadopoulos admitted lying to the FBI about contact with Russian agents who offered the campaign "thousands" of damaging emails about Clinton months before then candidate Donald Trump asked Russia to "find" Hillary Clinton's missing emails. His plea agreement said a Russian operative had told a campaign aide "the Russians had emails of Clinton". Papadopoulos agreed to cooperate with prosecutors as part of the plea bargain.[358][359]

Later that month, former Trump campaign chairman Paul Manafort surrendered to the FBI after being indicted on multiple charges. His business associate Rick Gates was also indicted and surrendered to the FBI.[360] The pair were indicted on one count of conspiracy against the United States, one count of conspiracy to launder money, one count of being an unregistered agent of a foreign principal, one count of making false and misleading FARA statements, and one count of making false statements. Manafort was charged with four counts of failing to file reports of foreign bank and financial accounts while Gates was charged with three.[361] All charges arise from their consulting work for a pro-Russian government in Ukraine and are unrelated to the campaign.[362] It was widely believed that the charges against Manafort are intended to pressure him into becoming a cooperating witness about Russian interference in the 2016 election.[362] In February 2018, Gates pleaded guilty to fraud-related charges and agreed to testify against Manafort.[363] In April 2018, when Manafort's lawyers filed a motion to suppress the evidence obtained during the July 26 raid on Manafort's home, the warrants for the search were revealed and indicated that, in addition to seeking evidence related to Manafort's work in Ukraine, Mueller's investigation also concerned Manafort's actions during the Trump campaign[364] including the meeting with a Russian lawyer and a counterintelligence officer at the Trump Tower meeting on June 9, 2016.[365]

In March 2018 the investigation revealed that the prosecutors have established links between Rick Gates and an individual with ties to Russian intelligence which occurred while Gates worked on Trump's campaign. A report filed by prosecutors, concerning the sentencing of Gates and Manafort associate Alex van der Zwaan who lied to Mueller's investigators, alleges that Gates knew the individual he was in contact with had these connections.[366]

2018 developments

2018 indictments

On February 16, 2018, a Federal grand jury in Washington, D.C., indicted 13 Russian nationals and three Russian entities on charges of conspiracy to defraud the United States, conspiracy to commit bank and wire fraud, and fraud with identification documents, in connection with the 2016 United States national elections.[367] The 37-page indictment cites the illegal use of social media "to sow political discord, including actions that supported the presidential candidacy of Donald Trump and disparaged his opponent, Hillary Clinton."[368] On the same day, Robert Mueller announced that Richard Pinedo had pleaded guilty to using the identities of other people in connection with unlawful activity.[369][370]

Lawyers representing Concord Management and Consulting appeared on May 9, 2018, in federal court in Washington, to plead not guilty to the charges.[371] The prosecutors subsequently withdrew the charges.[372]

Twelve Russians were indicted for hacking at a press conference on July 13, 2018.

On July 13, 2018, Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein released indictments returned by a grand jury charging twelve Russian intelligence officials, who work for the Russian intelligence agency GRU, with conspiring to interfere in the 2016 elections.[124][125] The individuals, posing as "a Guccifer 2.0 persona", are accused of hacking into computers of the Clinton campaign and the Democratic National Committee, as well as state election boards and secretaries of several states. In one unidentified state, the Russians stole information on half a million voters. The indictment also said a Republican congressional candidate, also unidentified, had been sent campaign documents stolen by the group, and that a reporter was in contact with the Russian operatives and offered to write an article to coincide with the release of the stolen documents.[124]

Claims by Anastasia Vashukevich

In March 2018, Anastasia Vashukevich, a Belarusian national arrested in Thailand, said she had over 16 hours of audio recordings that could shed light on possible Russian interference in American elections. She offered the recordings to American authorities in exchange for asylum, to avoid being extradited to Belarus.[373] Vashukevich said she was close to Oleg Deripaska, a Russian oligarch with ties to Putin and business links to Paul Manafort, and asserted the recordings included Deripaska discussing the 2016 presidential election. She said some of the recorded conversations, which she asserted were made in August 2016, included three individuals who spoke fluent English and who she believed were Americans. Vashukevich's claims appeared to be consistent with a video published in February 2018 by Alexei Navalny, about a meeting between Deripaska and Russian Deputy Prime Minister Sergei Eduardovich Prikhodko. In the video, Navalny claims Deripaska served as a liaison between the Russian government and Paul Manafort in connection with Russian interference efforts.[373]

In August 2018, Vashukevich said she no longer has any evidence having sent the recordings to Deripaska without having made them public, hoping he would be able to gain her release from prison,[374] and has promised Deripaska not to make any further comment on the recordings' contents.[375][376]

2019 developments

 
The Mueller Report (redacted)

On March 24, Attorney General Barr sent a four-page letter to Congress regarding the Special Counsel's findings regarding Russian interference and obstruction of justice.[377] Barr said that on the question of Russian interference in the election, Mueller detailed two ways in which Russia attempted to influence the election in Trump's favor, but "did not establish that members of the Trump Campaign conspired or coordinated with the Russian government in its election interference activities."[378][379] On the question of obstruction of justice, Barr said that Mueller wrote "while this report does not conclude that the President committed a crime, it also does not exonerate him."[378][380] "The Special Counsel's decision to describe the facts of his obstruction investigation without reaching any legal conclusions leaves it 'to the Attorney General to determine whether the conduct described in the report constitutes a crime ... Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein and I have concluded that the evidence developed during the Special Counsel's investigation is not sufficient to establish that the President committed an obstruction-of-justice offense."[381]

On April 18, 2019, a redacted version of the final Mueller Report was released to the public.[382][383] The Mueller Report found that the Russian government interfered in the election in "sweeping and systematic fashion" and violated U.S. criminal laws.[384]

On May 29, 2019, Mueller announced that he was retiring as special counsel and the office would be shut down, and he spoke publicly about the report for the first time. He reiterated that his report did not exonerate the president and that legal guidelines prevented the indictment of a sitting president, stating that "the Constitution requires a process other than the criminal justice system to formally accuse a sitting president of wrongdoing."[385] Saying, "The report is my testimony", he indicated he would have nothing to say that was not already in the report. He emphasized that the central conclusion of his investigation was "that there were multiple, systematic efforts to interfere in our election. That allegation deserves the attention of every American."[386]

Soon after the release of the Mueller Report, Trump began urging an investigation into the origins of the Russian investigation, wanting to "investigate the investigators".[387] In April 2019, Attorney General William Barr announced that he had launched a review of the origins of the FBI's investigation.[388][389] The origins of the probe were already being investigated by the Justice Department's inspector general and by U.S. attorney John Huber, who was appointed in 2018 by Jeff Sessions.[390] He assigned U.S. Attorney John Durham to lead it.[391]

Durham was given the authority "to broadly examin[e] the government's collection of intelligence involving the Trump campaign's interactions with Russians", reviewing government documents and requesting voluntary witness statements.[391] Trump directed the American intelligence community to "promptly provide assistance and information" to Barr, and delegated to him the "full and complete authority" to declassify any documents related to his probe.[387][392] In September 2019, it was reported that Barr has been contacting foreign governments to ask for help in this mission. He personally traveled to the United Kingdom and Italy to seek information, and at Barr's request Trump phoned the prime minister of Australia about the subject.[393]

2020 developments

On November 2, the Special Counsel's office released previously redacted portions of the Mueller report. In September, a federal judge ordered the passages disclosed in response to a Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) lawsuit filed by BuzzFeed News and the advocacy group Electronic Privacy Information Center, while allowing other portions to remain redacted.[11]

In summary, per Buzzfeed: "Although Wikileaks published emails stolen from the DNC in July and October 2016 and Stone — a close associate to Donald Trump — appeared to know in advance the materials were coming, investigators 'did not have sufficient evidence' to prove active participation in the hacks or knowledge that the electronic thefts were continuing. In addition, federal prosecutors could not establish that the hacked emails amounted to campaign contributions benefitting Trump's election chances ..."[11]

The newly released material also stated: "While the investigation developed evidence that the GRU's hacking efforts in fact were continuing at least at the time of the July 2016 WikiLeaks dissemination, ... the Office did not develop sufficient admissible evidence that WikiLeaks knew of – or even was willfully blind to – that fact." As reported by Buzzfeed, "Likewise, prosecutors faced what they called factual hurdles in pursuing Stone for the hack."[11]

On November 2, 2020, the day before the presidential election, New York magazine reported that:

According to two sources familiar with the probe, there has been no evidence found, after 18 months of investigation, to support Barr's claims that Trump was targeted by politically biased Obama officials to prevent his election. (The probe remains ongoing.) In fact, the sources said, the Durham investigation has so far uncovered no evidence of any wrongdoing by Biden or Barack Obama, or that they were even involved with the Russia investigation. There 'was no evidence … not even remotely … indicating Obama or Biden did anything wrong,' as one person put it.[394]

2022 developments

In November 2022, Russian oligarch Yevgeny Prigozhin admitted to Russian interference in U.S. elections.[395][396][397] CNN reported that "his statement appeared to be the first admission of a high-level Russian campaign to interfere in US elections from someone close to the Kremlin."[395]

In 2018, Prigozhin had been indicted along with 12 other Russian nationals and 3 Russian firms, as part of Robert Mueller's investigation into Russian election interference. In 2020, the Justice department had dismissed the indictments against Prigozhin's catering firm Concord, because the inability to punish the indicted would possibly lead to the exposure of law enforcement techniques in the process of trial. In July 2022 the State Department offered a $10 million reward for information on Prigozhin and the Internet Research Agency among other Russian interference mechanisms. Prigozhin's admission of election interference in November followed his admission of funding the Kremlin-linked far-right mercenary Wagner Group in September 2022.[396] He had also been placed on the FBI's Most Wanted list in 2021.[397]

U.S. officials were left unsurprised by the Russian oligarch's confession, which was phrased as a vague threat. "Gentlemen, we interfered, we interfere and we will interfere... Carefully, precisely, surgically and in our own way, as we know how. During our pinpoint operations, we will remove both kidneys and the liver at once."[395] Prigozhin long having been sanctioned by the United States, the timing and vagueness of his admission could include elements of disinformation, with White House Press Secretary Karine Jean-Pierre describing it as one of many Russian narratives "aimed at undermining democracy".[395] She stated the oligarch's comments "do not tell us anything new or surprising."[396]

State Department spokesman Ned Price said that "His bold confession, if anything, appears to be just a manifestation of the impunity that crooks and cronies enjoy under President Putin and the Kremlin... As you know, we have sanctioned this individual, Yevgeny Prigozhin, since 2018 for his interference with our election processes and institutions."[398][395]

On November 17, 2022, Republican political operative Jesse Benton was convicted by a federal jury for a 2016 scheme to funnel Russian money to the Donald Trump campaign. According to court documents, Benton caused a Russian foreign national to wire $100,000 to his consulting firm, of which $25,000 of the money from the Russian national was contributed to the Trump campaign.[399][400][401]

2023 developments

In December 2023, CNN reported that "a binder containing highly classified information related to Russian election interference went missing at the end of Donald Trump’s presidency, raising alarms among intelligence officials that some of the most closely guarded national security secrets from the US and its allies could be exposed [...] In the two-plus years since Trump left office, the missing intelligence does not appear to have been found. The binder contained raw intelligence the US and its NATO allies collected on Russians and Russian agents, including sources and methods that informed the US government’s assessment that Russian President Vladimir Putin sought to help Trump win the 2016 election. [...]" According to the report, in the final days of his presidency, Donald Trump intended to declassify and release publicly multiple documents related to the FBI's Russian investigation. Several copies of the binder, with varying levels of redactions ended up in the Justice Department and the National Archives, but an unredacted version went missing.[402][403][404]

Links between Trump associates and Russian officials and spies

During the 2016 presidential campaign and up to his inauguration, Donald J. Trump and at least 18 campaign officials and advisers had numerous contacts with Russian nationals, WikiLeaks, or intermediaries between the two. As of January 28, The New York Times had tallied more than 140 in-person meetings, phone calls, text messages, emails and private messages between the Trump campaign and Russians or WikiLeaks.[405]

In spring of 2015, U.S. intelligence agencies started overhearing conversations in which Russian government officials discussed associates of Donald Trump.[406] British and the Dutch intelligence have given information to United States intelligence about meetings in European cities between Russian officials, associates of Putin, and associates of then-president-elect Trump. American intelligence agencies also intercepted communications of Russian officials, some of them within the Kremlin, discussing contacts with Trump associates.[290] Multiple Trump associates were reported to have had contacts with senior Russian intelligence officials during 2016, although in February 2017 U.S. officials said they did not have evidence that Trump's campaign had co-operated with the Russians to influence the election.[407] As of March 2017, the FBI was investigating Russian involvement in the election, including alleged links between Trump's associates and the Russian government.[222]

 
Russian ambassador Sergey Kislyak met with a number of U.S. officials.

In particular, Russian Ambassador Sergey Kislyak has met several Trump campaign members and administration nominees; the people involved have dismissed those meetings as routine conversations in preparation for assuming the presidency. Trump's team has issued at least twenty denials concerning communications between his campaign and Russian officials;[408] several of these denials turned out to be false.[409] In the early months of 2017, Trump and other senior White House officials asked the Director of National Intelligence, the NSA director, the FBI director, and two chairs of congressional committees to publicly dispute the news reports about contacts between Trump associates and Russia.[410][411]

Paul Manafort

Trump campaign chairman Paul Manafort had several contacts with senior Russian intelligence officials during 2016, which he denied.[407] Intercepted communications during the campaign show that Russian officials believed they could use Manafort to influence Trump.[193] The Mueller investigation and the Senate Intelligence Committee found that, as Trump's campaign manager in August 2016, Manafort shared Trump campaign internal polling data with Ukrainian political consultant Konstantin Kilimnik, whom the Mueller Report linked to Russian intelligence, while the Intelligence Committee characterized him as a "Russian intelligence officer".[412][413] Manafort gave Kilimnik data for Michigan, Wisconsin and Pennsylvania, states the Russian Internet Research Agency specifically targeted for social media and ad campaigns. Trump won those three states by narrow margins and they were key to his election.[412][414][415]

In 2017 Manafort was indicted in the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia on various charges arising from his consulting work for the pro-Russian government of Viktor Yanukovych in Ukraine before Yanukovych's overthrow in 2014, as well as in the Eastern District of Virginia for eight charges of tax and bank fraud. He was convicted of the fraud charges in August 2019 and sentenced to 47 months in prison by Judge T.S. Ellis. Although all the 2017 charges arose from the Special Counsel investigation, none of them were for any alleged collusion to interfere with U.S. elections.[416] On March 13, 2019, Judge Amy Berman Jackson sentenced Manafort to an additional 43 months in prison.[417][418] That day, New York state prosecutors also charged Manafort with sixteen state felonies.[419] On December 18, 2019, the state charges against him were dismissed because of the doctrine of double jeopardy.[420] On May 13, 2020, Manafort was released to home confinement due to the threat of COVID-19.[421] On December 23, 2020, U.S. president Donald Trump pardoned Manafort.[422]

Michael Flynn

In December 2015, retired Army general Michael Flynn was photographed at a dinner seated next to Vladimir Putin. He was in Moscow to give a paid speech which he failed to disclose as is required of former high-ranking military officers.[423] Also seated at the head table are Green Party presidential candidate Jill Stein and members of Putin's inner circle, including Sergei Ivanov, Dmitry Peskov, Vekselberg, and Alexey Gromov.[424][425]

In February 2016, Flynn was named as an advisor to Trump's presidential campaign. Later that year, in phone calls intercepted by U.S. intelligence, Russian officials were overheard claiming they had formed a strong relationship with Trump advisor Flynn and believed they would be able to use him to influence Trump and his team.[426]

In December 2016 Flynn, then Trump's designated choice to be National Security Advisor, and Jared Kushner met with Russian ambassador to the United States Sergey Kislyak and requested him to set up a direct, encrypted line of communication so they could communicate directly with the Kremlin without the knowledge of American intelligence agencies.[427] Three anonymous sources claimed that no such channel was actually set up.[428][429]

On December 29, 2016, the day President Obama announced sanctions against Russia, Flynn discussed the sanctions with Kislyak, urging that Russia not retaliate.[430] Flynn initially denied speaking to Kislyak, then acknowledged the conversation but denied discussing the sanctions.[431][432] When it was revealed in February 2017 that U.S. intelligence agencies had evidence, through monitoring of the ambassador's communications, that he actually had discussed the sanctions, Flynn said he couldn't remember if he did or not.[431]

Upon Trump's inauguration on January 20, 2017, he appointed Flynn his National Security Advisor. On January 24, Flynn was interviewed by the FBI. Two days later, acting Attorney General Sally Yates informed the White House that Flynn was "compromised" by the Russians and possibly open to blackmail.[433] Flynn was forced to resign as national security advisor on February 13, 2017.[432]

On December 1, 2017, Flynn pleaded guilty to a single felony count of making "false, fictitious and fraudulent statements" to the FBI about his conversations with Kislyak. His plea was part of a plea bargain with special counsel Robert Mueller, under which Flynn also agreed to cooperate with Mueller's investigation which lead to his sentencing being postponed several times.[434]

In June 2019, Flynn fired his initial counsel from the firm Covington and Burling and hired Sidney Powell. Powell moved to compel production of additional Brady material and newly discovered evidence in October 2019, which was denied by Sullivan in December 2019. Flynn then moved to withdraw his guilty plea in January 2020, claiming that the government had acted in bad faith and breached the plea agreement.

In May 2020, the United States Department of Justice (DOJ) filed a motion to dismiss the charge against Flynn with prejudice, asserting that it no longer believed it could prove beyond a reasonable doubt that Flynn had made false statements to the FBI or that the statements, even if false, were materially false in regards to the FBI's investigation. Sullivan then appointed an amicus, John Gleeson, to prepare an argument against dismissal. Sullivan also allowed amici to file briefs regarding the dismissal motion.

Powell filed an emergency petition for a writ of mandamus in the Circuit Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia, asking (1) that Judge Sullivan be ordered to grant the government's motion to dismiss, (2) for Sullivan's amicus appointment of Gleeson to be vacated, and (3) for the case be assigned to another judge for any additional proceedings. The appellate court panel assigned to the case ordered Sullivan to respond, and briefs were also filed by the DOJ and amici. In June 2020, the appeals court panel ruled 2–1 in favor of Flynn on the first two requests, and the panel unanimously rejected the third request. Judge Sullivan petitioned the Court of Appeals for an en banc rehearing, a request opposed by Flynn and the DOJ. The appellate court granted Sullivan's petition in an 8-2 decision and vacated the panel's ruling. The case was ultimately dismissed as moot on December 8, 2020, after President Trump pardoned Flynn on November 25, 2020.

George Papadopoulos

In March 2016 Donald Trump named George Papadopoulos, an oil, gas, and policy consultant, as an unpaid foreign policy advisor to his campaign. Shortly thereafter Papadopoulos was approached by Joseph Mifsud, a London-based professor with connections to high-ranking Russian officials.[435] Mifsud told him the Russians had "dirt" on Hillary Clinton in the form of "thousands of emails"[436] "apparently stolen in an effort to try to damage her campaign".[437] The two met several times in March 2016.[436] In May 2016 at a London wine bar, Papadopoulos told the top Australian diplomat to the United Kingdom, Alexander Downer, that Russia "had a dirt file on rival candidate Hillary Clinton in the form of hacked Democratic Party emails".[438] After the DNC emails were published by WikiLeaks in July, the Australian government told the FBI about Papadopoulos' revelation, leading the FBI to launch a counterintelligence investigation into the Trump campaign, known by its code name: Crossfire Hurricane,[437][439] which has been criticized by Trump as a "witch hunt".[439]

Papadopoulos' main activity during the campaign was attempting, unsuccessfully, to set up meetings between Russian officials (including Vladimir Putin) and Trump campaign officials (including Trump himself).[440] In pursuit of this goal he communicated with multiple Trump campaign officials including Sam Clovis, Paul Manafort, Rick Gates, and Corey Lewandowski.[440]

On January 27, 2017, Papadopoulos was interviewed by FBI agents.[441] On July 27, he was arrested at Washington-Dulles International Airport, and he has since been cooperating with Special Counsel Robert Mueller in his investigation.[442] On October 5, 2017, he pleaded guilty to one felony count of making false statements to FBI agents relating to contacts he had with agents of the Russian government while working for the Trump campaign.[443][444] Papadopoulos's arrest and guilty plea became public on October 30, 2017, when court documents showing the guilty plea were unsealed.[445] Papadopoulos was sentenced to 14 days in prison, 12 months supervised release, 200 hours of community service and was fined $9,500, on September 7, 2018.[446] He was later pardoned by Trump in December 2020.[447]

Veselnitskaya meeting

In June 2016, Donald Trump Jr., Paul Manafort and Jared Kushner met with Russian attorney Natalia Veselnitskaya, who was accompanied by some others, including Russian-American lobbyist Rinat Akhmetshin, after Trump Jr. was informed that Veselnitskaya could supply the Trump campaign with incriminating information about Hillary Clinton such as her dealings with the Russians.[448] The meeting was arranged following an email from British music publicist Rob Goldstone who was the manager of Emin Agalarov, son of Russian tycoon Aras Agalarov.[449][450] In the email, Goldstone said the information had come from the Russian government and "was part of a Russian government effort to help Donald Trump's presidential campaign".[449][450] Trump Jr. replied with an e-mail saying "If it's what you say I love it especially later in the summer" and arranged the meeting.[451] Trump Jr. went to the meeting expecting to receive information harmful to the Clinton campaign, but he said none was forthcoming, and instead the conversation then turned to the Magnitsky Act and the adoption of Russian children.[452]

The meeting was disclosed by The New York Times on July 8, 2017.[453][454] On the same day, Donald Trump Jr. released a statement saying it had been a short introductory meeting focused on adoption of Russian children by Americans and "not a campaign issue".[454] Later that month The Washington Post revealed that Trump Jr.'s statement had been dictated by President Donald Trump, who had overruled his staff's recommendation that the statement be transparent about the actual motivation for the meeting: the Russian government's wish to help Trump's campaign.[455]

Other Trump associates

 
Former Attorney General Jeff Sessions talked with the Russian ambassador during the Trump campaign and recused himself from the investigation.

Former Attorney General Jeff Sessions, an early and prominent supporter of Trump's campaign, spoke twice with Russian ambassador Kislyak before the election—once in July 2016 at the Republican convention and once in September 2016 in Sessions' Senate office. In his confirmation hearings, Sessions testified that he "did not have communications with the Russians".[456] On March 2, 2017, after this denial was revealed to have been false, Sessions recused himself from matters relating to Russia's election interference and deferred to Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein.[457]

Roger Stone, a former adviser to Donald Trump and business partner of Paul Manafort, said he had been in contact with Guccifer 2.0, a hacker persona believed to be a front for Russian intelligence operations, who had publicly claimed responsibility for at least one hack of the DNC.[458] During the campaign, Stone had stated repeatedly and publicly that he had "actually communicated with Julian Assange"; he later denied having done so.[459] In August 2016, Stone had cryptically tweeted "Trust me, it will soon [sic] the Podesta's time in the barrel" shortly after claiming to have been in contact with WikiLeaks and before WikiLeaks' release of the Podesta emails.[460] Stone has denied having any advance knowledge of the Podesta e-mail hack or any connection to Russian intelligence, stating that his earlier tweet was actually referring to reports of the Podesta Group's own ties to Russia.[461][462] Stone ultimately named Randy Credico, who had interviewed both Assange and Stone for a radio show, as his intermediary with Assange.[463]

In June 2018 Stone disclosed that he had met with a Russian individual during the campaign, who wanted Trump to pay two million dollars for "dirt on Hillary Clinton". This disclosure contradicted Stone's earlier claims that he had not met with any Russians during the campaign. The meeting Stone attended was set up by Donald Trump's campaign aide, Michael Caputo and is a subject of Robert Mueller's investigation.[464]

Oil industry consultant Carter Page had his communications monitored by the FBI under a FISA warrant beginning in 2014,[465] and again beginning in October 2016,[466] after he was suspected of acting as an agent for Russia. Page told The Washington Post he considered that to be "unjustified, politically motivated government surveillance".[467] Page spoke with Kislyak during the 2016 Republican National Convention, acting as a foreign policy adviser to Donald Trump.[468][469] In 2013 he had met with Viktor Podobnyy, then a junior attaché at the Russian Permanent Mission to the United Nations, at an energy conference, and provided him with documents on the U.S. energy industry.[470] Podobnyy was later charged with spying, but was protected from prosecution by diplomatic immunity.[471] The FBI interviewed Page in 2013 as part of an investigation into Podonyy's spy ring, but never accused Page of wrongdoing.[471]

The Mueller Report also found that Abu Dhabi's Crown Prince Mohammed bin Zayed Al Nahyan (MbZ) approached Richard Gerson, a financier and Jared Kushner's friend, to arrange his meetings with Trump. A Russian businessman Kirill Dmitriev, who was close to Vladimir Putin and Blackwater founder Erik Prince, discussed a "reconciliation plan" with Gerson for the U.S. and Russia, which was later shared with Kushner. MbZ also advised Trump on the dangers of Iran and about Palestinian peace talks.[472] On January 11, 2017, UAE officials organized a meeting in the Seychelles between Prince and Dmitriev. They discussed a back channel between Trump and Putin along with Middle East policy, notably about Syria and Iran. U.S. officials said the FBI was investigating the meeting.[473][472]

 
Jared Kushner, President Trump's son-in-law and senior advisor, failed to disclose meetings with Russian officials.

Donald Trump's son-in-law and senior advisor, Jared Kushner, on his application for top secret security clearance, failed to disclose numerous meetings with foreign officials, including Ambassador Kislyak and Sergei Gorkov, the head of the Russian state-owned bank Vnesheconombank. Kushner's lawyers called the omissions "an error". Vnesheconombank has said the meeting was business-related, in connection with Kushner's management of Kushner Companies. However, the Trump administration provided a different explanation, saying it was a diplomatic meeting.[474]

On May 30, 2017, the House and Senate congressional panels both asked President Trump's personal lawyer Michael Cohen to "provide information and testimony" about any communications Cohen had with people connected to the Kremlin.[475][476] Cohen had attempted to contact Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov during the 2016 campaign, asking for help in advancing plans for a Trump Tower in Moscow.[477]

In May 2017 longtime Republican operative Peter W. Smith confirmed to The Wall Street Journal that during the 2016 campaign he had been actively involved in trying to obtain emails he believed had been hacked from Hillary Clinton's computer server.[478][479] In that quest he contacted several known hacker groups, including some Russian groups.[480] He claimed he was working on behalf of Trump campaign advisor (later national security advisor) Michael Flynn and Flynn's son.[478][481] At around the same time, there were intelligence reports that Russian hackers were trying to obtain Clinton's emails to pass to Flynn through an unnamed intermediary.[478]

Five of the hacker groups Smith contacted, including at least two Russian groups, claimed to have Clinton's emails. He was shown some information but was not convinced it was genuine, and suggested the hackers give it to WikiLeaks instead.[478] A document describing Smith's plans claimed that Flynn, Kellyanne Conway, Steve Bannon, and other campaign advisors were coordinating with him "to the extent permitted as an independent expenditure".[482][483] The White House, a campaign official, Conway, and Bannon all denied any connection with Smith's effort. British blogger Matt Tait said Smith had contacted him—curiously, around the same time Trump called for the Russians to get Hillary Clinton's missing emails—to ask him to help authenticate any materials that might be forthcoming.[481] Ten days after his interview with The Wall Street Journal, Smith committed suicide in a Minnesota hotel room, citing declining health.[484]

Steele dossier

In June 2016, Christopher Steele, a former MI6 agent, was hired by Fusion GPS to produce opposition research on Donald Trump. In October 2015, before Steele was hired, Trump's Republican political opponents had hired Fusion GPS to do opposition research on Trump. When they stopped their funding, Fusion GPS hired Steele to continue that research, but with more focus on Trump's Russian connections. In the beginning, Steele did not know the identities of Fusion GPS's ultimate clients, which were no longer Republicans, but the Democratic National Committee and Clinton campaign. His reports, based on information provided by his witting and unwitting Russian sources and sources close to the Trump campaign, included alleged kompromat that may make Trump vulnerable to blackmail from Russia.

In October 2016, a 33-page compilation was shared with Mother Jones magazine, which described some of its contents, but other mainstream media would not report on it because they could not confirm the material's credibility.[485] In December 2016, two more pages were added alleging efforts by Trump's lawyer to pay those who had hacked the DNC and arranging to cover up any evidence of their deeds.[221][486] On January 5, 2017, U.S. intelligence agencies briefed President Obama and President-elect Trump on the existence of these documents.[487] Eventually, the dossier was published in full by BuzzFeed News on January 10.[488][489]

In October 2016, the FBI used the dossier as part of its justification to obtain a FISA warrant to resume monitoring of former Trump foreign policy advisor Carter Page. However, officials would not say exactly what or how much of the dossier was actually corroborated.[490]

John Brennan and James Clapper testified to Congress that Steele's dossier played no role in the intelligence community assessment[491] about Russian interference in the 2016 election,[492][493] testimony which was reaffirmed by an April 2020 bipartisan Senate Intelligence Committee report. The committee found that the Steele dossier was not used by the assessment to "support any of its analytic judgments".[494] In a December 2020 interview with Chris Wallace of Fox News, Brennan said: "The Steele dossier was not used in any way to undergird the judgments that came out of the intelligence community assessment about the Russian actions in the 2016 election... There was so much other evidence and intelligence to support those judgments."[495]

Ongoing investigations

In December 2019, Switzerland extradited Russian businessman Vladislav Klyushin to the United States, where it was reported that he would face questions about the Russian government's interference in the 2016 election, though the US Government has not publicly implicated him.[496]

Commentary and reactions

Public opinion

Polls conducted in early January 2017 showed that 55% of respondents believed Russia interfered in the election;[497] 51% believed Russia intervened through hacking.[498] As of February 2017 public-opinion polls showed a partisan split on the importance of Russia's involvement in the 2016 election.[499] At that time, however, the broader issue of the Trump administration's relationship with Russia didn't even register among the most important problems facing the U.S.[500] An NBC News/Wall Street Journal poll found that 53 percent wanted a Congressional inquiry into communications in 2016 between the Trump campaign and Russian officials.[501] Quinnipiac University found that 47 percent thought it was very important.[502] A March 2017 poll conducted by the Associated Press and NORC found about 62% of respondents say they are at least moderately concerned about the possibility that Trump or his campaign had inappropriate contacts with Russia during the 2016 campaign.[503]

A January 2017 poll conducted by the Levada Center, Russia's largest independent polling organization, showed that only 12% of Russian respondents believed Russia "definitely" or "probably" interfered in the U.S. election.[504] A December 2017 survey conducted by the Levada Center found that 31% of Russian respondents thought their government tried to influence U.S. domestic affairs in a significant way.[505]

A Quinnipiac University poll conducted in late March and early April 2017 found that 68% of voters supported "an independent commission investigating the potential links between some of Donald Trump's campaign advisors and the Russian government".[506] An April 2017 NBC News/Wall Street Journal poll found that respondents had little confidence in Congress's investigation into the Russian interference in the election. The poll found that approximately 73% supported a "nonpartisan, independent commission" to look into Russia's involvement in the election.[507] An ABC News/Washington Post poll conducted in April 2017 found that 56 percent of respondents thought Russia tried to influence the election.[508]

A May 2017 Monmouth University poll, conducted after the dismissal of James Comey, found that "nearly 6-in-10 Americans thought it was either very (40%) or somewhat (19%) likely that Comey was fired in order to slow down or stop the FBI investigation into Russian interference in the 2016 election and possible links with the Trump campaign." Like other recent opinion polls, a majority, 73%, said that the FBI investigation should continue.[509]

A June 2017 NBC News/Wall Street Journal poll found that respondents were more likely to believe James Comey over Trump when it came to their differing accounts behind the reasons for Comey's dismissal. The survey found that 45% of respondents were more likely to believe Comey than Trump. The poll also found that the number of respondents disapproving of Trump's decision to fire Comey- 46%- was higher than when the same question was asked in May of the same year. 53% of respondents said that they believed that Russia interfered in the 2016 presidential election, however the number changes by party affiliation. 78% of Democrats said that they believed there was interference, versus 26% of Republicans who agreed.[510] An NPR/PBS NewsHour/Marist College poll conducted in late June 2017 found that 54% of respondents believed that Trump either did "something illegal" or "something unethical, but not illegal" in his dealings with Russian president Vladimir Putin. The poll found that 73% of Republicans said Trump himself has done "nothing wrong" while 41% of Democrats believed that Trump did something that was illegal. In addition, 47% said that they thought Russia was a major threat to future U.S. elections, while 13% of respondents said that Russia posed no threat at all.[511]

A July 2017 ABC News/Washington Post poll found that 63% of respondents said that it "was inappropriate for Trump's son, son-in-law and campaign manager to have met with a Russian lawyer during the campaign." The poll also found that six in ten overall who think that Russia tried to influence the election, with 72% saying that they thought that Trump benefited and that "67 percent thought that members of his campaign intentionally helped those efforts."[512]

Polls conducted in August 2017 found widespread disapproval and distrust of Trump's handling of the investigation. A CNN/SSRS poll conducted in early August found that only 31% of respondents approved of Trump's handling of the matter. The poll also noted that 60% of adults "thought that it was a serious matter that should be fully investigated." On party lines, the poll found that 15% of Democrats and 56% of Republicans approved of Trump's handling of the matter.[513] A Gallup poll from the same month found similar trends. The poll found that 25% of respondents said Trump acted illegally in dealings with the Russians. The poll found that 6% of Republicans and Republican-leaners thought Trump did something illegal in his dealings with the Russians.[514] A poll conducted by the Public Religion Research Institute found that 58% of respondents expressed a negative view of Russia, while 25% had a favorable view of the country. The poll also found that 48% believed "there is clear evidence that Russia interfered in the 2016 election to help the Trump campaign."[515] The broader issue of the Trump administration's relationship with Russia, however, was not identified by more than one percent of respondents in Gallup tracking of 'Most Important Problem' at any point since February 2017. (As of July 2018, it was less than half a percent.)[500]

A July 2018 an online Ipsos poll found that 60% of American believed that Russia interfered in the 2016 presidential election with 85% of democrats and 53% of Independents believing so compared to 46% of Republicans. 66% of democrats approved of the special counsel investigation compared to 32% of Republicans and 36% of Independents. In addition 75% of republicans believed the special counsel investigation was the result of anti-Trump bias. Compared to 32% of democrats and 36% of independents.[516]

A July 2018 Ipsos/Reuters poll found that 56% of Americans believed that Russia did interfere in support of Trump.[517]

A March 2019 poll released after reports of the findings of the Mueller report found that 48% of respondents said they believed "Trump or someone from his campaign worked with Russia to influence the 2016 election"; 53% said "Trump tried to stop investigations into Russian influence on his administration"; and "Democrats [were] much more likely than Republicans to believe that Trump colluded with Russia and obstructed justice." In addition, 39% of respondents felt that Trump "should be impeached", while 49% said that he should not.[518]

Hillary Clinton

 
Hillary Clinton said Vladimir Putin held a grudge against her due to her criticism of the 2011 Russian legislative election.[519]

On December 15, 2016, Hillary Clinton said she partially attributed her loss in the 2016 election to Russian meddling organized by Putin.[520] Clinton said Putin had a personal grudge against her. She linked Putin's feelings about her to her criticism of the 2011 Russian legislative election, adding that he felt she was responsible for fomenting the 2011–13 Russian protests.[519] Clinton drew a specific connection from her 2011 assertions as U.S. Secretary of State that Putin rigged the Russian elections that year to his efforts to influence the 2016 U.S. elections.[521] During the third presidential debate, Clinton had stated that Putin favored Trump "because he'd rather have a puppet as president of the United States".[522] Clinton said that by personally attacking her through meddling in the election, Putin attacked the American democratic system.[520] She said the Russian cyberattacks did not just affect her candidacy, but were an attempt to attack the national security of the United States.[519] Clinton acknowledged that she was unsuccessful in sufficiently publicizing to the media the cyberattacks against her campaign in the months leading up to the election.[521] She voiced her support for a proposal put forth by Senators from both parties, to set up an investigative panel to look into the matter akin to the 9/11 Commission.[521]

Republican National Committee

Chief of staff-designate for Trump and outgoing RNC Chairman Reince Priebus said in December 2016 that he still didn't know who hacked the DNC's computer servers.[139]

The RNC said there was no intrusion into its servers, while acknowledging email accounts of individual Republicans (including Colin Powell) were breached. More than 200 emails from Colin Powell were posted on the website DC Leaks.[136][138] Priebus appeared on Meet the Press on December 11, 2016, and discounted the CIA conclusions. Priebus said the FBI had investigated and found that RNC servers had not been hacked.[137]

Donald Trump

 
Trump's transition team dismissed the U.S. Intelligence Community's conclusions.
Trump and Putin answering questions from journalists on July 16, 2018. Video from the White House

Prior to his presidential run, Donald Trump made statements to Fox News in 2014 in which he agreed with an assessment by then FBI director James Comey about hacking against the U.S. by Russia and China.[523] Trump was played a clip of Comey from 60 Minutes discussing the dangers of cyber attacks.[523] Trump stated he agreed with the problem of cyber threats posed by China, and went on to emphasize there was a similar problem towards the U.S. posed by Russia.[523]

In September 2016, during the first presidential debate, Trump said he doubted whether anyone knew who hacked the DNC, and disputed Russian interference.[524] During the second debate, Trump said there might not have been hacking at all, and questioned why accountability was placed on Russia.[525]

During the third debate, Trump rejected Clinton's claim that Putin favored Trump.[522] Trump's words "our country has no idea" and "I doubt it" were deeply shocking to the British because "all NATO allies" and "all of America's intelligence agencies" were "sure Russia was behind the hacking", according to Kurt Eichenwald of Newsweek. Trump denied these conclusions "based on absolutely nothing. ... That he would so aggressively fight to clear Putin and cast aspersions on all Western intelligence agencies, left the British officials slack-jawed."[526]

After the election, Trump rejected the CIA analysis and asserted that the reports were politically motivated to deflect from the Democrats' electoral defeat.[527] Trump's transition team said in a brief statement: "These are the same people that said Saddam Hussein had weapons of mass destruction."[528][136] However, the intelligence analysts involved in monitoring Russian activities were different from those who assessed that Iraq had stockpiles of weapons of mass destruction, while post-Iraq War reforms have made it less likely for similar errors to reach the highest levels of the U.S. intelligence community.[529] Trump dismissed reports of Russia's interference, calling them "ridiculous"; he placed blame on Democrats upset over election results for publicizing these reports,[530] and cited Julian Assange's statement that "a 14-year-old kid could have hacked Podesta".[531] After Obama expelled 35 Russian diplomats and announced further sanctions on Russia, Trump commended Putin for refraining from retaliatory measures against the United States until the Trump administration would lay out its policy towards Russia.[532]

Excerpt of Trump at a press conference on January 11, 2017

On January 6, 2017, after meeting with members of U.S. intelligence agencies, Trump released a statement saying: cyberwarfare had no impact on the election and did not harm voting machines. In the same statement, he vowed to form a national cybersecurity task force to prepare an anti-hacking plan within 90 days of taking office.[533] Referring to the Office of Personnel Management data breach in 2015, Trump said he was under a "political witch hunt" and wondered why there was no focus on China.[534] Two days later, Reince Priebus said Trump had begun to acknowledge that "entities in Russia" were involved in the DNC leaks.[535] On January 11, 2017, Trump conceded that Russia was probably the source of the leaks, although he also said it could have been another country.[536][537]

On November 11, 2017, after meeting Vladimir Putin at a summit in Vietnam, Trump said, "I just asked him again. He said he absolutely did not meddle in our election. ... Every time he sees me he says: 'I didn't do that,' and I really believe that when he tells me that, he means it."[538] Trump went on to contrast Putin's "very strongly, vehemently" spoken denials with the word of American former intelligence officials who he termed as "political hacks": John Brennan, James Clapper, and the "liar" and "leaker" James Comey.[539] But a day later, when asked to clarify his comments, Trump said, "As to whether I believe it or not, I'm with our [intelligence] agencies, especially as currently constituted."[540] Brennan and Clapper, appearing on CNN, expressed concern that Trump was "giving Putin a pass" and showing the Russian leader that "Donald Trump can be played by foreign leaders who are going to appeal to his ego and try to play upon his insecurities."[541]

In 2019, The Washington Post revealed that (according to former officials) in May 2017 Trump had privately told Russian officials Sergey Lavrov and Sergey Kislyak he wasn't concerned about Russia interfering in American elections.[344][542] In early October 2022, The New York Times reported that Trump had retained secret government documents found by the FBI at his Mar-a-Lago domicile earlier the same year with the intention of pressuring the agency into trading them for files allegedly substantiating his claims that any Russian interference during the election was a "hoax", as he had constantly maintained in public.[543]

Trump viewed as under Putin's influence

Brennan did not say there was no evidence of collusion. He made clear he had been alarmed by the extent of contacts between the Trump team and Moscow....Brennan stressed repeatedly that collusion may have been unwitting, at least at first as Russian intelligence was deft at disguising its approaches to would-be agents. "Frequently, individuals on a treasonous path do not even realize they're on that path until it gets to be too late", he said.
- "Ex-CIA chief: Trump staff had enough contact with Russia to justify FBI inquiry"[544]

The Steele dossier alleges that the Russians have kompromat on Trump which could be used to blackmail him, and that the Kremlin promised the kompromat will not be used as long as he continues his cooperation with them.[545][546] Trump's actions at the Helsinki summit in 2018 "led many to conclude that Steele's report was more accurate than not. ... Trump sided with the Russians over the U.S. intelligence community's assessment that Moscow had waged an all-out attack on the 2016 election ... The joint news conference ... cemented fears among some that Trump was in Putin's pocket and prompted bipartisan backlash."[547]

At the joint news conference, when asked directly about the subject, Putin denied that he had any kompromat on Trump. Even though Trump was reportedly given a "gift from Putin" the weekend of the pageant, Putin argued "that he did not even know Trump was in Russia for the Miss Universe pageant in 2013 when, according to the Steele dossier, video of Trump was secretly recorded to blackmail him."[548]

In reaction to Trump's actions at the summit, Senator Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) spoke in the Senate:

Millions of Americans will continue to wonder if the only possible explanation for this dangerous and inexplicable behavior is the possibility—the very real possibility—that President Putin holds damaging information over President Trump.[549]

Several operatives and lawyers in the U.S. intelligence community reacted strongly to Trump's performance at the summit. They described it as "subservien[ce] to Putin" and a "fervent defense of Russia's military and cyber aggression around the world, and its violation of international law in Ukraine" which they saw as "harmful to U.S. interests". They also suggested that he was either a "Russian asset" or a "useful idiot" for Putin,[550] and that he looked like "Putin's puppet".[551] Former Director of National Intelligence James Clapper wondered "if Russians have something on Trump",[552] and former CIA director John O. Brennan, who has accused Trump of "treason", tweeted: "He is wholly in the pocket of Putin."[553]

Former acting CIA director Michael Morell has called Trump "an unwitting agent of the Russian federation", and former CIA director Michael V. Hayden said Trump was a "useful fool" who is "manipulated by Moscow".[554] House Speaker Nancy Pelosi questioned Trump's loyalty when she asked him: "[Why do] all roads lead to Putin?"[555]

Ynet, an Israeli online news site, reported on January 12, 2017, that U.S. intelligence had advised Israeli intelligence officers to be cautious about sharing information with the incoming Trump administration, until the possibility of Russian influence over Trump, suggested by Steele's report, has been fully investigated.[556]

Ex-spy Yuri Shvets, who was a partner of the assassinated Alexander Litvinenko, believes that the KGB cultivated Trump as an asset for over 40 years.[557] Yuri Shvets, a source for journalist Craig Unger, compared the former president to the Cambridge Five who passed secrets to Moscow. Shvets believes that Semyon Kislin was a "spotter agent" who identified Trump as an asset in 1980. Among other things Shvets highlights Trump's visit to the Soviet Union in 1987.[558] Yuri Shvets believes Trump was fed KGB talking points. For example, after Trump's return to New York, Trump took out full-page ads in major newspapers criticizing American allies and spending on NATO. Yuri Shvets claims that at the chief KGB directorate in Yasenevo, he received a cable celebrating the ad as a successful "active measure".[558] Shvets described the Mueller Report as a "big disappointment" because it focused only on "crime-related issues" rather than "counterintelligence aspects".[558]

Journalist Luke Harding argued that Trump's visit to the Soviet Union in 1987 was arranged by the KGB as part of KGB overtures to recruit a wider variety of agents.[559]

Mike Pence

In an interview on February 14, 2018, Pence said, "Irrespective of efforts that were made in 2016 by foreign powers, it is the universal conclusion of our intelligence communities that none of those efforts had any impact on the outcome of the 2016 election."[320] (In fact, in January 2017 the intelligence community had published a statement saying, "We did not make an assessment of the impact that Russian activities had on the outcome of the 2016 election.")[322] Pence added, "It doesn't mean that there weren't efforts, and we do know there were—there were efforts by Russia and likely by other countries. We take that very seriously."[320]

Intelligence community

The CIA assessment, and Trump's dismissal of it, created an unprecedented rupture between the president-elect and the intelligence community.[560][561][562] On December 11, 2016, U.S. intelligence officials responded to Trump's denunciation of their findings in a written statement, and expressed dismay that Trump disputed their conclusions as politically motivated or inaccurate. They wrote that intelligence officials were motivated to defend U.S. national security.[560] Members of the intelligence community feared reprisals from Donald Trump once he took office.[563]

Former CIA Director Michael Morell said foreign interference in U.S. elections was an existential threat.[564] Former CIA spokesman George E. Little condemned Trump for dismissing the CIA assessment, saying the president-elect's atypical response was disgraceful and denigrated the courage of those who serve in the CIA at risk to their own lives.[565]

Former NSA director and CIA director Michael V. Hayden posited that Trump's antagonizing the Intelligence Community signaled the administration would rely less on intelligence for policy-making.[566] Independent presidential candidate and former CIA intelligence officer Evan McMullin criticized the Republican leadership for failing to respond adequately to Russia's meddling in the election process.[567] McMullin said Republican politicians were aware that publicly revealed information about Russia's interference was likely the tip of the iceberg relative to the actual threat.[567] Former NSA director Michael V. Hayden has stated that Russia's interference in the 2016 presidential election is the "most successful covert influence operation in history".[568] Hayden went further saying that Trump was a "useful fool ... manipulated by Moscow".[569]

A January 2017 report by the Director of National Intelligence said that the intelligence community did "not make an assessment of the impact that Russian activities had on the outcome of the 2016 election". Despite this, CIA Director Mike Pompeo claimed that "the Russian meddling that took place did not affect the outcome of the election" at an event hosted by the Foundation for Defense of Democracies on October 19, 2017. CIA agency spokesman Dean Boyd withdrew his remarks the next day saying they had been made in error.[323]

Electoral College

On December 10, 2016, ten electors, headed by Christine Pelosi, daughter of former United States Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi (D-CA), wrote an open letter to the Director of National Intelligence James Clapper demanding an intelligence briefing on investigations into foreign intervention in the presidential election.[570][571] Fifty-eight additional electors subsequently added their names to the letter,[571] bringing the total to 68 electors from 17 different states.[572] The Clinton campaign supported the call for a classified briefing for electors.[573] On December 16, 2016, the briefing request was denied.[574]

Russia

 
Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov called American accusations "nonsense".[31]

The Russian government initially issued categorical denials of any involvement in the U.S. presidential election.[32] By June 2016, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov denied any connection of Russian government to the DNC hacks that had been blamed on Russia.[30][575] At the Valdai Discussion Club forum in October 2016, Putin denounced American "hysteria" over alleged Russian interference.[15]

When a new intelligence report surfaced in December 2016, Sergey Lavrov, Foreign Minister of Russia, rejected the accusations again.[31][19] During a press conference, Putin deflected questions on the issue by accusing the U.S. Democratic Party of scapegoating Russia after losing the presidential election.[134][576]

In June 2017, Putin said that "patriotically minded" Russian hackers could have been responsible for the cyberattacks against the U.S. during the 2016 campaign, while continuing to deny government involvement.[32] Putin's comments echoed similar remarks that he had made earlier the same week to the French newspaper Le Figaro.[32] A few days later he said, "Presidents come and go, and even the parties in power change, but the main political direction does not change. That's why, in the grand scheme of things, we don't care who's the head of the United States. We know more or less what is going to happen. And so in this regard, even if we wanted to, it wouldn't make sense for us to interfere."[577] Putin also invoked whataboutism and criticized U.S. foreign policy, saying, "Put your finger anywhere on a map of the world, and everywhere you will hear complaints that American officials are interfering in internal electoral processes."[577]

In March 2018 Putin suggested that "Ukrainians, Tatars, Jews, just with Russian citizenship" might have been to blame for interfering with U.S. elections, and suggested that "maybe it was the Americans who paid them for this work".[578][579] Putin's statement was criticized by the Anti-Defamation League and the American Jewish Committee; both likened his comments to the Protocols of the Elders of Zion, an antisemitic hoax first published in Russia in the early 20th century.[580][581] Boruch Gorin, a prominent rabbi in Moscow, said that the translation of Putin's comment into English lacked critical nuance and that Russian Jews were largely indifferent to it.[582]

Columbia Journalism Review

In a 2023 4-part series in the Columbia Journalism Review, Jeff Gerth, Pulitzer Prize winning investigative reporter, reassessed the role of the press in reporting on Trump's role in the Russian interference and said the coverage "includes serious flaws."[583] Multiple mainstream sources pushed back against Gerth's assertions, among them David Corn,[584] Joe Conason,[585] Jonathan Chait,[586] Rachel Maddow,[587] Cathy Young,[588] Dan Kennedy,[589] and Duncan Campbell.[590]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Similar reports were published by ABC News,[5] CBS News,[17] NBC News,[18] and Reuters.[19]
  2. ^ In 2001, the U.S. government expelled 51 Russian diplomats from the country in retaliation for Moscow's alleged recruitment of FBI special agent Robert Hanssen.[294]

References

  1. ^ Bump, Philip (February 16, 2018). "Timeline: How Russian trolls allegedly tried to throw the 2016 election to Trump". The Washington Post. Retrieved November 10, 2023.
  2. ^ United States of America vs. Internet Research Agency LLC, et al (United States District Court for the District of Columbia February 16, 2018) ("Indictment"), , archived from the original.
  3. ^ Schick, Nina (2020). Deep Fakes and the Infocalypse. United Kingdom: Monoray. pp. 60–75. ISBN 978-1-913183-52-3.
  4. ^ "Russian Project Lakhta Member Charged with Wire Fraud Conspiracy". justice.gov (Press release). September 10, 2020. Retrieved September 5, 2021.
  5. ^ a b c d e Ross, Brian; Schwartz, Rhonda; Meek, James Gordon (December 15, 2016). "Officials: Master Spy Vladimir Putin Now Directly Linked to US Hacking". ABC News. Retrieved December 15, 2016.
  6. ^ Hosenball, Mark (August 19, 2020). Mohammed, Arshad (ed.). "Factbox: Key findings from Senate inquiry into Russian interference in 2016 U.S. election". Reuters. Washington. Retrieved September 5, 2021.
  7. ^ Breuninger, Kevin (March 22, 2019). "Mueller probe Is over: Special counsel submits Russia report to Attorney General William Barr". cnbc.com. Retrieved March 22, 2019.
  8. ^ a b Treene, Zachary; Basu, Alayna (August 18, 2020). "Senate report finds Manafort passed sensitive campaign data to Russian intelligence officer". Axios. Retrieved August 18, 2020.
  9. ^ a b c d Mazzetti, Mark; Fandos, Nicholas (August 18, 2020). "G.O.P.-Led Senate Panel Details Ties Between 2016 Trump Campaign and Russian Interference". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved August 18, 2020.
  10. ^ a b "Russian Efforts Against Election Infrastructure With Additional Views" (PDF). Report Of The Select Committee On Intelligence United States Senate On Russian Active Measures Campaigns And Interference In The 2016 U.S. Election (Report). Vol. 1. 2020. p. 67.
  11. ^ a b c d Leopold, Jason; Bensinger, Ken (November 3, 2020). "New: Mueller Investigated Julian Assange, WikiLeaks, And Roger Stone For DNC Hacks". buzzfeednews.com. Retrieved November 3, 2020.
  12. ^ a b c Clayton, Mark (June 17, 2014). "Ukraine election narrowly avoided 'wanton destruction' from hackers". The Christian Science Monitor. Retrieved August 16, 2017.
  13. ^ a b Watkins, Ali (August 14, 2017). "Obama team was warned in 2014 about Russian interference". Politico. Retrieved August 16, 2017.
  14. ^ a b Kramer, Andrew E.; Higgins, Andrew (August 16, 2017). "In Ukraine, a Malware Expert Who Could Blow the Whistle on Russian Hacking". The New York Times. Retrieved August 16, 2017.
  15. ^ a b Doroshev, Anton; Arkhipov, Ilya (October 27, 2016). "Putin Says U.S. Isn't Banana Republic, Must Get Over Itself". Bloomberg News. Retrieved February 2, 2017.
  16. ^ Scott, Eugene (July 16, 2018). "Trump dismissed the idea that Putin wanted him to win. Putin just admitted that he did". The Washington Post. Retrieved August 16, 2018.
  17. ^ Pegues, Jeff (December 14, 2016). More details on U.S. probe of Russian hacking of DNC. CBS News. Archived from the original on November 2, 2021. Retrieved December 15, 2016 – via YouTube.
  18. ^ Arkin, William M.; Dilanian, Ken; McFadden, Cynthia (December 14, 2016). "U.S. Officials: Putin Personally Involved in U.S. Election Hack". NBC News. Retrieved December 14, 2016.
  19. ^ a b c d e "Putin turned Russia election hacks in Trump's favor: U.S. officials". Reuters. December 15, 2016. Retrieved December 16, 2016.
  20. ^ . Aljazeera.com. Archived from the original on August 26, 2020. Retrieved March 1, 2019.
  21. ^ Starr, Barbara; Brown, Pamela; Perez, Evan; Sciutto, Jim; Labott, Elise (December 15, 2016). "Intel analysis shows Putin approved election hacking". CNN. Retrieved December 15, 2016.
  22. ^ "White House suggests Putin involved in hacking, ups Trump criticism". Fox News. Associated Press. December 15, 2016. Retrieved December 15, 2016.
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russian, interference, 2016, united, states, elections, russiagate, redirects, here, other, uses, russiagate, disambiguation, russian, government, interfered, 2016, united, states, elections, with, goals, sabotaging, presidential, campaign, hillary, clinton, b. Russiagate redirects here For other uses see Russiagate disambiguation The Russian government interfered in the 2016 United States elections with the goals of sabotaging the presidential campaign of Hillary Clinton boosting the presidential campaign of Donald Trump and increasing political and social discord in the United States According to the U S intelligence community the operation code named Project Lakhta 3 4 was ordered directly by Russian president Vladimir Putin 5 6 The 448 page Mueller Report made public in April 2019 examined over 200 contacts between the Trump campaign and Russian officials but concluded that there was insufficient evidence to bring any conspiracy or coordination charges against Trump or his associates Russian interference in the 2016 United States electionsPart of 2016 U S presidential electionODNI declassified assessment of Russian activities and intentions in recent U S elections DateMay 2014 1 2 November 8 2016Also known asProject LakhtaMotiveDestabilization of the United StatesElection of Donald TrumpPerpetratorRussian governmentOutcomeTrump elected presidentMueller probe The Internet Research Agency IRA based in Saint Petersburg Russia and described as a troll farm created thousands of social media accounts that purported to be Americans supporting radical political groups and planned or promoted events in support of Trump and against Clinton They reached millions of social media users between 2013 and 2017 Fabricated articles and disinformation were spread from Russian government controlled media and promoted on social media Additionally computer hackers affiliated with the Russian military intelligence service GRU infiltrated information systems of the Democratic National Committee DNC the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee DCCC and Clinton campaign officials notably chairman John Podesta and publicly released stolen files and emails through DCLeaks Guccifer 2 0 and WikiLeaks during the election campaign Several individuals connected to Russia contacted various Trump campaign associates offering business opportunities to the Trump Organization and proffering damaging information on Clinton Russian government officials have denied involvement in any of the hacks or leaks Russian interference activities triggered strong statements from U S intelligence agencies a direct warning by then U S president Barack Obama to Russian president Vladimir Putin renewed economic sanctions against Russia and closures of Russian diplomatic facilities and expulsion of their staff The Senate and House Intelligence Committees conducted their own investigations into the matter Donald Trump denied the interference had occurred The Federal Bureau of Investigation FBI opened the Crossfire Hurricane investigation of Russian interference in July 2016 including a special focus on links between Trump associates and Russian officials and spies and suspected coordination between the Trump campaign and the Russian government Russian attempts to interfere in the election were first disclosed publicly by members of the United States Congress in September 2016 confirmed by US intelligence agencies in October 2016 and further detailed by the Director of National Intelligence office in January 2017 The dismissal of James Comey the FBI director by President Trump in May 2017 was partly because of Comey s investigation of the Russian interference The FBI s work was taken over in May 2017 by former FBI director Robert Mueller who led a special counsel investigation until March 2019 7 Mueller concluded that Russian interference was sweeping and systematic and violated U S criminal law and he indicted twenty six Russian citizens and three Russian organizations The investigation also led to indictments and convictions of Trump campaign officials and associated Americans on unrelated charges The Mueller report made public in April 2019 examined numerous contacts between the Trump campaign and Russian officials but concluded that though the Trump campaign welcomed the Russian activities and expected to benefit from them there was insufficient evidence to bring any conspiracy or coordination charges against Trump or his associates The Republican led Senate Intelligence Committee investigation submitted the first in their five volume 1 313 page report in July 2019 The committee concluded that the January 2017 intelligence community assessment alleging Russian interference was coherent and well constructed The first volume also concluded that the assessment was proper learning from analysts that there was no politically motivated pressure to reach specific conclusions The final and fifth volume which was the result of three years of investigations was released in August 2020 8 ending one of the United States highest profile congressional inquiries 9 10 The Committee report found that the Russian government had engaged in an extensive campaign to sabotage the election in favor of Trump which included assistance from some of Trump s own advisers 9 In November 2020 newly released passages from the Mueller special counsel investigation s report indicated Although WikiLeaks published emails stolen from the DNC in July and October 2016 and Stone a close associate to Donald Trump appeared to know in advance the materials were coming investigators did not have sufficient evidence to prove active participation in the hacks or knowledge that the electronic thefts were continuing 11 Contents 1 Background and Russian actors 1 1 Prior Russian election interference in Ukraine 1 2 Vladimir Putin 1 3 U S counter disinformation team 1 4 Russian Institute for Strategic Studies 1 5 Preparation 2 Social media and Internet trolls 3 Cyberattack on Democrats 3 1 Podesta hack 3 2 DNC hack 3 2 1 Intelligence analysis of attack 3 2 2 Intelligence reaction and indictment 3 2 3 WikiLeaks 3 2 4 Hacking of Congressional candidates 3 2 4 1 Hacking of Republicans 3 2 4 2 Civil DNC lawsuit against Russian Federation 3 2 4 3 Calls by Trump for Russians to hack or find Clinton s deleted emails 4 Targeting of important voting blocs and institutions 4 1 Attempts to suppress African American votes and spread alienation 4 2 Arousing conservative voters 5 Intrusions into state election systems 5 1 Intrusions into state voter registration systems 6 Investigation into financial flows 6 1 Money funneled through the NRA 6 2 Money from Russian oligarchs 7 Intelligence analysis and reports 7 1 Non U S intelligence 7 2 October 2016 ODNI DHS joint statement 7 3 December 2016 CIA report 7 4 FBI inquiries 7 5 January 2017 Intelligence Community Assessment 7 6 James Comey testimony 8 U S government response 8 1 U S Senate 8 1 1 2018 committee reports 8 1 2 2020 committee report 8 2 U S House of Representatives 8 3 Obama administration 8 4 Punitive measures imposed on Russia 8 4 1 Countering America s Adversaries Through Sanctions Act 8 4 2 Counter sanctions by Russia 9 Impact on election result 10 2017 developments 10 1 Dismissal of FBI Director James Comey 10 2 Investigation by special counsel 10 3 2017 charges 11 2018 developments 11 1 2018 indictments 11 2 Claims by Anastasia Vashukevich 12 2019 developments 13 2020 developments 14 2022 developments 15 2023 developments 16 Links between Trump associates and Russian officials and spies 16 1 Paul Manafort 16 2 Michael Flynn 16 3 George Papadopoulos 16 4 Veselnitskaya meeting 16 5 Other Trump associates 17 Steele dossier 18 Ongoing investigations 19 Commentary and reactions 19 1 Public opinion 19 2 Hillary Clinton 19 3 Republican National Committee 19 4 Donald Trump 19 4 1 Trump viewed as under Putin s influence 19 5 Mike Pence 19 6 Intelligence community 19 7 Electoral College 19 8 Russia 19 9 Columbia Journalism Review 20 See also 21 Notes 22 References 23 Further reading 24 External linksBackground and Russian actorsMain article Timeline of Russian interference in the 2016 United States elections See also Anti American sentiment in Russia Cold War II and Russia United States relations Obama administration 2009 2017 Prior Russian election interference in Ukraine The May 2014 Ukrainian presidential election was disrupted by cyberattacks over several days including the release of hacked emails attempted alteration of vote tallies and distributed denial of service attacks to delay the final result They were found to have been launched by pro Russian hackers 12 13 Malware that would have displayed a graphic declaring far right candidate Dmytro Yarosh the electoral winner was removed from Ukraine s Central Election Commission less than an hour before polls closed Despite this Channel One Russia falsely reported that Yarosh had won broadcasting the same fake graphic that had been planted on the election commission s website 12 14 Political scientist Peter Ordeshook said in 2017 These faked results were geared for a specific audience in order to feed the Russian narrative that has claimed from the start that ultra nationalists and Nazis were behind the revolution in Ukraine 12 The same Sofacy malware used in the Central Election Commission hack was later found on the servers of the Democratic National Committee DNC 14 Around the same time as Russia s attempt to hack the 2014 elections the Obama administration received a report suggesting that the Kremlin was building a disinformation program which could be used to interfere in Western politics 13 Vladimir Putin nbsp American intelligence agencies concluded that Russian president Vladimir Putin personally ordered the covert operation code named Project Lakhta while Putin denied the allegations 15 At the 2018 Helsinki summit Putin said that he wanted Trump to win because he talked about normalizing the U S Russia relationship 16 In December 2016 two unidentified senior intelligence officials told several U S news media outlets Note 1 that they were highly confident that the operation to interfere in the 2016 presidential election was personally directed by Vladimir Putin 5 Under Putin s direction the goals of the operation are reported to have evolved from first undermining American trust in their own democracy to undermining Clinton s campaign and by the fall of 2016 to directly helping Trump s campaign possibly because Putin believed Trump would ease economic sanctions 19 20 Her presidential campaign s Russia policy advisor was Richard Lourie The officials believe Putin became personally involved after Russia accessed the DNC computers 5 because such an operation would require high level government approval 21 White House Press Secretary Josh Earnest 22 and Obama foreign policy advisor and speechwriter Ben Rhodes agreed with this assessment with Rhodes saying operations of this magnitude required Putin s consent 19 In January 2017 the Office of the Director of National Intelligence 23 delivered a declassified report representing the work of the FBI the CIA and the NSA with a similar conclusion President Vladimir Putin ordered an influence campaign in 2016 aimed at the U S presidential election Russia s goals were to undermine public faith in the U S democratic process denigrate Secretary Clinton and harm her electability and potential presidency We further assess Putin and the Russian Government developed a clear preference for president elect Trump We have high confidence in these judgments 24 7 Putin blamed Clinton for the 2011 2012 mass protests in Russia against his rule according to the report 24 11 Clinton was U S Secretary of State at the time 25 26 FBI Director James Comey also has testified that Putin disliked Clinton and preferred her opponent 27 and Clinton herself has accused Putin of having a grudge against her 26 Michael McFaul who was U S ambassador to Russia said the operation could be a retaliation by Putin against Clinton 28 Russian security expert Andrei Soldatov has said The Kremlin believes that with Clinton in the White House it will be almost impossible to lift sanctions against Russia So it is a very important question for Putin personally This is a question of national security 29 Russian officials have denied the allegations multiple times In June 2016 Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov denied any connection of Russia to the DNC hacks 30 In December 2016 when U S intelligence officials publicly accused Putin of being directly involved in the covert operation 5 Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov said he was astonished by this nonsense 31 Putin also has denied any Kremlin involvement in the election campaign though in June 2017 he told journalists that patriotically minded Russian hackers may have been responsible for the campaign cyberattacks against the U S 32 and in 2018 he stated that he had wanted Trump to win the election because he talked about bringing the U S Russia relationship back to normal 33 U S counter disinformation team The United States Department of State planned to use a unit formed with the intention of combating disinformation from the Russian government but it was disbanded in September 2015 after department heads missed the scope of propaganda before the 2016 U S election 34 The unit had been in development for eight months prior to being scrapped 34 Titled the Counter Disinformation Team it would have been a reboot of the Active Measures Working Group set up by the Reagan Administration 35 It was created under the Bureau of International Information Programs 35 Work began in 2014 with the intention of countering propaganda from Russian sources such as TV network RT formerly called Russia Today 35 A beta website was ready and staff were hired by the U S State Department for the unit prior to its cancellation 35 U S Intelligence officials explained to former National Security Agency analyst and counterintelligence officer John R Schindler writing in The New York Observer published at the time by Jared Kushner that the Obama Administration decided to cancel the unit as they were afraid of antagonizing Russia 35 A State Department representative told the International Business Times after being contacted regarding the closure of the unit that the U S was disturbed by propaganda from Russia and the strongest defense was sincere communication 34 U S Undersecretary of State for Public Diplomacy Richard Stengel was the point person for the unit before it was canceled 35 Stengel had written in 2014 that RT was engaged in a disinformation campaign about Ukraine 36 Russian Institute for Strategic Studies Further information Russian Institute for Strategic Studies nbsp The Russian Institute for Strategic Studies began working for the Russian presidency after 2009 In April 2017 Reuters cited several unnamed U S officials as having stated that the Russian Institute for Strategic Studies RISS had developed a strategy to sway the U S election to Donald Trump and failing that to disillusion voters 37 The development of strategy was allegedly ordered by Putin and directed by former officers of Russian Foreign Intelligence Service SVR retired SVR general Leonid Petrovich Reshetnikov being head of the RISS at the time The Institute had been a part of the SVR until 2009 whereafter it has worked for the Russian Presidential Administration 38 The U S officials said the propaganda efforts began in March 2016 The first set of recommendations issued in June 2016 proposed that Russia support a candidate for U S president more favorable to Russia than Obama had been via Russia backed news outlets and a social media campaign It supported Trump until October when another conclusion was made that Hillary Clinton was likely to win and the strategy should be modified to work to undermine U S voters faith in their electoral system and a Clinton presidency by alleging voter fraud in the election 37 RISS director Mikhail Fradkov and Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov denied the allegations 39 Preparation According to a February 2018 criminal indictment 40 more than two years before the election two Russian women obtained visas for what the indictment alleged was a three week reconnaissance tour of the United States including battleground states such as Colorado Michigan Nevada and New Mexico to gather intelligence on American politics The 2018 indictment alleged that another Russian operative visited Atlanta in November 2014 on a similar mission 40 In order to establish American identities for individuals and groups within specific social media communities 41 hundreds of email PayPal and bank accounts and fraudulent driver s licenses were created for fictitious Americans and sometimes real Americans whose Social Security numbers had been stolen 40 Social media and Internet trollsFurther information Internet Research Agency According to the special counsel investigation s Mueller Report officially named Report on the Investigation into Russian Interference in the 2016 Presidential Election 42 the first method of Russian interference used the Internet Research Agency IRA a Kremlin linked troll farm to wage a social media campaign that favored presidential candidate Donald J Trump and disparaged presidential candidate Hillary Clinton 43 The Internet Research Agency also sought to provoke and amplify political and social discord in the United States 44 By February 2016 internal IRA documents showed an order to support the candidacies of Donald Trump and Bernie Sanders while IRA members were to use any opportunity to criticize Hillary Clinton and the rest of the candidates 45 From June 2016 the IRA organized election rallies in the U S often promoting Trump s campaign while opposing Clinton s campaign 46 The IRA posed as Americans hiding their Russian background while asking Trump campaign members for campaign buttons flyers and posters for the rallies 47 nbsp Initially in 2016 Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg said I think the idea that fake news on Facebook influenced the election in any way I think is a pretty crazy idea 48 Russian use of social media to disseminate propaganda content was very broad Facebook and Twitter were used but also Reddit Tumblr Pinterest Medium YouTube Vine and Google among other sites Instagram was by far the most used platform and one that largely remained out of the public eye until late 2018 49 50 The Mueller report lists IRA created groups on Facebook including purported conservative groups e g Tea Party News purported Black social justice groups e g Blacktivist LGBTQ groups LGBT United and religious groups United Muslims of America 47 The IRA Twitter accounts included TEN GOP claiming to be related to the Tennessee Republican Party jenn abrams and Pamela Moore13 both claimed to be Trump supporters and both had 70 000 followers 51 Several Trump campaign members Donald J Trump Jr Eric Trump Kellyanne Conway Brad Parscale and Michael T Flynn linked or reposted material from the IRA s TEN GOP Twitter account listed above Other people who responded to IRA social media accounts include Michael McFaul Sean Hannity Roger Stone and Michael Flynn Jr 52 Advertisements bought by Russian operatives for the Facebook social media site are estimated to have reached 10 million users But many more Facebook users were contacted by accounts created by Russian actors 470 Facebook accounts are known to have been created by Russians during the 2016 campaign Of those accounts six generated content that was shared at least 340 million times according to research done by Jonathan Albright research director for Columbia University s Tow Center for Digital Journalism 53 The most strident Internet promoters of Trump were paid Russian propagandists trolls who were estimated by The Guardian to number several thousand 54 By 2017 the U S news media was focusing on the Russian operations on Facebook and Twitter and Russian operatives moved on to Instagram 50 The Mueller Report found the IRA spent 100 000 for more than 3 500 Facebook advertisements from June 2015 to May 2017 55 which included anti Clinton and pro Trump advertisements 47 In comparison Clinton and Trump campaigns spent 81 million on Facebook ads 56 57 Fabricated articles and disinformation 58 were spread from Russian government controlled outlets RT and Sputnik to be popularized on pro Russian accounts on Twitter and other social media 58 Researchers have compared Russian tactics during the 2016 U S election to the active measures of the Soviet Union during the Cold War 58 but made easier by the use of social media 58 59 Monitoring 7 000 pro Trump social media accounts over a 2 1 2 year period researchers J M Berger Andrew Weisburd and Clint Watts 60 found the accounts denigrated critics of Russian activities in Syria and propagated falsehoods about Clinton s health 61 Watts found Russian propaganda to be aimed at fomenting dissent or conspiracies against the U S government and its institutions 62 and by autumn of 2016 amplifying attacks on Clinton and support for Trump via social media Internet trolls botnets and websites 58 nbsp Former site of the Internet Research Agency in Saint Petersburg Russia nbsp Wikisource has original text related to this article Internet Research Agency Indictment Monitoring news on Twitter directed at one state Michigan prior to the election Philip N Howard found about half of it fabricated or untrue the other half came from real news sources 63 In continued analysis after the election Howard and other researchers found the most prominent methods of misinformation were ostensibly organic posting not advertisements and influence operation activity increased after the 2016 and was not limited to the election 64 Facebook originally denied that fake news on their platform had influenced the election and had insisted it was unaware of any Russian financed advertisements but later admitted that about 126 million Americans may have seen posts published by Russia based operatives 65 66 67 Criticized for failing to stop fake news from spreading on its platform during the 2016 election 68 Facebook originally thought that the fake news problem could be solved by engineering but in May 2017 it announced plans to hire 3 000 content reviewers 69 failed verification According to an analysis by BuzzFeed News the 20 top performing false election stories from hoax sites and hyperpartisan blogs generated 8 711 000 shares reactions and comments on Facebook 70 In September 2017 Facebook told congressional investigators it had discovered that hundreds of fake accounts linked to a Russian troll farm had bought 100 000 in advertisements targeting the 2016 U S election audience 66 The ads which ran between June 2015 and May 2017 primarily focused on divisive social issues roughly 25 were geographically targeted 71 72 Facebook has also turned over information about the Russian related ad buys to Special Counsel Robert Mueller 73 Approximately 3 000 adverts were involved and these were viewed by between four and five million Facebook users prior to the election 74 On November 1 2017 the House Intelligence Committee released a sample of Facebook ads and pages that had been financially linked to the Internet Research Agency 75 A 2019 analysis by The Washington Post s Outlook reviewed a number of troll accounts active in 2016 and 2018 and found that many resembled organic users Rather than wholly negative and obvious many confirmed troll accounts deployed humor and were astute in exploiting questions of culture and identity and are frequently among the first to push new divisive conversations some of which moved quickly to mainstream print media 76 In January 2023 a study from New York University s Center for Social Media and Politics about the influence of Russian trolls on Twitter found they had little influence on 2016 voters attitudes polarization or voting behavior The study was limited to Twitter and did not examine other social media such as the much larger Facebook It did not address the Russian hack and leak operations Another major study in 2018 by University of Pennsylvania communications professor Kathleen Hall Jamieson suggested those probably played a significant role in the 2016 race s outcome Lastly it doesn t suggest that foreign influence operations aren t a threat at all It found that voters who were already favorably disposed to Trump were exposed the most Only 1 percent of Twitter users accounted for 70 percent of the exposure to accounts that Twitter identified as Russian troll accounts Highly partisan Republicans were exposed to nine times more posts than non Republicans 77 78 Cyberattack on Democrats source source source source source source Hillary Clinton at the 2016 Democratic National Convention According to the Mueller Report the second method of Russian interference saw the Russian intelligence service the GRU hacking into email accounts owned by volunteers and employees of the Clinton presidential campaign including that of campaign chairman John Podesta and also hacking into the computer networks of the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee DCCC and the Democratic National Committee DNC As a result the GRU obtained hundreds of thousands of hacked documents and the GRU proceeded by arranging releases of damaging hacked material via the WikiLeaks organization and also GRU s personas DCLeaks and Guccifer 2 0 79 80 81 Starting in March 2016 the Russian military intelligence agency GRU sent spearphishing emails targeted more than 300 individuals affiliated with the Democratic Party or the Clinton campaign according to the Special Counsel s July 13 2018 Indictment Using malware to explore the computer networks of the DNC and DCCC 82 they harvested tens of thousands of emails and attachments and deleted computer logs and files to obscure evidence of their activities 83 These were saved and released in stages to the public during the three months before the 2016 election 84 Some were released strategically to distract the public from media events that were either beneficial to the Clinton campaign or harmful to Trump s The first tranche of 19 000 emails and 8 000 attachments was released on July 22 2016 three days before the Democratic convention The resulting news coverage created the impression that the Democratic National Committee was biased against Clinton s Democratic primary challenger Bernie Sanders who received 43 of votes cast in the Democratic presidential primaries and forced DNC Chairwoman Debbie Wasserman Schultz to resign disrupting the plans of the Clinton campaign 85 86 A second tranche was released on October 7 a few hours after the Obama Administration released a statement by the Department of Homeland Security and the director of National Intelligence accusing the Russian government of interfering in the election through hacking and just 29 minutes after The Washington Post reported on the Access Hollywood videotape where Trump boasted about grabbing women by the pussy The stolen documents effectively distracted media and voter attention from both stories 85 84 87 Stolen emails and documents were given both to platforms created by hackers a website called DCLeaks and a persona called Guccifer 2 0 claiming to be a lone hacker and to an unidentified organization believed to be WikiLeaks 86 The Russians registered the domain dcleaks com 88 using principally Bitcoin to pay for the domain and the hosting 88 Podesta hack Main article Podesta emails John Podesta Chairman of Hillary Clinton s presidential campaign received a phishing email on March 19 2016 sent by Russian operatives purporting to alert him of a compromise in the system and urging him to change his password immediately by clicking on a link 89 This allowed Russian hackers to access around 60 000 emails from Podesta s private account 90 John Podesta later told Meet the Press that the FBI spoke to him only once regarding his hacked emails and that he had not been sure what had been taken until a month before the election on October 7 when WikiLeaks Julian Assange started dumping them out and said they would all dump out that s when I knew that they had the contents of my email account 91 The WikiLeaks October 7 dump started less than an hour after The Washington Post released the Donald Trump and Billy Bush recording Access Hollywood tape WikiLeaks announced on Twitter that it was in possession of 50 000 of Podesta s emails and a few hours after the Obama Administration released a statement by the Department of Homeland Security and the director of National Intelligence stating The U S Intelligence Community USIC is confident that the Russian Government directed the recent compromises of e mails from U S persons and institutions including from U S political organizations 92 It initially released 2 050 of these 93 The cache included emails containing transcripts of Clinton s paid speeches to Wall Street banks controversial comments from staffers about Catholic voters infighting among employees of the Clinton campaign as well as potential vice presidential picks for Clinton 94 95 The Clinton campaign did not confirm or deny the authenticity of the emails but emphasized they were stolen and distributed by parties hostile to Clinton and that top national security officials had stated that documents can be faked as part of a sophisticated Russian misinformation campaign 96 Podesta s e mails once released by WikiLeaks formed the basis for Pizzagate a debunked conspiracy theory that falsely posited that Podesta and other Democratic Party officials were involved in a child trafficking ring based out of pizzerias in Washington D C 97 98 DNC hack Main articles Democratic National Committee cyber attacks and 2016 Democratic National Committee email leak nbsp Debbie Wasserman Schultz resigned her position as chairperson of the DNC 99 The United States Intelligence Community concluded by January 2017 that the GRU using the names Cozy Bear and Fancy Bear had gained access to the computer network of the Democratic National Committee DNC the formal governing body of the Democratic Party in July 2015 and maintained it until at least June 2016 100 101 when they began leaking the stolen information via the Guccifer 2 0 online persona DCLeaks com and Wikileaks 102 Debbie Wasserman Schultz resigned as DNC chairwoman following the release of e mails by WikiLeaks that showed DNC officials discussing Bernie Sanders and his presidential campaign in a derisive and derogatory manner 103 Emails leaked included personal information about Democratic Party donors with credit card and Social Security numbers 104 105 emails by Wasserman Schultz calling a Sanders campaign official a damn liar 106 Following the July 22 publication of a large number of hacked emails by WikiLeaks the FBI announced that it would investigate the theft of DNC emails 107 108 Intelligence analysis of attack In June and July 2016 cybersecurity experts and firms including CrowdStrike 109 Fidelis FireEye 110 Mandiant SecureWorks 111 Symantec 110 and ThreatConnect stated the DNC email leaks were part of a series of cyberattacks on the DNC committed by two Russian intelligence groups called Fancy Bear and Cozy Bear 112 113 also known respectively as APT28 and APT29 The Dukes 114 115 109 116 ThreatConnect also noted possible links between the DC Leaks project and Russian intelligence operations because of a similarity with Fancy Bear attack patterns 117 SecureWorks added that the actor group was operating from Russia on behalf of the Russian government 118 119 de Volkskrant later reported that Dutch intelligence agency AIVD had penetrated the Russian hacking group Cozy Bear in 2014 and observed them in 2015 hack the State Department in real time while capturing pictures of the hackers via a security camera in their workspace 120 121 American British and Dutch intelligence services had also observed stolen DNC emails on Russian military intelligence networks 122 Intelligence reaction and indictment On October 7 2016 Secretary Johnson and Director Clapper issued a joint statement that the intelligence community is confident the Russian Government directed the recent compromises of e mails from U S persons and institutions including from U S political organizations and that the disclosures of hacked e mails on sites like DCLeaks com and WikiLeaks are consistent with the Russian directed efforts 123 In the July 2018 indictment by the Justice Department of twelve Russian GRU intelligence officials posing as a Guccifer 2 0 persona for conspiring to interfere in the 2016 elections 124 125 was for hacking into computers of the Clinton campaign the Democratic National Committee state election boards and secretaries of several states The indictment describes a sprawling and sustained cyberattack on at least three hundred people connected to the Democratic Party and the Clinton campaign The leaked stolen files were released in stages a tactic wreaking havoc on the Democratic Party throughout much of the election season 125 84 One collection of data that hackers obtained and that may have become a devastating weapon against the Clinton campaign was the campaign s data analytics and voter turnout models 126 extremely useful in targeting messages to key constituencies that Clinton needed to mobilize 84 These voters were later bombarded by Russian operatives with negative information about Clinton on social media 84 WikiLeaks nbsp WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange In April 2017 CIA Director Mike Pompeo said WikiLeaks was a hostile intelligence agency aided by foreign states including Russia and that the U S Intelligence Community concluded that Russia s propaganda outlet RT had conspired with WikiLeaks 127 WikiLeaks 128 and its founder Julian Assange 129 130 have made a number of statements denying that the Russian government was the source of the material However an anonymous CIA official said that Russian officials transferred the hacked e mails to WikiLeaks using a circuitous route from Russia s military intelligence services GRU to WikiLeaks via third parties 131 In a leaked private message on Twitter Assange wrote that in the 2016 election it would be much better for GOP to win and that Hillary Clinton was a sadistic sociopath 132 133 Hacking of Congressional candidates Hillary Clinton was not the only Democrat attacked Caches of Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee documents stolen by Guccifer 2 0 were also released to reporters and bloggers around the U S As one Democratic candidate put it Our entire internal strategy plan was made public and suddenly all this material was out there and could be used against me The New York Times noted The seats that Guccifer 2 0 targeted in the document dumps were hardly random They were some of the most competitive House races in the country 134 Hacking of Republicans On January 10 2017 FBI Director James Comey told the Senate Intelligence Committee that Russia succeeded in collecting some information from Republican affiliated targets but did not leak it to the public 135 In earlier statements an FBI official stated Russian attempts to access the RNC server were unsuccessful 136 or had reportedly told the RNC chair that their servers were secure 137 but that email accounts of individual Republicans including Colin Powell were breached Over 200 emails from Colin Powell were posted on the website DC Leaks 136 138 137 139 One state Republican Party Illinois may have had some of its email accounts hacked 140 Civil DNC lawsuit against Russian Federation Main article Democratic National Committee v Russian Federation On April 20 2018 the Democratic National Committee filed a civil lawsuit in federal court in New York accusing the Russian Government the Trump campaign WikiLeaks and others of conspiracy to alter the course of the 2016 presidential election and asking for monetary damages and a declaration admitting guilt The lawsuit was dismissed by the judge because New York does not recognize the specific tort claims pressed in the suit the judge did not make a finding on whether there was or was not collusion between defendants and Russia during the 2016 presidential election 141 Calls by Trump for Russians to hack or find Clinton s deleted emails At a news conference on July 27 2016 Trump publicly called on Russia to hack and release Hillary Clinton s deleted emails from her private server during her tenure in the State Department 142 143 Russia if you re listening I hope you re able to find the 30 000 emails that are missing I think you will probably be rewarded mightily by our press 142 Trump s comment was condemned by the press and political figures including some Republicans 144 he replied that he had been speaking sarcastically 145 Several Democratic Senators said Trump s comments appeared to violate the Logan Act 146 147 and Harvard Law School professor Laurence Tribe added that Trump s call could be treasonous 148 The July 2018 federal indictment of Russian GRU agents said that the first and unsuccessful attempt by Russian hackers to infiltrate the computer servers inside Clinton s offices took place on the same day July 27 2016 Trump made his Russia if you re listening appeal 149 While no direct link with Trump s remark was alleged in the indictment 149 journalist Jane Mayer called the timing striking 84 Trump asserted in March 2019 that he had been joking when he made the remark Katy Tur of NBC News had interviewed Trump immediately after the 2016 remark noting she gave him an opportunity to characterize it as a joke but he did not 150 151 Targeting of important voting blocs and institutionsIn her analysis of the Russian influence on the 2016 election Kathleen Hall Jamieson argues that Russians aligned themselves with the geographic and demographic objectives of the Trump campaign using trolls social media and hacked information to target certain important constituencies 152 Attempts to suppress African American votes and spread alienation According to Vox the Russian Internet Research Agency IRA focused on the culture of Muslims Christians Texas and LGBTQ people to engage those communities as part of a broader strategy to deepen social and political divisions within the U S but no other group received as much attention as Black Americans 49 whose voter turnout has been historically crucial to the election of Democrats Russia s influence campaign used an array of tactics aiming to reduce their vote for Hillary Clinton according to a December 2018 report The Tactics amp Tropes of the Internet Research Agency 153 commissioned by the Senate Intelligence Committee 50 A total 30 Facebook pages targeting Black Americans and 10 YouTube channels that posted 571 videos related to police violence against African Americans 154 The covertly Russian Instagram account blackstagram had more than 300 000 followers 50 A variety of Facebook pages targeting African Americans and later determined to be Russian amassed a total of 1 2 million individual followers the report found 50 The Facebook page for the Russian Blacktivist garnered more hits than Black Lives Matter s non Russian Facebook page 84 Influence operations included recruiting typically unknowing assets who would stage events and spread content from Russian influencers spreading videos of police abuse and spreading misleading information about how to vote and whom to vote for 84 50 The attempt to target Black Americans has been compared to the KGB s attempt to foster racial tensions during Operation INFEKTION 155 Arousing conservative voters At least 25 social media pages drawing 1 4 million followers were created by Russian agents to target the American political right and promote the Trump candidacy 50 An example of the targeting was the adding of Blue Lives Matter material to social media platforms by Russian operatives after the Black Lives Matter movement moved to the center of public attention in America and sparked a pro police reaction 50 Jamieson 156 noted there was reason to believe Donald Trump would under perform among two normally dependable conservative Republican voting blocs churchgoing Christians and military service members and their families It was thought pious Christians were put off by Trump s lifestyle as a Manhattan socialite 157 known for his three marriages and many affairs but not for any religious beliefs who had boasted of groping women 158 Military personnel might lack enthusiasm for a candidate who avoided service in Vietnam 158 but who described himself as a brave soldier in having to face his personal Vietnam of the threat of sexually transmitted diseases 159 and who mocked Gold Star parents and former prisoner of war John McCain To overcome Trump s possible poor reputation among evangelicals and veterans Russian trolls created memes that exploited typical conservative social attitudes about people of color Muslims and immigrants One such meme juxtaposed photographs of a homeless veteran and an undocumented immigrant alluding to the belief that undocumented immigrants receive special treatment 160 84 152 84 CNN exit polls showed that Trump led Clinton among veterans by 26 percentage points and won a higher percentage of the evangelical vote than either of the two previous Republican presidential nominees indicating that this tactic may have succeeded 84 Intrusions into state election systemsA 2019 report by the Senate Intelligence Committee 161 found an unprecedented level of activity against state election infrastructure by Russian intelligence in 2016 162 The activity occurred in all 50 states and is thought by many officials and experts to have been a trial run to probe American defenses and identify weaknesses in the vast back end apparatus voter registration operations state and local election databases electronic poll books and other equipment of state election systems 163 The report warned that the United States remains vulnerable in the 2020 election 162 Of particular concern to the committee report was the Russians hacking of three companies that provide states with the back end systems that have increasingly replaced the thick binders of paper used to verify voters identities and registration status 163 Intrusions into state voter registration systems During the summer and fall of 2016 Russian hackers intruded into voter databases and software systems in 39 different states alarming Obama administration officials to the point that they took the unprecedented step of contacting Moscow directly via the Moscow Washington hotline and warning that the attacks risked setting off a broader conflict 164 As early as June 2016 the FBI sent a warning to states about bad actors probing state elections systems to seek vulnerabilities 165 In September 2016 FBI Director James Comey testified before the House Judiciary Committee that the FBI was investigating Russian hackers attempting to disrupt the 2016 election and that federal investigators had detected hacker related activities in state voter registration databases 166 which independent assessments determined were soft targets for hackers 167 Comey stated there were multiple attempts to hack voter database registrations 165 Director of National Intelligence James Clapper attributed Russian hacking attempts to Vladimir Putin 168 nbsp Part of the 2017 NSA report as published by The Intercept 169 In August 2016 the FBI issued a nationwide flash alert warning state election officials about hacking attempts 167 In September 2016 U S Department of Homeland Security officials and the National Association of Secretaries of State announced that hackers had penetrated or sought to penetrate the voter registration systems in more than 20 states over the previous few months 166 Federal investigators attributed these attempts to Russian government sponsored hackers 165 and specifically to Russian intelligence agencies 167 Four of the intrusions into voter registration databases were successful including intrusions into the Illinois and Arizona databases 168 Although the hackers did not appear to change or manipulate data 166 165 Illinois officials said information on up to 200 000 registered voters was stolen 167 The FBI and DHS increased their election security coordination efforts with state officials as a result 165 166 Homeland Security Secretary Jeh Johnson reported that 18 states had requested voting system security assistance from DHS 165 The department also offered risk assessments to the states but just four states expressed interest as the election was rapidly approaching 166 The reports of the database intrusions prompted alarm from Senate Minority Leader Harry Reid Democrat of Nevada who wrote to the FBI saying foreign attempts to cast doubt on free and fair elections was a danger to democracy not seen since the Cold War 168 A June 5 2017 article in The Intercept described how a top secret National Security Agency report dated May 5 2017 details a months long Russian hacking effort against the U S election infrastructure The NSA did not draw conclusions but reported the possibility that Russian hacking may have breached at least some elements of the voting system with disconcertingly uncertain results The NSA report revealed that the Russian military s GRU hackers used spearfishing attacks to successfully get employee login credentials and login information at VR Systems an election software vendor That information can be used to penetrate corporate VPNs email or cloud services allowing access to internal corporate data Two months later a second attack used trojanized Microsoft Word documents that were supposedly from a VR systems employee They targeted officials at local government organizations who were involved in the management of voter registration systems This type of attack gave the hackers the same unlimited access and capabilities as trusted users The NSA was uncertain about the results of this attack The report detailed other Russian attacks 169 On September 22 2017 federal authorities notified the election officials of 21 states that their election systems had been targeted 170 In most cases states said they were told the systems were not breached 171 Over a year after the initial warnings this was the first official confirmation many state governments received that their states specifically had been targeted 172 Moreover top elections officials of the states of Wisconsin and California have denied the federal claim California Secretary of State Alex Padilla said California voters can further rest assured that the California Secretary of State elections infrastructure and websites were not hacked or breached by Russian cyber actors Our notification from DHS last Friday was not only a year late it also turned out to be bad information 173 In May 2018 the Senate Intelligence Committee released its interim report on election security 174 The committee concluded on a bipartisan basis that the response of the U S Department of Homeland Security to Russian government sponsored efforts to undermine confidence in the U S voting process was inadequate The committee reported that the Russian government was able to penetrate election systems in at least 18 and possibly up to 21 states and that in a smaller subset of states infiltrators could have altered or deleted voter registration data although they lacked the ability to manipulate individual votes or vote tallies The committee wrote that the infiltrators failure to exploit vulnerabilities in election systems could have been because they decided against taking action or because they were merely gathering information and testing capabilities for a future attack 174 To prevent future infiltrations the committee made a number of recommendations including that at a minimum any machine purchased going forward should have a voter verified paper trail and no WiFi capability 174 175 Investigation into financial flowsBy January 2017 a multi agency investigation conducted by the FBI the CIA the NSA the Justice Department the Financial Crimes Enforcement Network and representatives of the DNI was underway looking into how the Russian government may have secretly financed efforts to help Trump win the election had been conducted over several months by six federal agencies 176 Investigations into Carter Page Paul Manafort and Roger Stone were underway on January 19 the eve of the presidential inauguration 177 Money funneled through the NRA By January 2018 the FBI was investigating the possible funneling of illegal money by Aleksandr Torshin a deputy governor of the Central Bank of Russia through the National Rifle Association of America which was then used to help Donald Trump win the presidency 178 179 Torshin is known to have close connections both to Russia s president Vladimir Putin and to the NRA and he has been charged with money laundering in other countries 178 The NRA reported spending 30 million to support the 2016 Trump campaign three times what it spent on Mitt Romney in 2012 and spent more than any other independent group including the leading Trump superPAC 180 Sources with connections to the NRA have stated that the actual amount spent was much higher than 30 million The subunits within the organization which made the donations are not generally required to disclose their donors 178 Spanish special prosecutor Jose Grinda Gonzalez has said that in early 2018 the Spanish police gave wiretapped audio to the FBI of telephone discussions between Torshin and convicted money launderer and mafia boss Alexander Romanov Torshin met with Donald Trump Jr at an NRA event in May 2016 while attempting to broker a meeting between Donald Trump and Vladimir Putin 181 Maria Butina a Russian anti gun control activist who has served as a special assistant to Torshin and came to the U S on a student visa to attend university classes in Washington claimed both before and after the election that she was part of the Trump campaign s communications with Russia 182 Like Torshin she cultivated a close relationship with the NRA 183 In February 2016 Butina started a consulting business called Bridges LLC with Republican political operative Paul Erickson 184 During Trump s presidential campaign Erickson contacted Rick Dearborn one of Trump s advisors writing in an email that he had close ties both to the NRA and to Russia and asking how a back channel meeting between Trump and Putin could be set up The email was later turned over to federal investigators as part of the inquiry into Russia s meddling in the presidential election 185 On July 15 2018 Butina was arrested by the Federal Bureau of Investigation and charged with conspiring to act as an unregistered Russian agent who had attempted to create a backchannel of communications between American Republicans conservatives and Russian officials by infiltrating the National Rifle Association the National Prayer Breakfast and conservative religious organizations 186 Money from Russian oligarchs As of April 2018 Mueller s investigators were examining whether Russian oligarchs directly or indirectly provided illegal cash donations to the Trump campaign and inauguration Investigators were examining whether oligarchs invested in American companies or think tanks having political action committees connected to the campaign as well as money funneled through American straw donors to the Trump campaign and inaugural fund At least one oligarch Viktor Vekselberg was detained and his electronic devices searched as he arrived at a New York area airport on his private jet in early 2018 187 188 Vekselberg was questioned about hundreds of thousands of dollars in payments made to Michael Cohen after the election through Columbus Nova the American affiliate of Vekselberg s Renova Group 189 Another oligarch was also detained on a recent trip to the United States but it is unclear if he was searched Investigators have also asked a third oligarch who has not traveled to the United States to voluntarily provide documents and an interview citation needed Intelligence analysis and reportsNon U S intelligence nbsp John O Brennan Assistant to the President for Counterterrorism and Homeland Security in the Oval Office January 4 2010 In part because U S intelligence agencies cannot surveil U S citizens without a warrant they were slow to recognize the pattern of Russia s efforts From late 2015 until the summer of 2016 during routine surveillance of Russians several countries discovered suspicious interactions between figures connected to Trump and known or suspected Russian agents The UK Germany Estonia Poland and Australia and possibly the Netherlands and France relayed their discoveries to the U S 190 Because the materials were highly sensitive GCHQ director Robert Hannigan contacted CIA director John O Brennan directly to give him information 190 Concerned Brennan gave classified briefings to U S Congress Gang of Eight during late August and September 2016 191 Referring only to intelligence allies and not to specific sources Brennan told the Gang of Eight he had received evidence that Russia might be trying to help Trump win the U S election 190 It was later revealed that the CIA had obtained intelligence from sources inside the Russian government that stated that Putin gave direct orders to disparage Clinton and help Trump 192 On May 23 2017 Brennan stated to the House Intelligence Committee that Russia brazenly interfered in the 2016 U S elections He said he first picked up on Russia s active meddling last summer 193 and that he had on August 4 2016 warned his counterpart at Russia s FSB intelligence agency Alexander Bortnikov against further interference 194 The first public U S government assertion of Russian efforts to influence the 2016 election came in a joint statement on September 22 2016 by Senator Dianne Feinstein and Representative Adam Schiff the top Democrats on the Senate and House Intelligence Committees respectively 195 196 October 2016 ODNI DHS joint statement nbsp James R Clapper At the Aspen security conference in summer 2016 Director of National Intelligence James Clapper said Vladimir Putin wanted to retaliate against perceived U S intervention in Russian affairs with the 2011 13 Russian protests and the ousting of Viktor Yanukovych in the Revolution of Dignity 197 In July 2016 consensus grew within the CIA that Russia had hacked the DNC 198 In a joint statement on October 7 2016 the Department of Homeland Security and the Office of the Director of National Intelligence expressed confidence that Russia had interfered in the presidential election by stealing emails from politicians and U S groups and publicizing the information 199 On December 2 intelligence sources told CNN they had gained confidence that Russia s efforts were aimed at helping Trump win the election 200 On October 7 the U S government formally accused Russia of hacking the DNC s computer networks to interfere in the 2016 presidential election with the help of organizations like WikiLeaks The Department of Homeland Security and Office of the Director of National Intelligence on Election Security claimed in their joint statement The recent disclosures of alleged hacked e mails on sites like DCLeaks com and WikiLeaks and by the Guccifer 2 0 online persona are consistent with the methods and motivations of Russian directed efforts 201 This was corroborated by a report released by the Office of the Director of National Intelligence ODNI in conjunction with the CIA the FBI and the NSA on January 6 2017 202 December 2016 CIA report On December 9 the CIA told U S legislators the U S Intelligence Community had concluded in a consensus view that Russia conducted operations to assist Donald Trump in winning the presidency stating that individuals with connections to the Russian government previously known to the intelligence community had given WikiLeaks hacked emails from the DNC and John Podesta 203 The agencies further stated that Russia had hacked the RNC as well but did not leak information obtained from there 136 These assessments were based on evidence obtained before the election 204 FBI inquiries FBI has been investigating the Russian government s attempt to influence the 2016 presidential election including whether campaign associates of Donald Trump s were involved in Russia s efforts since July 31 2016 205 Following the July 22 publication of a large number of emails by WikiLeaks the FBI announced that it would investigate the theft of DNC emails 107 108 An earlier event investigated by the FBI was a May 2016 meeting between the Donald Trump campaign foreign policy advisor George Papadopoulos and Alexander Downer in a London wine bar where Papadopoulos disclosed his inside knowledge of a large trove of Hillary Clinton emails that could potentially damage her campaign 206 Papadopoulos had gained this knowledge on March 14 2016 when he held a meeting with Joseph Mifsud 207 who told Papadopoulos the Russians had dirt on Clinton in the form of thousands of stolen emails This occurred before the hacking of the DNC computers had become public knowledge 207 208 and Papadopoulos later bragged that the Trump campaign was aware the Russian government had dirt on Hillary Clinton 209 In February 2019 Michael Cohen implicated Trump before the U S Congress writing that Trump had knowledge that Roger Stone was communicating with WikiLeaks about releasing emails stolen from the DNC in 2016 210 211 John Podesta later testified before the House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence that in April 2016 the DNC did not know their computers had been hacked leading Adam Schiff to state So if the Clinton campaign wasn t aware in April that the hacking had even occurred the first campaign to be notified the Russians were in possession of stolen emails would have been the Trump campaign through Mr Papadopoulos 212 In June 2016 the FBI notified the Illinois Republican Party that some of its email accounts may have been hacked 213 In December 2016 an FBI official stated that Russian attempts to access the RNC server were unsuccessful 136 In an interview with George Stephanopoulos of ABC News RNC chair Reince Priebus stated they communicated with the FBI when they learned about the DNC hacks and a review determined their servers were secure 137 On January 10 2017 FBI Director James Comey told the Senate Intelligence Committee that Russia succeeded in collecting some information from Republican affiliated targets but did not leak it to the public 135 On October 31 2016 The New York Times said the FBI had been examining possible connections between the Trump campaign and Russia but did not find any clear links 214 At the time FBI officials thought Russia was motivated to undermine confidence in the U S political process rather than specifically support Trump 214 During a House Intelligence Committee hearing in early December the CIA said it was certain of Russia s intent to help Trump 215 On December 16 2016 CIA Director John O Brennan sent a message to his staff saying he had spoken with FBI Director James Comey and Director of National Intelligence James Clapper and that all agreed with the CIA s conclusion that Russia interfered in the presidential election with the motive of supporting Donald Trump s candidacy 216 On December 29 2016 the FBI and the Department of Homeland Security DHS released an unclassified report 116 that gave new technical details regarding methods used by Russian intelligence services for affecting the U S election government political organizations and private sector 217 218 The report included malware samples and other technical details as evidence that the Russian government had hacked the Democratic National Committee 219 Alongside the report DHS published Internet Protocol addresses malware and files used by Russian hackers 217 An article in the Suddeutsche Zeitung discussed the difficulty of proof in matters of cybersecurity One analyst told the Suddeutsche Zeitung that U S intelligence services could be keeping some information secret to protect their sources and analysis methods 220 Clapper later said the classified version contained a lot of the substantiation that could not be put in the public report 221 On March 20 2017 during public testimony to the House Intelligence Committee FBI director James Comey confirmed the existence of an FBI investigation into Russian interference and Russian links to the Trump campaign including the question of whether there had been any coordination between the campaign and the Russians 222 He said the investigation began in July 2016 223 Comey made the unusual decision to reveal the ongoing investigation to Congress citing benefit to the public good 224 On October 7 2016 Secretary Johnson and Director Clapper issued a joint statement that the intelligence community is confident the Russian Government directed the recent compromises of e mails from U S persons and institutions including from U S political organizations and that the disclosures of hacked e mails on sites like DCLeaks com and WikiLeaks are consistent with the Russian directed efforts The statement also noted that the Russians have used similar tactics and techniques across Europe and Eurasia to influence public opinion there On December 29 2016 DHS and FBI released a Joint Analysis Report JAR which further expands on that statement by providing details of the tools and infrastructure used by Russian intelligence services to compromise and exploit networks and infrastructure associated with the recent U S election as well as a range of U S government political and private sector entities 123 January 2017 Intelligence Community Assessment Main article Assessing Russian Activities and Intentions in Recent US Elections On January 6 2017 after briefing the president the president elect and members of the Senate and House the Office of the Director of National Intelligence ODNI released a de classified version of the report on Russian activities 24 The intelligence community assessment ICA produced by the CIA the FBI the NSA and the ODNI asserted that Russia had carried out a massive cyber operation ordered by Russian president Putin with the goal to sabotage the 2016 U S elections 225 The agencies concluded that Putin and the Russian government tried to help Trump win the election by discrediting Hillary Clinton and portraying her negatively relative to Trump and that Russia had conducted a multipronged cyber campaign consisting of hacking and the extensive use of social media and trolls as well as open propaganda on Russian controlled news platforms 226 The ICA contained no information about how the data was collected and provided no evidence underlying its conclusions 227 228 Clapper said the classified version contained substantiation that could not be made public 221 A large part of the ICA was dedicated to criticizing Russian TV channel RT America which it described as a messaging tool for a Kremlin directed campaign to undermine faith in the U S Government and fuel political protest 229 On March 5 2017 James Clapper said in an interview with Chuck Todd on Meet the Press that the January 2017 ICA did not have evidence of collusion but that it might have become available after he left the government He agreed with Todd that the idea of collusion was not proven at that time 230 On May 14 2017 in an interview with George Stephanopoulos Clapper explained more about the state of evidence for or against any collusion at the time of the January IC assessment saying there was no evidence of any collusion included in that report that s not to say there wasn t evidence He also stated he was also unaware of the existence of the formal investigation at that time 231 In November 2017 Clapper explained that at the time of the Stephanopoulos interview he did not know about the efforts of George Papadopoulos to set up meetings between Trump associates and Kremlin officials nor about the meeting at Trump Tower between Donald Trump Jr Jared Kushner Paul Manafort and a Russian lawyer 232 In June 2017 E W Priestap the assistant director of the FBI Counterintelligence Division told the PBS Newshour program that Russian intelligence used fake news and propaganda and they also used online amplifiers to spread the information to as many people as possible during the election 233 James Comey testimony nbsp Wikinews has related news Former U S FBI Director James Comey testifies about President Trump In testimony to the Senate Intelligence Committee on June 8 234 former FBI Director James Comey said he had no doubt Russia interfered in the 2016 election and that the interference was a hostile act 235 236 Concerning the motives of his dismissal Comey said I take the president at his word that I was fired because of the Russia investigation Something about the way I was conducting it the president felt created pressure on him he wanted to relieve He also said that while he was director Trump was not under investigation 236 U S government responseAt least 17 distinct investigations were started to examine aspects of Russian interference in the 2016 United States elections 237 U S Senate Members of the U S Senate Intelligence Committee traveled to Ukraine and Poland in 2016 and learned about Russian operations to influence their elections 238 Senator McCain called for a special select committee of the U S Senate to investigate Russian meddling in the election 239 240 and called election meddling an act of war 241 The Senate Intelligence Committee began work on its bipartisan inquiry in January 2017 242 In May the committee voted unanimously to give both chairmen solo subpoena power 243 244 Soon after the committee issued a subpoena to the Trump campaign for all Russia related documents emails and telephone records 245 In December it was also looking at the presidential campaign of Green Party s Jill Stein for potential collusion with the Russians 246 In May 2018 the Senate Intelligence Committee released the interim findings of their bipartisan investigation finding that Russia interfered in the 2016 election with the goal of helping Trump gain the presidency stating Our staff concluded that the intelligence community s conclusions were accurate and on point The Russian effort was extensive sophisticated and ordered by President Putin himself for the purpose of helping Donald Trump and hurting Hillary Clinton 247 On January 10 2018 Senator Ben Cardin of the United States Senate Foreign Relations Committee released Putin s Asymmetric Assault on Democracy in Russia and Europe Implications for U S National Security 248 The report said the interference in the 2016 United States elections was a part of Putin s asymmetric assault on democracy worldwide including targeting elections in a number of countries such as Britain France and Germany by Moscow sponsored hacking internet trolling and financing for extremist political groups 249 2018 committee reports The Senate Intelligence Committee commissioned two reports that extensively described the Russian campaign to influence social media during the 2016 election 50 154 One report The Tactics amp Tropes of the Internet Research Agency was produced by the New Knowledge cybersecurity company aided by researchers at Columbia University and Canfield Research LLC 153 Another The IRA Social Media and Political Polarization in the United States 2012 2018 by the Computational Propaganda Project of Oxford University along with the social media analysis company Graphika 250 The New Knowledge report highlighted the energy and imagination of the Russian effort to sway American opinion and divide the country and their focus on African Americans 50 154 The report identified more than 263 million engagements likes comments shares etc with Internet Research Agency content and faulted U S social media companies for allowing their platforms to be co opted for foreign propaganda 154 Examples of efforts included campaigning for African American voters to boycott elections or follow the wrong voting procedures in 2016 encouraging extreme right wing voters to be more confrontational and spreading sensationalist conspiratorial and other forms of junk political news and misinformation to voters across the political spectrum 64 2020 committee report Main article Senate Intelligence Committee report on Russian interference in the 2016 United States presidential election On April 21 2020 the Senate Intelligence Committee released a unanimous heavily redacted report reviewing the January 2017 intelligence community assessment on Russian interference 251 252 253 The committee felt that the assessment brought a coherent and well constructed intelligence basis for the case of unprecedented Russian interference in the 2016 U S presidential election specifically that the interference was unprecedented in its manner and aggressiveness 253 254 The Senate committee heard specific intelligence reporting to support the assessment that Putin and the Russian Government demonstrated a preference for candidate Trump and that Putin approved and directed the interference 254 The committee praised the assessment as an impressive accomplishment noting that the assessment reflects proper analytic tradecraft despite a limited timeframe 255 254 The committee also stated that interviews with those who drafted and prepared the ICA affirmed that analysts were under no political pressure to reach specific conclusions 256 A disagreement between the CIA and the NSA of the agencies confidence level of Russia s preference for Trump was reasonable transparent and openly debated among the agencies and analysts 252 Additionally the committee found that the Steele dossier was not used by the assessment to support any of its analytic judgments 255 On August 17 2020 the Republican controlled Senate Intelligence Committee released the fifth and final volume of their 996 page report 8 ending one of the United States highest profile congressional inquiries 9 10 The Committee report which was based on three years of investigations found that the Russian government had engaged in an extensive campaign to sabotage the election in favor of Trump which included assistance from some members of Trump s own advisers 9 Volume 5 said the Trump administration had used novel claims of executive privilege to obstruct the inquiry 257 The report said that Trump s 2016 campaign staff were eager to accept Russia s help 257 258 however after the release of the report acting Senate Intelligence Committee Chair Marco Rubio issued a statement stating the committee found absolutely no evidence that then candidate Donald Trump or his campaign colluded with the Russian government to meddle in the 2016 election 259 260 U S House of Representatives After bipartisan calls to action in December 2016 261 262 the House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence launched an investigation in January 2017 about Russian election meddling including possible ties between Trump s campaign and Russia The Senate Intelligence Committee launched its own parallel probe in January as well 263 Fifteen months later in April 2018 the House Intelligence Committee s Republican majority released its final report amid harsh criticism from Democratic members of the committee 264 The report found no evidence of collusion between the Russian government and the Trump campaign 265 On February 24 2017 Republican Congressman Darrell Issa called for a special prosecutor to investigate whether Russia meddled with the U S election and was in contact with Trump s team during the presidential campaign saying it would be improper for Trump s appointee former Attorney General Jeff Sessions to lead the investigation 266 267 In March 2017 Democratic ranking committee member Adam Schiff said there was sufficient evidence to warrant further investigation 268 and claimed to have seen more than circumstantial evidence of collusion 269 On April 6 2017 Republican committee chairman Devin Nunes temporarily recused himself from the investigation after the House Ethics Committee announced that it would investigate accusations that he had disclosed classified information without authorization He was replaced by Representative Mike Conaway 270 Nunes was cleared of wrongdoing on December 8 2017 271 The committee s probe was shut down on March 12 2018 272 273 acknowledging that Russians interfered in the 2016 elections through an active measures campaign 274 promoting propaganda and fake news 272 but rejecting the conclusion of intelligence agencies that Russia had favored Trump in the election 272 274 although some Republican committee members distanced themselves from this assertion 275 The committee s report did not find any evidence of collusion between the Trump campaign and the Russian government s efforts Conaway said they had uncovered only perhaps some bad judgment inappropriate meetings 272 274 276 Democrats on the committee objected to the Republicans closure of the investigation and their refusal to press key witnesses for further testimony or documentation which might have further established complicity of the Trump campaign with Russia 277 Schiff issued a 21 page status report outlining plans to continue the investigation including a list of additional witnesses to interview and documents to request 278 Obama administration nbsp President Barack Obama ordered the United States Intelligence Community to investigate election hacking attempts since 2008 279 U S president Obama and Vladimir Putin had a discussion about computer security issues in September 2016 which took place over the course of an hour and a half 280 During the discussion which took place as a side segment during the then ongoing G20 summit in China Obama made his views known on cyber security matters between the U S and Russia 280 Obama said Russian hacking stopped after his warning to Putin 281 One month after that discussion the email leaks from the DNC cyber attack had not ceased and President Obama decided to contact Putin via the Moscow Washington hotline commonly known as the red phone on October 31 2016 Obama emphasized the gravity of the situation by telling Putin International law including the law for armed conflict applies to actions in cyberspace 282 On December 9 2016 Obama ordered the U S Intelligence Community to investigate Russian interference in the election and report before he left office on January 20 2017 279 U S Homeland Security Advisor and chief counterterrorism advisor to the president Lisa Monaco announced the study and said foreign intrusion into a U S election was unprecedented and would necessitate investigation by subsequent administrations 283 The intelligence analysis would cover malicious cyberwarfare occurring between the 2008 and 2016 elections 284 285 A senior administration official said the White House was confident Russia interfered in the election 286 The official said the order by President Obama would be a lessons learned report with options including sanctions and covert cyber response against Russia 286 On December 12 2016 White House Press Secretary Josh Earnest was critical of Trump s rejection of the conclusions of the U S Intelligence Community 287 that Russia used cyberattacks to influence the election 287 United States Secretary of State John Kerry spoke on December 15 2016 about President Obama s decision to approve the October 2016 joint statement by the Department of Homeland Security and the Office of the Director of National Intelligence 19 Obama said the U S government would respond to Russia via overt and covert methods in order to send an unambiguous symbol to the world that any such interference would have harsh consequences in a December 15 2016 interview by NPR journalist Steve Inskeep 280 He added that a motive behind the Russian operation could better be determined after completion of the intelligence report he ordered 280 Obama emphasized that Russian efforts caused more harm to Clinton than to Trump during the campaign 280 At a press conference the following day he highlighted his September 2016 admonition to Putin to cease engaging in cyberwarfare against the U S 288 Obama explained that the U S did not publicly reciprocate against Russia s actions due to a fear such choices would appear partisan 288 President Obama stressed cyber warfare against the U S should be a bipartisan issue 289 In the last days of the Obama administration officials pushed as much raw intelligence as possible into analyses and attempted to keep reports at relatively low classification levels as part of an effort to widen their visibility across the federal government The information was filed in many locations within federal agencies as a precaution against future concealment or destruction of evidence in the event of any investigation 290 Punitive measures imposed on Russia See also Countering America s Adversaries Through Sanctions Act International sanctions during the Ukrainian crisis and Magnitsky Act On December 29 2016 the U S government announced a series of punitive measures against Russia 291 292 The Obama administration imposed sanctions on four top officials of the GRU and declared persona non grata 35 Russian diplomats suspected of spying they were ordered to leave the country within 72 hours 293 Note 2 On December 30 two waterfront compounds used as retreats by families of Russian embassy personnel were shut down on orders of the U S government citing spying activities one in Upper Brookville New York on Long Island and the other in Centreville Maryland on the Eastern Shore 292 295 Further sanctions against Russia were undertaken both overt and covert 219 296 297 A White House statement said that cyberwarfare by Russia was geared to undermine U S trust in democracy and impact the election 298 President Obama said his decision was taken after previous warnings to Russia 299 In mid July 2017 the Russian foreign ministry said the U S was refusing to issue visas to Russian diplomats to allow Moscow to replace the expelled personnel and get its embassy back up to full strength 300 Initially Putin refrained from retaliatory measures to the December 29 sanctions and invited all the children of the U S diplomats accredited in Russia to New Year s and Christmas celebrations at the Kremlin He also said that steps for restoring Russian American relations would be built on the basis of the policies developed by the Trump administration 301 302 Later in May 2017 Russian banker Andrey Kostin an associate of President Vladimir Putin accused the Washington elite of purposefully disrupting the presidency of Donald Trump 303 Countering America s Adversaries Through Sanctions Act Main article Countering America s Adversaries Through Sanctions Act nbsp German Chancellor Angela Merkel criticized the CAATSA sanctions against Russia targeting EU Russia energy projects 304 In June 2017 the Senate voted 98 to 2 for a bill that had been initially drafted in January by a bipartisan group of senators over Russia s continued involvement in the wars in Ukraine and Syria and its meddling in the 2016 election that envisaged sanctions on Russia as well as Iran and North Korea 305 the bill would expand the punitive measures previously imposed by executive orders and convert them into law 306 307 An identical bill introduced by Democrats in the House in July 308 passed 419 to 3 309 The law forbids the president from lifting earlier sanctions without first consulting Congress giving them time to reverse such a move It targets Russia s defense industry by harming Russia s ability to export weapons and allows the U S to sanction international companies that work to develop Russian energy resources 310 The proposed sanctions also caused harsh criticism and threats of retaliatory measure on the part of the European Union Germany and France 304 311 312 On January 29 2018 the Trump administration notified Congress that it would not impose additional sanctions on Russia under 2017 legislation designed to punish Moscow s meddling in the 2016 U S election The administration insisted that the mere threat of the sanctions outlined in the Countering America s Adversaries Through Sanctions Act would serve as a deterrent and that implementing the sanctions would therefore be unnecessary 313 Counter sanctions by Russia On July 27 as the sanctions bill was being passed by the Senate Putin pledged a response to this kind of insolence towards our country 314 Shortly thereafter Russia s foreign ministry Sergey Lavrov demanded that the U S reduce its diplomatic and technical personnel in the Moscow embassy and its consulates in St Petersburg Ekaterinburg and Vladivostok to 455 persons the same as the number of Russian diplomats posted in the U S and suspended the use of a retreat compound and a storage facility in Moscow 315 Putin said he had made this decision personally and confirmed that 755 employees of the U S diplomatic mission must leave Russia 316 315 Impact on election resultAs of October 2018 the question of whether Donald Trump won the 2016 election because of the Russian interference had not been given much focus The question has been declared impossible to answer or has been ignored in favor of other factors that led to Trump s victory 84 126 Joel Benenson the Clinton campaign s pollster has said that the answer to this question will probably never be known while Richard Burr the Republican chairman of the Senate Intelligence Committee said we cannot calculate the impact that foreign meddling and social media had on this election Michael V Hayden a former director of the CIA and the NSA has asserted that the Russian attacks were the most successful covert influence operation in history but that their impact is not just unknown it s unknowable 84 Statistician Nate Silver writing in February 2018 described himself as fairly agnostic on the question but noted that thematically the Russian interference tactics were consistent with the reasons Clinton lost 317 Clinton supporters have been more likely to blame her defeat on factors like campaign mistakes or Comey s reopening of the criminal investigation into Clinton s emails than to blame it on Russian interference They have also drawn attention to the issue of whether Trump colluded with Russia in connection with the campaign 84 In their book Shattered Inside Hillary Clinton s Doomed Campaign reporters Jonathan Allen and Amie Parnes reported that immediately after the election Robby Mook and John Podesta decided to assert that Russian hacking was the real reason for the defeat 318 Several high level Republicans who including those who would have benefited from Russia s efforts have asserted that Russian interference did not determine the election s outcome President Trump has asserted that the Russians had no impact on our votes whatsoever 319 and Vice President Pence has claimed that it is the universal conclusion of our intelligence communities that none of those efforts had any impact on the outcome of the 2016 election 320 Secretary of State Mike Pompeo added that the intelligence community s assessment is that the Russian meddling that took place did not affect the outcome of the election 321 85 In fact the official intelligence assessment of January 2017 did not evaluate whether Russian activities had any impact on the election s outcome 322 and CIA spokesman Dean Boyd said Pompeo s remark was erroneous 323 House Speaker Paul Ryan claimed that it was clear that the Russian interference didn t have a material effect on our elections 126 85 On the other hand a number of former intelligence and law enforcement officials at least one political scientist and one former U S president argue that Russian interference was decisive In support of this argument they point to the sophistication of the Russian propaganda on social media the hacking of Democratic Party emails and the timing of their public release the small shift in voter support needed to achieve victory in the Electoral College and the relatively high number of undecided voters who may have been more readily influenced 85 126 84 James Clapper the former director of National Intelligence told Jane Mayer it stretches credulity to think the Russians didn t turn the election I think the Russians had more to do with making Clinton lose than Trump did 84 Ex FBI agent Clint Watts has written that without the Russian influence I believe Trump would not have even been within striking distance of Clinton on Election Day 85 324 Former president Jimmy Carter has publicly said he believes Trump would not have been elected without the Russian interference 325 Carter has said Trump didn t actually win the election in 2016 He lost the election and he was put into office because the Russians interfered on his behalf When questioned Carter agreed that Trump was an illegitimate president 326 327 Three states where Trump won by very close margins margins significantly less than the number of votes cast for third party candidates in those states gave him an Electoral College majority Mayer writes that if only 12 of these third party voters were persuaded by Russian propaganda based on hacked Clinton campaign analytics not to vote for Clinton this would have been enough to win the election for Trump 84 Political scientist Kathleen Hall Jamieson in a detailed forensic analysis concludes that Russian trolls and hackers persuaded enough Americans to either vote a certain way or not vote at all to affect the election results 84 328 Specifically Jamieson argued that two factors that caused a drop in intention to vote for Clinton reported to pollsters can be traced to Russian work The publicizing of excerpts of speeches by Clinton made to investment banks for high fees and disinformation on FBI head Comey s public denunciation of Clinton s actions as extremely careless see above 84 A Columbia study published in 2022 saw changes on election betting markets around Russian holidays when trolls would be less active 329 An NYU study published in 2023 found Russian Twitter trolls specifically had no measurable impact 77 2017 developmentsFurther information Timeline of investigations into Trump and Russia January June 2017 and Timeline of investigations into Trump and Russia July December 2017 Dismissal of FBI Director James Comey Main article Dismissal of James Comey On May 9 2017 Trump dismissed Comey attributing his action to recommendations from United States Attorney General Jeff Sessions and Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein 330 Trump had been talking to aides about firing Comey for at least a week before acting and had asked Justice Department officials to come up with a rationale for dismissing him 331 332 After he learned that Trump was about to fire Comey Rosenstein submitted to Trump a memo critical of Comey s conduct in the investigation about Hillary Clinton s emails 333 334 Trump later confirmed that he had intended to fire Comey regardless of any Justice Department recommendation 335 Trump himself also tied the firing to the Russia investigation in a televised interview stating When I decided to fire Comey I said to myself I said You know this Russia thing with Trump and Russia is a made up story it s an excuse by the Democrats for having lost an election that they should have won 336 337 The dismissal came as a surprise to Comey and most of Washington and was described as immediately controversial and having vast political ramifications because of the Bureau s ongoing investigation into Russian activities in the 2016 election 338 It was compared to the Saturday Night Massacre President Richard Nixon s termination of special prosecutor Archibald Cox who had been investigating the Watergate scandal 339 340 and to the dismissal of Sally Yates in January 2017 341 Comey himself stated It s my judgment that I was fired because of the Russia investigation I was fired in some way to change or the endeavor was to change the way the Russia investigation was being conducted 342 During a meeting with Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov and Ambassador Sergey Kislyak on May 10 2017 in the Oval Office Trump told the Russian officials that firing the F B I director James Comey had relieved great pressure on him according to a White House document Trump stated I just fired the head of the F B I He was crazy a real nut job I faced great pressure because of Russia That s taken off 343 In 2019 The Washington Post revealed that Trump also told Lavrov and Kislyak during this meeting that he wasn t concerned about Russia interfering in American elections 344 Investigation by special counsel Main article Mueller special counsel investigation nbsp Special counsel Robert Mueller directed the FBI from 2001 to 2013 On May 17 2017 Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein appointed former FBI Director Robert Mueller as special counsel to direct FBI agents and Department of Justice prosecutors investigating election interference by Russia and related matters 345 346 347 As special counsel Mueller has the power to issue subpoenas 348 hire staff members request funding and prosecute federal crimes in connection with his investigation 349 Mueller assembled a legal team 350 Trump engaged several attorneys to represent and advise him including his longtime personal attorney Marc Kasowitz 351 as well as Jay Sekulow Michael Bowe and John M Dowd 352 353 All but Sekulow have since resigned 354 355 In August 2017 Mueller was using a grand jury 356 2017 charges In October 2017 Trump campaign adviser George Papadopoulos pleaded guilty earlier in the month to making a false statement to FBI investigators about his connections to Russia 357 In the first guilty plea of special counsel Robert Mueller s investigation George Papadopoulos admitted lying to the FBI about contact with Russian agents who offered the campaign thousands of damaging emails about Clinton months before then candidate Donald Trump asked Russia to find Hillary Clinton s missing emails His plea agreement said a Russian operative had told a campaign aide the Russians had emails of Clinton Papadopoulos agreed to cooperate with prosecutors as part of the plea bargain 358 359 Later that month former Trump campaign chairman Paul Manafort surrendered to the FBI after being indicted on multiple charges His business associate Rick Gates was also indicted and surrendered to the FBI 360 The pair were indicted on one count of conspiracy against the United States one count of conspiracy to launder money one count of being an unregistered agent of a foreign principal one count of making false and misleading FARA statements and one count of making false statements Manafort was charged with four counts of failing to file reports of foreign bank and financial accounts while Gates was charged with three 361 All charges arise from their consulting work for a pro Russian government in Ukraine and are unrelated to the campaign 362 It was widely believed that the charges against Manafort are intended to pressure him into becoming a cooperating witness about Russian interference in the 2016 election 362 In February 2018 Gates pleaded guilty to fraud related charges and agreed to testify against Manafort 363 In April 2018 when Manafort s lawyers filed a motion to suppress the evidence obtained during the July 26 raid on Manafort s home the warrants for the search were revealed and indicated that in addition to seeking evidence related to Manafort s work in Ukraine Mueller s investigation also concerned Manafort s actions during the Trump campaign 364 including the meeting with a Russian lawyer and a counterintelligence officer at the Trump Tower meeting on June 9 2016 365 In March 2018 the investigation revealed that the prosecutors have established links between Rick Gates and an individual with ties to Russian intelligence which occurred while Gates worked on Trump s campaign A report filed by prosecutors concerning the sentencing of Gates and Manafort associate Alex van der Zwaan who lied to Mueller s investigators alleges that Gates knew the individual he was in contact with had these connections 366 2018 developmentsFurther information Timeline of investigations into Trump and Russia January June 2018 and Timeline of investigations into Trump and Russia July December 2018 2018 indictments On February 16 2018 a Federal grand jury in Washington D C indicted 13 Russian nationals and three Russian entities on charges of conspiracy to defraud the United States conspiracy to commit bank and wire fraud and fraud with identification documents in connection with the 2016 United States national elections 367 The 37 page indictment cites the illegal use of social media to sow political discord including actions that supported the presidential candidacy of Donald Trump and disparaged his opponent Hillary Clinton 368 On the same day Robert Mueller announced that Richard Pinedo had pleaded guilty to using the identities of other people in connection with unlawful activity 369 370 Lawyers representing Concord Management and Consulting appeared on May 9 2018 in federal court in Washington to plead not guilty to the charges 371 The prosecutors subsequently withdrew the charges 372 source source source source source source source track Twelve Russians were indicted for hacking at a press conference on July 13 2018 On July 13 2018 Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein released indictments returned by a grand jury charging twelve Russian intelligence officials who work for the Russian intelligence agency GRU with conspiring to interfere in the 2016 elections 124 125 The individuals posing as a Guccifer 2 0 persona are accused of hacking into computers of the Clinton campaign and the Democratic National Committee as well as state election boards and secretaries of several states In one unidentified state the Russians stole information on half a million voters The indictment also said a Republican congressional candidate also unidentified had been sent campaign documents stolen by the group and that a reporter was in contact with the Russian operatives and offered to write an article to coincide with the release of the stolen documents 124 Claims by Anastasia Vashukevich In March 2018 Anastasia Vashukevich a Belarusian national arrested in Thailand said she had over 16 hours of audio recordings that could shed light on possible Russian interference in American elections She offered the recordings to American authorities in exchange for asylum to avoid being extradited to Belarus 373 Vashukevich said she was close to Oleg Deripaska a Russian oligarch with ties to Putin and business links to Paul Manafort and asserted the recordings included Deripaska discussing the 2016 presidential election She said some of the recorded conversations which she asserted were made in August 2016 included three individuals who spoke fluent English and who she believed were Americans Vashukevich s claims appeared to be consistent with a video published in February 2018 by Alexei Navalny about a meeting between Deripaska and Russian Deputy Prime Minister Sergei Eduardovich Prikhodko In the video Navalny claims Deripaska served as a liaison between the Russian government and Paul Manafort in connection with Russian interference efforts 373 In August 2018 Vashukevich said she no longer has any evidence having sent the recordings to Deripaska without having made them public hoping he would be able to gain her release from prison 374 and has promised Deripaska not to make any further comment on the recordings contents 375 376 2019 developmentsFurther information Timeline of investigations into Trump and Russia 2019 2020 nbsp The Mueller Report redacted On March 24 Attorney General Barr sent a four page letter to Congress regarding the Special Counsel s findings regarding Russian interference and obstruction of justice 377 Barr said that on the question of Russian interference in the election Mueller detailed two ways in which Russia attempted to influence the election in Trump s favor but did not establish that members of the Trump Campaign conspired or coordinated with the Russian government in its election interference activities 378 379 On the question of obstruction of justice Barr said that Mueller wrote while this report does not conclude that the President committed a crime it also does not exonerate him 378 380 The Special Counsel s decision to describe the facts of his obstruction investigation without reaching any legal conclusions leaves it to the Attorney General to determine whether the conduct described in the report constitutes a crime Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein and I have concluded that the evidence developed during the Special Counsel s investigation is not sufficient to establish that the President committed an obstruction of justice offense 381 On April 18 2019 a redacted version of the final Mueller Report was released to the public 382 383 The Mueller Report found that the Russian government interfered in the election in sweeping and systematic fashion and violated U S criminal laws 384 On May 29 2019 Mueller announced that he was retiring as special counsel and the office would be shut down and he spoke publicly about the report for the first time He reiterated that his report did not exonerate the president and that legal guidelines prevented the indictment of a sitting president stating that the Constitution requires a process other than the criminal justice system to formally accuse a sitting president of wrongdoing 385 Saying The report is my testimony he indicated he would have nothing to say that was not already in the report He emphasized that the central conclusion of his investigation was that there were multiple systematic efforts to interfere in our election That allegation deserves the attention of every American 386 Soon after the release of the Mueller Report Trump began urging an investigation into the origins of the Russian investigation wanting to investigate the investigators 387 In April 2019 Attorney General William Barr announced that he had launched a review of the origins of the FBI s investigation 388 389 The origins of the probe were already being investigated by the Justice Department s inspector general and by U S attorney John Huber who was appointed in 2018 by Jeff Sessions 390 He assigned U S Attorney John Durham to lead it 391 Durham was given the authority to broadly examin e the government s collection of intelligence involving the Trump campaign s interactions with Russians reviewing government documents and requesting voluntary witness statements 391 Trump directed the American intelligence community to promptly provide assistance and information to Barr and delegated to him the full and complete authority to declassify any documents related to his probe 387 392 In September 2019 it was reported that Barr has been contacting foreign governments to ask for help in this mission He personally traveled to the United Kingdom and Italy to seek information and at Barr s request Trump phoned the prime minister of Australia about the subject 393 2020 developmentsOn November 2 the Special Counsel s office released previously redacted portions of the Mueller report In September a federal judge ordered the passages disclosed in response to a Freedom of Information Act FOIA lawsuit filed by BuzzFeed News and the advocacy group Electronic Privacy Information Center while allowing other portions to remain redacted 11 In summary per Buzzfeed Although Wikileaks published emails stolen from the DNC in July and October 2016 and Stone a close associate to Donald Trump appeared to know in advance the materials were coming investigators did not have sufficient evidence to prove active participation in the hacks or knowledge that the electronic thefts were continuing In addition federal prosecutors could not establish that the hacked emails amounted to campaign contributions benefitting Trump s election chances 11 The newly released material also stated While the investigation developed evidence that the GRU s hacking efforts in fact were continuing at least at the time of the July 2016 WikiLeaks dissemination the Office did not develop sufficient admissible evidence that WikiLeaks knew of or even was willfully blind to that fact As reported by Buzzfeed Likewise prosecutors faced what they called factual hurdles in pursuing Stone for the hack 11 On November 2 2020 the day before the presidential election New York magazine reported that According to two sources familiar with the probe there has been no evidence found after 18 months of investigation to support Barr s claims that Trump was targeted by politically biased Obama officials to prevent his election The probe remains ongoing In fact the sources said the Durham investigation has so far uncovered no evidence of any wrongdoing by Biden or Barack Obama or that they were even involved with the Russia investigation There was no evidence not even remotely indicating Obama or Biden did anything wrong as one person put it 394 2022 developmentsIn November 2022 Russian oligarch Yevgeny Prigozhin admitted to Russian interference in U S elections 395 396 397 CNN reported that his statement appeared to be the first admission of a high level Russian campaign to interfere in US elections from someone close to the Kremlin 395 In 2018 Prigozhin had been indicted along with 12 other Russian nationals and 3 Russian firms as part of Robert Mueller s investigation into Russian election interference In 2020 the Justice department had dismissed the indictments against Prigozhin s catering firm Concord because the inability to punish the indicted would possibly lead to the exposure of law enforcement techniques in the process of trial In July 2022 the State Department offered a 10 million reward for information on Prigozhin and the Internet Research Agency among other Russian interference mechanisms Prigozhin s admission of election interference in November followed his admission of funding the Kremlin linked far right mercenary Wagner Group in September 2022 396 He had also been placed on the FBI s Most Wanted list in 2021 397 U S officials were left unsurprised by the Russian oligarch s confession which was phrased as a vague threat Gentlemen we interfered we interfere and we will interfere Carefully precisely surgically and in our own way as we know how During our pinpoint operations we will remove both kidneys and the liver at once 395 Prigozhin long having been sanctioned by the United States the timing and vagueness of his admission could include elements of disinformation with White House Press Secretary Karine Jean Pierre describing it as one of many Russian narratives aimed at undermining democracy 395 She stated the oligarch s comments do not tell us anything new or surprising 396 State Department spokesman Ned Price said that His bold confession if anything appears to be just a manifestation of the impunity that crooks and cronies enjoy under President Putin and the Kremlin As you know we have sanctioned this individual Yevgeny Prigozhin since 2018 for his interference with our election processes and institutions 398 395 On November 17 2022 Republican political operative Jesse Benton was convicted by a federal jury for a 2016 scheme to funnel Russian money to the Donald Trump campaign According to court documents Benton caused a Russian foreign national to wire 100 000 to his consulting firm of which 25 000 of the money from the Russian national was contributed to the Trump campaign 399 400 401 2023 developmentsIn December 2023 CNN reported that a binder containing highly classified information related to Russian election interference went missing at the end of Donald Trump s presidency raising alarms among intelligence officials that some of the most closely guarded national security secrets from the US and its allies could be exposed In the two plus years since Trump left office the missing intelligence does not appear to have been found The binder contained raw intelligence the US and its NATO allies collected on Russians and Russian agents including sources and methods that informed the US government s assessment that Russian President Vladimir Putin sought to help Trump win the 2016 election According to the report in the final days of his presidency Donald Trump intended to declassify and release publicly multiple documents related to the FBI s Russian investigation Several copies of the binder with varying levels of redactions ended up in the Justice Department and the National Archives but an unredacted version went missing 402 403 404 Links between Trump associates and Russian officials and spiesMain article Links between Trump associates and Russian officials and spies During the 2016 presidential campaign and up to his inauguration Donald J Trump and at least 18 campaign officials and advisers had numerous contacts with Russian nationals WikiLeaks or intermediaries between the two As of January 28 The New York Times had tallied more than 140 in person meetings phone calls text messages emails and private messages between the Trump campaign and Russians or WikiLeaks 405 In spring of 2015 U S intelligence agencies started overhearing conversations in which Russian government officials discussed associates of Donald Trump 406 British and the Dutch intelligence have given information to United States intelligence about meetings in European cities between Russian officials associates of Putin and associates of then president elect Trump American intelligence agencies also intercepted communications of Russian officials some of them within the Kremlin discussing contacts with Trump associates 290 Multiple Trump associates were reported to have had contacts with senior Russian intelligence officials during 2016 although in February 2017 U S officials said they did not have evidence that Trump s campaign had co operated with the Russians to influence the election 407 As of March 2017 update the FBI was investigating Russian involvement in the election including alleged links between Trump s associates and the Russian government 222 nbsp Russian ambassador Sergey Kislyak met with a number of U S officials In particular Russian Ambassador Sergey Kislyak has met several Trump campaign members and administration nominees the people involved have dismissed those meetings as routine conversations in preparation for assuming the presidency Trump s team has issued at least twenty denials concerning communications between his campaign and Russian officials 408 several of these denials turned out to be false 409 In the early months of 2017 Trump and other senior White House officials asked the Director of National Intelligence the NSA director the FBI director and two chairs of congressional committees to publicly dispute the news reports about contacts between Trump associates and Russia 410 411 Paul Manafort Further information Paul Manafort and Trials of Paul Manafort Trump campaign chairman Paul Manafort had several contacts with senior Russian intelligence officials during 2016 which he denied 407 Intercepted communications during the campaign show that Russian officials believed they could use Manafort to influence Trump 193 The Mueller investigation and the Senate Intelligence Committee found that as Trump s campaign manager in August 2016 Manafort shared Trump campaign internal polling data with Ukrainian political consultant Konstantin Kilimnik whom the Mueller Report linked to Russian intelligence while the Intelligence Committee characterized him as a Russian intelligence officer 412 413 Manafort gave Kilimnik data for Michigan Wisconsin and Pennsylvania states the Russian Internet Research Agency specifically targeted for social media and ad campaigns Trump won those three states by narrow margins and they were key to his election 412 414 415 In 2017 Manafort was indicted in the U S District Court for the District of Columbia on various charges arising from his consulting work for the pro Russian government of Viktor Yanukovych in Ukraine before Yanukovych s overthrow in 2014 as well as in the Eastern District of Virginia for eight charges of tax and bank fraud He was convicted of the fraud charges in August 2019 and sentenced to 47 months in prison by Judge T S Ellis Although all the 2017 charges arose from the Special Counsel investigation none of them were for any alleged collusion to interfere with U S elections 416 On March 13 2019 Judge Amy Berman Jackson sentenced Manafort to an additional 43 months in prison 417 418 That day New York state prosecutors also charged Manafort with sixteen state felonies 419 On December 18 2019 the state charges against him were dismissed because of the doctrine of double jeopardy 420 On May 13 2020 Manafort was released to home confinement due to the threat of COVID 19 421 On December 23 2020 U S president Donald Trump pardoned Manafort 422 Michael Flynn Further information Michael Flynn and United States v Flynn In December 2015 retired Army general Michael Flynn was photographed at a dinner seated next to Vladimir Putin He was in Moscow to give a paid speech which he failed to disclose as is required of former high ranking military officers 423 Also seated at the head table are Green Party presidential candidate Jill Stein and members of Putin s inner circle including Sergei Ivanov Dmitry Peskov Vekselberg and Alexey Gromov 424 425 In February 2016 Flynn was named as an advisor to Trump s presidential campaign Later that year in phone calls intercepted by U S intelligence Russian officials were overheard claiming they had formed a strong relationship with Trump advisor Flynn and believed they would be able to use him to influence Trump and his team 426 In December 2016 Flynn then Trump s designated choice to be National Security Advisor and Jared Kushner met with Russian ambassador to the United States Sergey Kislyak and requested him to set up a direct encrypted line of communication so they could communicate directly with the Kremlin without the knowledge of American intelligence agencies 427 Three anonymous sources claimed that no such channel was actually set up 428 429 On December 29 2016 the day President Obama announced sanctions against Russia Flynn discussed the sanctions with Kislyak urging that Russia not retaliate 430 Flynn initially denied speaking to Kislyak then acknowledged the conversation but denied discussing the sanctions 431 432 When it was revealed in February 2017 that U S intelligence agencies had evidence through monitoring of the ambassador s communications that he actually had discussed the sanctions Flynn said he couldn t remember if he did or not 431 Upon Trump s inauguration on January 20 2017 he appointed Flynn his National Security Advisor On January 24 Flynn was interviewed by the FBI Two days later acting Attorney General Sally Yates informed the White House that Flynn was compromised by the Russians and possibly open to blackmail 433 Flynn was forced to resign as national security advisor on February 13 2017 432 On December 1 2017 Flynn pleaded guilty to a single felony count of making false fictitious and fraudulent statements to the FBI about his conversations with Kislyak His plea was part of a plea bargain with special counsel Robert Mueller under which Flynn also agreed to cooperate with Mueller s investigation which lead to his sentencing being postponed several times 434 In June 2019 Flynn fired his initial counsel from the firm Covington and Burling and hired Sidney Powell Powell moved to compel production of additional Brady material and newly discovered evidence in October 2019 which was denied by Sullivan in December 2019 Flynn then moved to withdraw his guilty plea in January 2020 claiming that the government had acted in bad faith and breached the plea agreement In May 2020 the United States Department of Justice DOJ filed a motion to dismiss the charge against Flynn with prejudice asserting that it no longer believed it could prove beyond a reasonable doubt that Flynn had made false statements to the FBI or that the statements even if false were materially false in regards to the FBI s investigation Sullivan then appointed an amicus John Gleeson to prepare an argument against dismissal Sullivan also allowed amici to file briefs regarding the dismissal motion Powell filed an emergency petition for a writ of mandamus in the Circuit Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia asking 1 that Judge Sullivan be ordered to grant the government s motion to dismiss 2 for Sullivan s amicus appointment of Gleeson to be vacated and 3 for the case be assigned to another judge for any additional proceedings The appellate court panel assigned to the case ordered Sullivan to respond and briefs were also filed by the DOJ and amici In June 2020 the appeals court panel ruled 2 1 in favor of Flynn on the first two requests and the panel unanimously rejected the third request Judge Sullivan petitioned the Court of Appeals for an en banc rehearing a request opposed by Flynn and the DOJ The appellate court granted Sullivan s petition in an 8 2 decision and vacated the panel s ruling The case was ultimately dismissed as moot on December 8 2020 after President Trump pardoned Flynn on November 25 2020 George Papadopoulos Further information George Papadopoulos In March 2016 Donald Trump named George Papadopoulos an oil gas and policy consultant as an unpaid foreign policy advisor to his campaign Shortly thereafter Papadopoulos was approached by Joseph Mifsud a London based professor with connections to high ranking Russian officials 435 Mifsud told him the Russians had dirt on Hillary Clinton in the form of thousands of emails 436 apparently stolen in an effort to try to damage her campaign 437 The two met several times in March 2016 436 In May 2016 at a London wine bar Papadopoulos told the top Australian diplomat to the United Kingdom Alexander Downer that Russia had a dirt file on rival candidate Hillary Clinton in the form of hacked Democratic Party emails 438 After the DNC emails were published by WikiLeaks in July the Australian government told the FBI about Papadopoulos revelation leading the FBI to launch a counterintelligence investigation into the Trump campaign known by its code name Crossfire Hurricane 437 439 which has been criticized by Trump as a witch hunt 439 Papadopoulos main activity during the campaign was attempting unsuccessfully to set up meetings between Russian officials including Vladimir Putin and Trump campaign officials including Trump himself 440 In pursuit of this goal he communicated with multiple Trump campaign officials including Sam Clovis Paul Manafort Rick Gates and Corey Lewandowski 440 On January 27 2017 Papadopoulos was interviewed by FBI agents 441 On July 27 he was arrested at Washington Dulles International Airport and he has since been cooperating with Special Counsel Robert Mueller in his investigation 442 On October 5 2017 he pleaded guilty to one felony count of making false statements to FBI agents relating to contacts he had with agents of the Russian government while working for the Trump campaign 443 444 Papadopoulos s arrest and guilty plea became public on October 30 2017 when court documents showing the guilty plea were unsealed 445 Papadopoulos was sentenced to 14 days in prison 12 months supervised release 200 hours of community service and was fined 9 500 on September 7 2018 446 He was later pardoned by Trump in December 2020 447 Veselnitskaya meeting Main article Trump Tower meeting In June 2016 Donald Trump Jr Paul Manafort and Jared Kushner met with Russian attorney Natalia Veselnitskaya who was accompanied by some others including Russian American lobbyist Rinat Akhmetshin after Trump Jr was informed that Veselnitskaya could supply the Trump campaign with incriminating information about Hillary Clinton such as her dealings with the Russians 448 The meeting was arranged following an email from British music publicist Rob Goldstone who was the manager of Emin Agalarov son of Russian tycoon Aras Agalarov 449 450 In the email Goldstone said the information had come from the Russian government and was part of a Russian government effort to help Donald Trump s presidential campaign 449 450 Trump Jr replied with an e mail saying If it s what you say I love it especially later in the summer and arranged the meeting 451 Trump Jr went to the meeting expecting to receive information harmful to the Clinton campaign but he said none was forthcoming and instead the conversation then turned to the Magnitsky Act and the adoption of Russian children 452 The meeting was disclosed by The New York Times on July 8 2017 453 454 On the same day Donald Trump Jr released a statement saying it had been a short introductory meeting focused on adoption of Russian children by Americans and not a campaign issue 454 Later that month The Washington Post revealed that Trump Jr s statement had been dictated by President Donald Trump who had overruled his staff s recommendation that the statement be transparent about the actual motivation for the meeting the Russian government s wish to help Trump s campaign 455 Other Trump associates nbsp Former Attorney General Jeff Sessions talked with the Russian ambassador during the Trump campaign and recused himself from the investigation Former Attorney General Jeff Sessions an early and prominent supporter of Trump s campaign spoke twice with Russian ambassador Kislyak before the election once in July 2016 at the Republican convention and once in September 2016 in Sessions Senate office In his confirmation hearings Sessions testified that he did not have communications with the Russians 456 On March 2 2017 after this denial was revealed to have been false Sessions recused himself from matters relating to Russia s election interference and deferred to Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein 457 Roger Stone a former adviser to Donald Trump and business partner of Paul Manafort said he had been in contact with Guccifer 2 0 a hacker persona believed to be a front for Russian intelligence operations who had publicly claimed responsibility for at least one hack of the DNC 458 During the campaign Stone had stated repeatedly and publicly that he had actually communicated with Julian Assange he later denied having done so 459 In August 2016 Stone had cryptically tweeted Trust me it will soon sic the Podesta s time in the barrel shortly after claiming to have been in contact with WikiLeaks and before WikiLeaks release of the Podesta emails 460 Stone has denied having any advance knowledge of the Podesta e mail hack or any connection to Russian intelligence stating that his earlier tweet was actually referring to reports of the Podesta Group s own ties to Russia 461 462 Stone ultimately named Randy Credico who had interviewed both Assange and Stone for a radio show as his intermediary with Assange 463 In June 2018 Stone disclosed that he had met with a Russian individual during the campaign who wanted Trump to pay two million dollars for dirt on Hillary Clinton This disclosure contradicted Stone s earlier claims that he had not met with any Russians during the campaign The meeting Stone attended was set up by Donald Trump s campaign aide Michael Caputo and is a subject of Robert Mueller s investigation 464 Oil industry consultant Carter Page had his communications monitored by the FBI under a FISA warrant beginning in 2014 465 and again beginning in October 2016 466 after he was suspected of acting as an agent for Russia Page told The Washington Post he considered that to be unjustified politically motivated government surveillance 467 Page spoke with Kislyak during the 2016 Republican National Convention acting as a foreign policy adviser to Donald Trump 468 469 In 2013 he had met with Viktor Podobnyy then a junior attache at the Russian Permanent Mission to the United Nations at an energy conference and provided him with documents on the U S energy industry 470 Podobnyy was later charged with spying but was protected from prosecution by diplomatic immunity 471 The FBI interviewed Page in 2013 as part of an investigation into Podonyy s spy ring but never accused Page of wrongdoing 471 The Mueller Report also found that Abu Dhabi s Crown Prince Mohammed bin Zayed Al Nahyan MbZ approached Richard Gerson a financier and Jared Kushner s friend to arrange his meetings with Trump A Russian businessman Kirill Dmitriev who was close to Vladimir Putin and Blackwater founder Erik Prince discussed a reconciliation plan with Gerson for the U S and Russia which was later shared with Kushner MbZ also advised Trump on the dangers of Iran and about Palestinian peace talks 472 On January 11 2017 UAE officials organized a meeting in the Seychelles between Prince and Dmitriev They discussed a back channel between Trump and Putin along with Middle East policy notably about Syria and Iran U S officials said the FBI was investigating the meeting 473 472 nbsp Jared Kushner President Trump s son in law and senior advisor failed to disclose meetings with Russian officials Donald Trump s son in law and senior advisor Jared Kushner on his application for top secret security clearance failed to disclose numerous meetings with foreign officials including Ambassador Kislyak and Sergei Gorkov the head of the Russian state owned bank Vnesheconombank Kushner s lawyers called the omissions an error Vnesheconombank has said the meeting was business related in connection with Kushner s management of Kushner Companies However the Trump administration provided a different explanation saying it was a diplomatic meeting 474 On May 30 2017 the House and Senate congressional panels both asked President Trump s personal lawyer Michael Cohen to provide information and testimony about any communications Cohen had with people connected to the Kremlin 475 476 Cohen had attempted to contact Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov during the 2016 campaign asking for help in advancing plans for a Trump Tower in Moscow 477 In May 2017 longtime Republican operative Peter W Smith confirmed to The Wall Street Journal that during the 2016 campaign he had been actively involved in trying to obtain emails he believed had been hacked from Hillary Clinton s computer server 478 479 In that quest he contacted several known hacker groups including some Russian groups 480 He claimed he was working on behalf of Trump campaign advisor later national security advisor Michael Flynn and Flynn s son 478 481 At around the same time there were intelligence reports that Russian hackers were trying to obtain Clinton s emails to pass to Flynn through an unnamed intermediary 478 Five of the hacker groups Smith contacted including at least two Russian groups claimed to have Clinton s emails He was shown some information but was not convinced it was genuine and suggested the hackers give it to WikiLeaks instead 478 A document describing Smith s plans claimed that Flynn Kellyanne Conway Steve Bannon and other campaign advisors were coordinating with him to the extent permitted as an independent expenditure 482 483 The White House a campaign official Conway and Bannon all denied any connection with Smith s effort British blogger Matt Tait said Smith had contacted him curiously around the same time Trump called for the Russians to get Hillary Clinton s missing emails to ask him to help authenticate any materials that might be forthcoming 481 Ten days after his interview with The Wall Street Journal Smith committed suicide in a Minnesota hotel room citing declining health 484 Steele dossierMain article Steele dossier nbsp Wikisource has original text related to this article Senate Judiciary Committee Interview of Glenn Simpson nbsp Wikisource has original text related to this article House Intelligence Committee Interview of Glenn Simpson Transcript In June 2016 Christopher Steele a former MI6 agent was hired by Fusion GPS to produce opposition research on Donald Trump In October 2015 before Steele was hired Trump s Republican political opponents had hired Fusion GPS to do opposition research on Trump When they stopped their funding Fusion GPS hired Steele to continue that research but with more focus on Trump s Russian connections In the beginning Steele did not know the identities of Fusion GPS s ultimate clients which were no longer Republicans but the Democratic National Committee and Clinton campaign His reports based on information provided by his witting and unwitting Russian sources and sources close to the Trump campaign included alleged kompromat that may make Trump vulnerable to blackmail from Russia In October 2016 a 33 page compilation was shared with Mother Jones magazine which described some of its contents but other mainstream media would not report on it because they could not confirm the material s credibility 485 In December 2016 two more pages were added alleging efforts by Trump s lawyer to pay those who had hacked the DNC and arranging to cover up any evidence of their deeds 221 486 On January 5 2017 U S intelligence agencies briefed President Obama and President elect Trump on the existence of these documents 487 Eventually the dossier was published in full by BuzzFeed News on January 10 488 489 In October 2016 the FBI used the dossier as part of its justification to obtain a FISA warrant to resume monitoring of former Trump foreign policy advisor Carter Page However officials would not say exactly what or how much of the dossier was actually corroborated 490 John Brennan and James Clapper testified to Congress that Steele s dossier played no role in the intelligence community assessment 491 about Russian interference in the 2016 election 492 493 testimony which was reaffirmed by an April 2020 bipartisan Senate Intelligence Committee report The committee found that the Steele dossier was not used by the assessment to support any of its analytic judgments 494 In a December 2020 interview with Chris Wallace of Fox News Brennan said The Steele dossier was not used in any way to undergird the judgments that came out of the intelligence community assessment about the Russian actions in the 2016 election There was so much other evidence and intelligence to support those judgments 495 Ongoing investigationsIn December 2019 Switzerland extradited Russian businessman Vladislav Klyushin to the United States where it was reported that he would face questions about the Russian government s interference in the 2016 election though the US Government has not publicly implicated him 496 Commentary and reactionsPublic opinion Polls conducted in early January 2017 showed that 55 of respondents believed Russia interfered in the election 497 51 believed Russia intervened through hacking 498 As of February 2017 update public opinion polls showed a partisan split on the importance of Russia s involvement in the 2016 election 499 At that time however the broader issue of the Trump administration s relationship with Russia didn t even register among the most important problems facing the U S 500 An NBC News Wall Street Journal poll found that 53 percent wanted a Congressional inquiry into communications in 2016 between the Trump campaign and Russian officials 501 Quinnipiac University found that 47 percent thought it was very important 502 A March 2017 poll conducted by the Associated Press and NORC found about 62 of respondents say they are at least moderately concerned about the possibility that Trump or his campaign had inappropriate contacts with Russia during the 2016 campaign 503 A January 2017 poll conducted by the Levada Center Russia s largest independent polling organization showed that only 12 of Russian respondents believed Russia definitely or probably interfered in the U S election 504 A December 2017 survey conducted by the Levada Center found that 31 of Russian respondents thought their government tried to influence U S domestic affairs in a significant way 505 A Quinnipiac University poll conducted in late March and early April 2017 found that 68 of voters supported an independent commission investigating the potential links between some of Donald Trump s campaign advisors and the Russian government 506 An April 2017 NBC News Wall Street Journal poll found that respondents had little confidence in Congress s investigation into the Russian interference in the election The poll found that approximately 73 supported a nonpartisan independent commission to look into Russia s involvement in the election 507 An ABC News Washington Post poll conducted in April 2017 found that 56 percent of respondents thought Russia tried to influence the election 508 A May 2017 Monmouth University poll conducted after the dismissal of James Comey found that nearly 6 in 10 Americans thought it was either very 40 or somewhat 19 likely that Comey was fired in order to slow down or stop the FBI investigation into Russian interference in the 2016 election and possible links with the Trump campaign Like other recent opinion polls a majority 73 said that the FBI investigation should continue 509 A June 2017 NBC News Wall Street Journal poll found that respondents were more likely to believe James Comey over Trump when it came to their differing accounts behind the reasons for Comey s dismissal The survey found that 45 of respondents were more likely to believe Comey than Trump The poll also found that the number of respondents disapproving of Trump s decision to fire Comey 46 was higher than when the same question was asked in May of the same year 53 of respondents said that they believed that Russia interfered in the 2016 presidential election however the number changes by party affiliation 78 of Democrats said that they believed there was interference versus 26 of Republicans who agreed 510 An NPR PBS NewsHour Marist College poll conducted in late June 2017 found that 54 of respondents believed that Trump either did something illegal or something unethical but not illegal in his dealings with Russian president Vladimir Putin The poll found that 73 of Republicans said Trump himself has done nothing wrong while 41 of Democrats believed that Trump did something that was illegal In addition 47 said that they thought Russia was a major threat to future U S elections while 13 of respondents said that Russia posed no threat at all 511 A July 2017 ABC News Washington Post poll found that 63 of respondents said that it was inappropriate for Trump s son son in law and campaign manager to have met with a Russian lawyer during the campaign The poll also found that six in ten overall who think that Russia tried to influence the election with 72 saying that they thought that Trump benefited and that 67 percent thought that members of his campaign intentionally helped those efforts 512 Polls conducted in August 2017 found widespread disapproval and distrust of Trump s handling of the investigation A CNN SSRS poll conducted in early August found that only 31 of respondents approved of Trump s handling of the matter The poll also noted that 60 of adults thought that it was a serious matter that should be fully investigated On party lines the poll found that 15 of Democrats and 56 of Republicans approved of Trump s handling of the matter 513 A Gallup poll from the same month found similar trends The poll found that 25 of respondents said Trump acted illegally in dealings with the Russians The poll found that 6 of Republicans and Republican leaners thought Trump did something illegal in his dealings with the Russians 514 A poll conducted by the Public Religion Research Institute found that 58 of respondents expressed a negative view of Russia while 25 had a favorable view of the country The poll also found that 48 believed there is clear evidence that Russia interfered in the 2016 election to help the Trump campaign 515 The broader issue of the Trump administration s relationship with Russia however was not identified by more than one percent of respondents in Gallup tracking of Most Important Problem at any point since February 2017 As of July 2018 it was less than half a percent 500 A July 2018 an online Ipsos poll found that 60 of American believed that Russia interfered in the 2016 presidential election with 85 of democrats and 53 of Independents believing so compared to 46 of Republicans 66 of democrats approved of the special counsel investigation compared to 32 of Republicans and 36 of Independents In addition 75 of republicans believed the special counsel investigation was the result of anti Trump bias Compared to 32 of democrats and 36 of independents 516 A July 2018 Ipsos Reuters poll found that 56 of Americans believed that Russia did interfere in support of Trump 517 A March 2019 poll released after reports of the findings of the Mueller report found that 48 of respondents said they believed Trump or someone from his campaign worked with Russia to influence the 2016 election 53 said Trump tried to stop investigations into Russian influence on his administration and Democrats were much more likely than Republicans to believe that Trump colluded with Russia and obstructed justice In addition 39 of respondents felt that Trump should be impeached while 49 said that he should not 518 Hillary Clinton nbsp Hillary Clinton said Vladimir Putin held a grudge against her due to her criticism of the 2011 Russian legislative election 519 On December 15 2016 Hillary Clinton said she partially attributed her loss in the 2016 election to Russian meddling organized by Putin 520 Clinton said Putin had a personal grudge against her She linked Putin s feelings about her to her criticism of the 2011 Russian legislative election adding that he felt she was responsible for fomenting the 2011 13 Russian protests 519 Clinton drew a specific connection from her 2011 assertions as U S Secretary of State that Putin rigged the Russian elections that year to his efforts to influence the 2016 U S elections 521 During the third presidential debate Clinton had stated that Putin favored Trump because he d rather have a puppet as president of the United States 522 Clinton said that by personally attacking her through meddling in the election Putin attacked the American democratic system 520 She said the Russian cyberattacks did not just affect her candidacy but were an attempt to attack the national security of the United States 519 Clinton acknowledged that she was unsuccessful in sufficiently publicizing to the media the cyberattacks against her campaign in the months leading up to the election 521 She voiced her support for a proposal put forth by Senators from both parties to set up an investigative panel to look into the matter akin to the 9 11 Commission 521 Republican National Committee Chief of staff designate for Trump and outgoing RNC Chairman Reince Priebus said in December 2016 that he still didn t know who hacked the DNC s computer servers 139 The RNC said there was no intrusion into its servers while acknowledging email accounts of individual Republicans including Colin Powell were breached More than 200 emails from Colin Powell were posted on the website DC Leaks 136 138 Priebus appeared on Meet the Press on December 11 2016 and discounted the CIA conclusions Priebus said the FBI had investigated and found that RNC servers had not been hacked 137 Donald Trump nbsp Trump s transition team dismissed the U S Intelligence Community s conclusions source source source source source source source Trump and Putin answering questions from journalists on July 16 2018 Video from the White House Prior to his presidential run Donald Trump made statements to Fox News in 2014 in which he agreed with an assessment by then FBI director James Comey about hacking against the U S by Russia and China 523 Trump was played a clip of Comey from 60 Minutes discussing the dangers of cyber attacks 523 Trump stated he agreed with the problem of cyber threats posed by China and went on to emphasize there was a similar problem towards the U S posed by Russia 523 In September 2016 during the first presidential debate Trump said he doubted whether anyone knew who hacked the DNC and disputed Russian interference 524 During the second debate Trump said there might not have been hacking at all and questioned why accountability was placed on Russia 525 During the third debate Trump rejected Clinton s claim that Putin favored Trump 522 Trump s words our country has no idea and I doubt it were deeply shocking to the British because all NATO allies and all of America s intelligence agencies were sure Russia was behind the hacking according to Kurt Eichenwald of Newsweek Trump denied these conclusions based on absolutely nothing That he would so aggressively fight to clear Putin and cast aspersions on all Western intelligence agencies left the British officials slack jawed 526 After the election Trump rejected the CIA analysis and asserted that the reports were politically motivated to deflect from the Democrats electoral defeat 527 Trump s transition team said in a brief statement These are the same people that said Saddam Hussein had weapons of mass destruction 528 136 However the intelligence analysts involved in monitoring Russian activities were different from those who assessed that Iraq had stockpiles of weapons of mass destruction while post Iraq War reforms have made it less likely for similar errors to reach the highest levels of the U S intelligence community 529 Trump dismissed reports of Russia s interference calling them ridiculous he placed blame on Democrats upset over election results for publicizing these reports 530 and cited Julian Assange s statement that a 14 year old kid could have hacked Podesta 531 After Obama expelled 35 Russian diplomats and announced further sanctions on Russia Trump commended Putin for refraining from retaliatory measures against the United States until the Trump administration would lay out its policy towards Russia 532 source source source source source source Excerpt of Trump at a press conference on January 11 2017 On January 6 2017 after meeting with members of U S intelligence agencies Trump released a statement saying cyberwarfare had no impact on the election and did not harm voting machines In the same statement he vowed to form a national cybersecurity task force to prepare an anti hacking plan within 90 days of taking office 533 Referring to the Office of Personnel Management data breach in 2015 Trump said he was under a political witch hunt and wondered why there was no focus on China 534 Two days later Reince Priebus said Trump had begun to acknowledge that entities in Russia were involved in the DNC leaks 535 On January 11 2017 Trump conceded that Russia was probably the source of the leaks although he also said it could have been another country 536 537 On November 11 2017 after meeting Vladimir Putin at a summit in Vietnam Trump said I just asked him again He said he absolutely did not meddle in our election Every time he sees me he says I didn t do that and I really believe that when he tells me that he means it 538 Trump went on to contrast Putin s very strongly vehemently spoken denials with the word of American former intelligence officials who he termed as political hacks John Brennan James Clapper and the liar and leaker James Comey 539 But a day later when asked to clarify his comments Trump said As to whether I believe it or not I m with our intelligence agencies especially as currently constituted 540 Brennan and Clapper appearing on CNN expressed concern that Trump was giving Putin a pass and showing the Russian leader that Donald Trump can be played by foreign leaders who are going to appeal to his ego and try to play upon his insecurities 541 In 2019 The Washington Post revealed that according to former officials in May 2017 Trump had privately told Russian officials Sergey Lavrov and Sergey Kislyak he wasn t concerned about Russia interfering in American elections 344 542 In early October 2022 The New York Times reported that Trump had retained secret government documents found by the FBI at his Mar a Lago domicile earlier the same year with the intention of pressuring the agency into trading them for files allegedly substantiating his claims that any Russian interference during the election was a hoax as he had constantly maintained in public 543 Trump viewed as under Putin s influence Brennan did not say there was no evidence of collusion He made clear he had been alarmed by the extent of contacts between the Trump team and Moscow Brennan stressed repeatedly that collusion may have been unwitting at least at first as Russian intelligence was deft at disguising its approaches to would be agents Frequently individuals on a treasonous path do not even realize they re on that path until it gets to be too late he said Ex CIA chief Trump staff had enough contact with Russia to justify FBI inquiry 544 The Steele dossier alleges that the Russians have kompromat on Trump which could be used to blackmail him and that the Kremlin promised the kompromat will not be used as long as he continues his cooperation with them 545 546 Trump s actions at the Helsinki summit in 2018 led many to conclude that Steele s report was more accurate than not Trump sided with the Russians over the U S intelligence community s assessment that Moscow had waged an all out attack on the 2016 election The joint news conference cemented fears among some that Trump was in Putin s pocket and prompted bipartisan backlash 547 At the joint news conference when asked directly about the subject Putin denied that he had any kompromat on Trump Even though Trump was reportedly given a gift from Putin the weekend of the pageant Putin argued that he did not even know Trump was in Russia for the Miss Universe pageant in 2013 when according to the Steele dossier video of Trump was secretly recorded to blackmail him 548 In reaction to Trump s actions at the summit Senator Chuck Schumer D N Y spoke in the Senate Millions of Americans will continue to wonder if the only possible explanation for this dangerous and inexplicable behavior is the possibility the very real possibility that President Putin holds damaging information over President Trump 549 Several operatives and lawyers in the U S intelligence community reacted strongly to Trump s performance at the summit They described it as subservien ce to Putin and a fervent defense of Russia s military and cyber aggression around the world and its violation of international law in Ukraine which they saw as harmful to U S interests They also suggested that he was either a Russian asset or a useful idiot for Putin 550 and that he looked like Putin s puppet 551 Former Director of National Intelligence James Clapper wondered if Russians have something on Trump 552 and former CIA director John O Brennan who has accused Trump of treason tweeted He is wholly in the pocket of Putin 553 Former acting CIA director Michael Morell has called Trump an unwitting agent of the Russian federation and former CIA director Michael V Hayden said Trump was a useful fool who is manipulated by Moscow 554 House Speaker Nancy Pelosi questioned Trump s loyalty when she asked him Why do all roads lead to Putin 555 Ynet an Israeli online news site reported on January 12 2017 that U S intelligence had advised Israeli intelligence officers to be cautious about sharing information with the incoming Trump administration until the possibility of Russian influence over Trump suggested by Steele s report has been fully investigated 556 Ex spy Yuri Shvets who was a partner of the assassinated Alexander Litvinenko believes that the KGB cultivated Trump as an asset for over 40 years 557 Yuri Shvets a source for journalist Craig Unger compared the former president to the Cambridge Five who passed secrets to Moscow Shvets believes that Semyon Kislin was a spotter agent who identified Trump as an asset in 1980 Among other things Shvets highlights Trump s visit to the Soviet Union in 1987 558 Yuri Shvets believes Trump was fed KGB talking points For example after Trump s return to New York Trump took out full page ads in major newspapers criticizing American allies and spending on NATO Yuri Shvets claims that at the chief KGB directorate in Yasenevo he received a cable celebrating the ad as a successful active measure 558 Shvets described the Mueller Report as a big disappointment because it focused only on crime related issues rather than counterintelligence aspects 558 Journalist Luke Harding argued that Trump s visit to the Soviet Union in 1987 was arranged by the KGB as part of KGB overtures to recruit a wider variety of agents 559 Mike Pence In an interview on February 14 2018 Pence said Irrespective of efforts that were made in 2016 by foreign powers it is the universal conclusion of our intelligence communities that none of those efforts had any impact on the outcome of the 2016 election 320 In fact in January 2017 the intelligence community had published a statement saying We did not make an assessment of the impact that Russian activities had on the outcome of the 2016 election 322 Pence added It doesn t mean that there weren t efforts and we do know there were there were efforts by Russia and likely by other countries We take that very seriously 320 Intelligence community The CIA assessment and Trump s dismissal of it created an unprecedented rupture between the president elect and the intelligence community 560 561 562 On December 11 2016 U S intelligence officials responded to Trump s denunciation of their findings in a written statement and expressed dismay that Trump disputed their conclusions as politically motivated or inaccurate They wrote that intelligence officials were motivated to defend U S national security 560 Members of the intelligence community feared reprisals from Donald Trump once he took office 563 Former CIA Director Michael Morell said foreign interference in U S elections was an existential threat 564 Former CIA spokesman George E Little condemned Trump for dismissing the CIA assessment saying the president elect s atypical response was disgraceful and denigrated the courage of those who serve in the CIA at risk to their own lives 565 Former NSA director and CIA director Michael V Hayden posited that Trump s antagonizing the Intelligence Community signaled the administration would rely less on intelligence for policy making 566 Independent presidential candidate and former CIA intelligence officer Evan McMullin criticized the Republican leadership for failing to respond adequately to Russia s meddling in the election process 567 McMullin said Republican politicians were aware that publicly revealed information about Russia s interference was likely the tip of the iceberg relative to the actual threat 567 Former NSA director Michael V Hayden has stated that Russia s interference in the 2016 presidential election is the most successful covert influence operation in history 568 Hayden went further saying that Trump was a useful fool manipulated by Moscow 569 A January 2017 report by the Director of National Intelligence said that the intelligence community did not make an assessment of the impact that Russian activities had on the outcome of the 2016 election Despite this CIA Director Mike Pompeo claimed that the Russian meddling that took place did not affect the outcome of the election at an event hosted by the Foundation for Defense of Democracies on October 19 2017 CIA agency spokesman Dean Boyd withdrew his remarks the next day saying they had been made in error 323 Electoral College On December 10 2016 ten electors headed by Christine Pelosi daughter of former United States Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi D CA wrote an open letter to the Director of National Intelligence James Clapper demanding an intelligence briefing on investigations into foreign intervention in the presidential election 570 571 Fifty eight additional electors subsequently added their names to the letter 571 bringing the total to 68 electors from 17 different states 572 The Clinton campaign supported the call for a classified briefing for electors 573 On December 16 2016 the briefing request was denied 574 Russia Further information Russia investigation origins counter narrative nbsp Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov called American accusations nonsense 31 The Russian government initially issued categorical denials of any involvement in the U S presidential election 32 By June 2016 Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov denied any connection of Russian government to the DNC hacks that had been blamed on Russia 30 575 At the Valdai Discussion Club forum in October 2016 Putin denounced American hysteria over alleged Russian interference 15 When a new intelligence report surfaced in December 2016 Sergey Lavrov Foreign Minister of Russia rejected the accusations again 31 19 During a press conference Putin deflected questions on the issue by accusing the U S Democratic Party of scapegoating Russia after losing the presidential election 134 576 In June 2017 Putin said that patriotically minded Russian hackers could have been responsible for the cyberattacks against the U S during the 2016 campaign while continuing to deny government involvement 32 Putin s comments echoed similar remarks that he had made earlier the same week to the French newspaper Le Figaro 32 A few days later he said Presidents come and go and even the parties in power change but the main political direction does not change That s why in the grand scheme of things we don t care who s the head of the United States We know more or less what is going to happen And so in this regard even if we wanted to it wouldn t make sense for us to interfere 577 Putin also invoked whataboutism and criticized U S foreign policy saying Put your finger anywhere on a map of the world and everywhere you will hear complaints that American officials are interfering in internal electoral processes 577 In March 2018 Putin suggested that Ukrainians Tatars Jews just with Russian citizenship might have been to blame for interfering with U S elections and suggested that maybe it was the Americans who paid them for this work 578 579 Putin s statement was criticized by the Anti Defamation League and the American Jewish Committee both likened his comments to the Protocols of the Elders of Zion an antisemitic hoax first published in Russia in the early 20th century 580 581 Boruch Gorin a prominent rabbi in Moscow said that the translation of Putin s comment into English lacked critical nuance and that Russian Jews were largely indifferent to it 582 Columbia Journalism Review In a 2023 4 part series in the Columbia Journalism Review Jeff Gerth Pulitzer Prize winning investigative reporter reassessed the role of the press in reporting on Trump s role in the Russian interference and said the coverage includes serious flaws 583 Multiple mainstream sources pushed back against Gerth s assertions among them David Corn 584 Joe Conason 585 Jonathan Chait 586 Rachel Maddow 587 Cathy Young 588 Dan Kennedy 589 and Duncan Campbell 590 See also nbsp Russia portal nbsp United States portal Attempts to overturn the 2020 United States presidential election Federal prosecution of Donald Trump classified documents case Foreign electoral intervention Russian involvement in regime change Russian interference in the 2016 Brexit referendum Russian interference in the 2018 United States elections Russian interference in the 2020 United States elections Russia United States relations Social media in the 2016 United States presidential election Timelines related to Donald Trump and Russian interference in United States elections Vulkan files leakNotes Similar reports were published by ABC News 5 CBS News 17 NBC News 18 and Reuters 19 In 2001 the U S government expelled 51 Russian diplomats from the country in retaliation for Moscow s alleged recruitment of FBI special agent Robert Hanssen 294 References Bump Philip February 16 2018 Timeline How Russian trolls allegedly tried to throw the 2016 election to Trump The Washington Post Retrieved November 10 2023 United States of America vs Internet Research Agency LLC et al United States District Court for the District of Columbia February 16 2018 Indictment Text archived from the original Schick Nina 2020 Deep Fakes and the Infocalypse United Kingdom Monoray pp 60 75 ISBN 978 1 913183 52 3 Russian Project Lakhta Member Charged with Wire Fraud Conspiracy justice gov Press release September 10 2020 Retrieved September 5 2021 a b c d e Ross Brian Schwartz Rhonda Meek James Gordon December 15 2016 Officials Master Spy Vladimir Putin Now Directly Linked to US Hacking ABC News Retrieved December 15 2016 Hosenball Mark August 19 2020 Mohammed Arshad ed Factbox Key findings from Senate inquiry into Russian interference in 2016 U S election Reuters Washington Retrieved September 5 2021 Breuninger Kevin March 22 2019 Mueller probe Is over Special counsel submits Russia report to Attorney General William Barr cnbc com Retrieved March 22 2019 a b Treene Zachary Basu Alayna August 18 2020 Senate report finds Manafort passed sensitive campaign data to Russian intelligence officer Axios Retrieved August 18 2020 a b c d Mazzetti Mark Fandos Nicholas August 18 2020 G O P Led Senate Panel Details Ties Between 2016 Trump Campaign and Russian Interference The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved August 18 2020 a b Russian Efforts Against Election Infrastructure With Additional Views PDF Report Of The Select Committee On Intelligence United States Senate On Russian Active Measures Campaigns And Interference In The 2016 U S Election Report Vol 1 2020 p 67 a b c d Leopold Jason Bensinger Ken November 3 2020 New Mueller Investigated Julian Assange WikiLeaks And Roger Stone For DNC Hacks buzzfeednews com Retrieved November 3 2020 a b c Clayton Mark June 17 2014 Ukraine election narrowly avoided wanton destruction from hackers The Christian Science Monitor Retrieved August 16 2017 a b Watkins Ali August 14 2017 Obama team was warned in 2014 about Russian interference Politico Retrieved August 16 2017 a b Kramer Andrew E Higgins Andrew August 16 2017 In Ukraine a Malware Expert Who Could Blow the Whistle on Russian Hacking The New York Times Retrieved August 16 2017 a b Doroshev Anton Arkhipov Ilya October 27 2016 Putin Says U S Isn t Banana Republic Must Get Over Itself Bloomberg News Retrieved February 2 2017 Scott Eugene July 16 2018 Trump dismissed the idea that Putin wanted him to win Putin just admitted that he did The Washington Post Retrieved August 16 2018 Pegues Jeff December 14 2016 More details on U S probe of Russian hacking of DNC CBS News Archived from the original on November 2 2021 Retrieved December 15 2016 via YouTube Arkin William M Dilanian Ken McFadden Cynthia December 14 2016 U S Officials Putin Personally Involved in U S Election Hack NBC News Retrieved December 14 2016 a b c d e Putin turned Russia election hacks in Trump s favor U S officials Reuters December 15 2016 Retrieved December 16 2016 Battlefield Washington Trump s Russia Connections Aljazeera com Archived from the original on August 26 2020 Retrieved March 1 2019 Starr Barbara Brown Pamela Perez Evan Sciutto Jim Labott Elise December 15 2016 Intel analysis shows Putin approved election hacking CNN Retrieved December 15 2016 White House suggests Putin involved in hacking ups Trump criticism Fox News Associated Press December 15 2016 Retrieved December 15 2016 ODNI Statement on Declassified Intelligence Community Assessment of Russian Activities and Intentions in Recent U S Elections Press release Office of the Director of National Intelligence January 6 2017 Archived from the original on April 13 2017 Retrieved May 9 2017 a b c Assessing Russian Activities and Intentions in Recent US Elections PDF Office of the Director of National Intelligence January 6 2017 Retrieved June 24 2017 Englund Will July 28 2016 The roots of the hostility between Putin and Clinton The Washington Post Retrieved July 29 2016 a b Blackwell Tom December 16 2016 The top four reasons Vladimir Putin might have a grudge against Hillary Clinton National Post Key quotes from Congress hearing on Russia and the U S election Reuters March 20 2017 Why Putin Hates Hillary Politico July 26 2016 Pro Kremlin youth groups could be behind DNC hack Deutsche Welle July 27 2016 a b Moscow denies Russian involvement in U S DNC hacking Reuters June 14 2016 a b c Mills Curt December 15 2016 Kremlin Denies Putin s Involvement in Election Hacking U S News amp World Report Retrieved December 16 2016 a b c d Andrew Higgins Putin Hints at U S Election Meddling by Patriotically Minded Russians The New York Times June 1 2017 Murray Stephanie July 16 2018 Putin I wanted Trump to win the election Politico Retrieved January 24 2019 a b c Porter Tom November 28 2016 How US and EU failings allowed Kremlin propaganda and fake news to spread through the West International Business Times Retrieved November 29 2016 a b c d e f Schindler John R November 5 2015 Obama Fails to Fight Putin s Propaganda Machine New York Observer Retrieved November 28 2016 Stengel Richard April 29 2014 Russia Today s Disinformation Campaign United States Department of State Archived from the original on May 2 2014 Retrieved November 28 2016 a b Parker Ned Landay Jonathan Walcott John April 20 2017 Exclusive Putin linked think tank drew up plan to sway 2016 U S election documents Reuters Retrieved April 20 2017 Lagunina Irina Maternaya Elizabeth April 20 2017 Trump and secret documents of the Kremlin Tramp i tajnye dokumenty Kremlya in Russian Radio Svoboda Retrieved April 22 2017 Stubbs Jack Pinchuk Denis April 21 2017 King Larry ed Russia denies Reuters report think tank drew up plan to sway U S election Reuters Retrieved April 21 2017 a b c Shane Scott Mazzetti Mark February 16 2018 Inside a 3 Year Russian Campaign to Influence U S Voters The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved February 17 2018 McKew Molly February 16 2018 DID RUSSIA AFFECT THE 2016 ELECTION IT S NOW UNDENIABLE Wired Retrieved January 10 2019 Fishel Justin Fact Check Friday The Mueller Edition ABC News Retrieved April 27 2019 Main points of Mueller report Agence France Presse Archived from the original on April 20 2019 Retrieved April 20 2019 Harris Shane Nakashima Ellen Timberg Craig April 18 2019 Through email leaks and propaganda Russians sought to elect Trump Mueller finds The Washington Post Retrieved April 23 2019 Thomsen Jacqueline April 18 2019 Mueller Russia sought to help Trump win but did not collude with campaign The Hill Retrieved April 27 2019 Lindstrom Natasha April 18 2019 Why Pittsburgh is mentioned in the Mueller report triblive com Retrieved April 27 2019 a b c Broderick Ryan April 18 2019 Here s Everything The Mueller Report Says About How Russian Trolls Used Social Media Buzzfeed News Retrieved April 27 2019 Probe reveals stunning stats about fake election headlines on Facebook CBS News CBS Interactive November 17 2016 Retrieved August 27 2018 a b Ward Alex December 17 2018 4 main takeaways from new reports on Russia s 2016 election interference Vox Retrieved January 10 2019 a b c d e f g h i j Shane Scott Frankel Sheera December 17 2018 Russian 2016 Influence Operation Targeted African Americans on Social Media The New York Times The New York Times Prohov Jennifer April 18 2019 Fake Tennessee GOP Twitter account cited as example in Mueller report WBIR Retrieved April 27 2019 Kiely Eugene Robertson Lori April 24 2019 Kushner Distorts Scope of Russia Interference Factcheck org Retrieved April 27 2019 Timberg Craig October 5 2017 Russian propaganda may have been shared hundreds of millions of times new research says The Washington Post Retrieved January 3 2019 Benedictus Leo November 6 2016 Invasion of the troll armies from Russian Trump supporters to Turkish state stooges The Guardian Retrieved December 2 2016 Facebook Says Russian Accounts Bought 100 000 in Ads During the 2016 Election Time September 6 2017 Mate Aaron December 28 2018 New Studies Show Pundits Are Wrong About Russian Social Media Involvement in US Politics The Nation Archived from the original on June 3 2019 Retrieved June 3 2019 Trump and Clinton spent 81M on US election Facebook ads Russian agency 46K TechCrunch November 1 2017 a b c d e Weisburd Andrew Watts Clint August 6 2016 Trolls for Trump How Russia Dominates Your Twitter Feed to Promote Lies And Trump Too The Daily Beast Retrieved November 24 2016 Watkins Ali Frenkel Sheera November 30 2016 Intel Officials Believe Russia Spreads Fake News BuzzFeed News Retrieved December 1 2016 Weisburd Andrew Watts Clint Berger JM November 6 2016 Trolling for Trump How Russia is Trying to Destroy Our Democracy War on the Rocks Retrieved December 6 2016 U S officials defend integrity of vote despite hacking fears WITN TV November 26 2016 Retrieved December 2 2016 Dougherty Jill December 2 2016 The reality behind Russia s fake news CNN Retrieved December 2 2016 Howard Philip N Gorwa Robert May 20 2017 Facebook could tell us how Russia interfered in our elections Why won t it The Washington Post a b Howard Philip Ganesh Bharath Liotsiou Dimitra Kelly John Francois Camille October 1 2019 The IRA Social Media and Political Polarization in the United States 2012 2018 U S Senate Documents Facebook says 126 million Americans may have seen Russia linked political posts Reuters October 31 2017 a b Goel Vindu Shane Scott September 6 2017 Fake Russian Facebook Accounts Bought 100 000 in Political Ads The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved September 6 2017 Samuelsohn Darren September 7 2017 Facebook faces backlash over Russian meddling Politico Retrieved September 7 2017 Salzman Ari June 7 2017 Facebook s Fake Accountability Barron s Retrieved June 10 2017 Salzman Ari May 5 2017 Facebook Tesla Realize Technology Can t Solve Everything Barron s Retrieved June 10 2017 Silverman Craig November 17 2016 This Analysis Shows How Viral Fake Election News Stories Outperformed Real News On Facebook BuzzFeed News Retrieved October 26 2022 Leonnig Carol Hamburger Tom Helderman and Rosalind Facebook says it sold political ads to Russian company during 2016 election The Washington Post Retrieved September 6 2017 Borger Julian October 4 2017 Top Senate intelligence duo Russia did interfere in 2016 election The Guardian Retrieved October 18 2017 Facebook gives election ad data to U S special counsel source Reuters September 7 2017 Retrieved September 7 2017 Gambino Lauren October 3 2017 Facebook says up to 10 m people saw ads bought by Russian agency The Guardian Shane Scott November 2017 These Are the Ads Russia Bought on Facebook in 2016 The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved November 3 2017 Perspective Russian trolls can be surprisingly subtle and often fun to read The Washington Post ISSN 0190 8286 Retrieved September 15 2021 a b Analysis Russian trolls on Twitter had little influence on 2016 voters The Washington Post January 9 2023 Archived from the original on June 9 2023 Eady Gregory January 9 2023 Exposure to the Russian Internet Research Agency foreign influence campaign on Twitter in the 2016 US election and its relationship to attitudes and voting behavior Nature Communications 14 1 62 Bibcode 2023NatCo 14 62E doi 10 1038 s41467 022 35576 9 PMC 9829855 PMID 36624094 Mackey Robert Risen James Aaronson Trevor April 18 2019 Annotating special counsel Robert Mueller s redacted report The Intercept Retrieved April 23 2019 Dunleavy Jerry April 18 2019 Mueller says Russia s GRU stole Clinton DNC emails and gave them to WikiLeaks Washington Examiner Retrieved April 23 2019 Mueller Report vol I p 4 At the same time that the IRA operation began to focus on supporting candidate Trump in early 2016 the Russian government employed a second form of interference cyber intrusions hacking and releases of hacked materials damaging to the Clinton Campaign The Russian intelligence service known as the Main Intelligence Directorate of the General Staff of the Russian Army GRU carried out these operations In March 2016 the GRU began hacking the email accounts of Clinton Campaign volunteers and employees including campaign chairman John Podesta In April 2016 the GRU hacked into the computer networks of the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee DCCC and the Democratic National Committee DNC The GRU stole hundreds of thousands of documents from the compromised email accounts and networks Around the time that the DNC announced in mid June 2016 the Russian government s role in hacking its network the GRU began disseminating stolen materials through the fictitious online personas DCLeaks and Guccifer 2 0 The GRU later released additional materials through the organization WikiLeaks Meyer Josh Moe Alex Connor Tracy July 29 2016 Hack of Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee Similar to DNC Breach NBC News Retrieved January 18 2019 Brewington Autumn Fogel Mikhaila Hennessey Susan Kahn Matthew Kelley Katherine July 13 2018 Russia Indictment 2 0 What to Make of Mueller s Hacking Indictment lawfare Retrieved January 10 2019 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r Mayer Jane October 1 2018 How Russia Helped Swing the Election for Trump The New Yorker Retrieved December 23 2018 a b c d e f Boot Max July 24 2018 Without the Russians Trump wouldn t have won The Washington Post Retrieved December 27 2018 a b Matishak Martin July 18 2018 What we know about Russia s election hacking Politico Retrieved January 10 2019 18 revelations from Wikileaks hacked Clinton emails BBC News October 27 2016 Retrieved January 18 2024 a b Popper Nathaniel July 13 2018 How Russian Spies Hid Behind Bitcoin in Hacking Campaign The New York Times Retrieved July 14 2018 Sciutto Jim June 28 2017 How one typo let Russian hackers in Retrieved January 25 2019 Harding Luke December 14 2016 Top Democrat s emails hacked by Russia after aide made typo investigation finds Retrieved November 3 2017 Johnstone Liz December 18 2016 John Podesta FBI Spoke to Me Only Once About My Hacked Emails Retrieved January 25 2019 Joint Statement from the Department Of Homeland Security and Office of the Director of National Intelligence on Election Security p2016 Department Of Homeland Security Retrieved January 27 2019 Sharockman Aaron December 18 2016 It s True WikiLeaks dumped Podesta emails hour after Trump video surfaced Retrieved November 3 2017 18 revelations from WikiLeaks hacked Clinton emails Reuters October 27 2017 Retrieved November 3 2017 Cohen Marshall October 7 2017 Access Hollywood Russian hacking and the Podesta emails One year later Retrieved November 3 2017 Smith David October 8 2016 WikiLeaks releases what appear to be Clinton s paid Wall Street speeches Retrieved November 3 2017 Aisch Gregor Huang Jon Kang Cecilia December 10 2016 Dissecting the PizzaGate Conspiracy Theories The New York Times Archived from the original on December 10 2016 Samuelson Kate December 5 2016 What to Know About Pizzagate the Fake News Story With Real Consequences Time Archived from the original on December 7 2016 Siddiqui Sabrina Gambino Lauren Roberts Dan July 25 2016 DNC apologizes to Bernie Sanders amid convention chaos in wake of email leak The Guardian Kiely Eugene June 7 2017 Timeline of Russia Investigation factcheck org Retrieved January 29 2019 Assessing Russian Activities and Intentions in Recent US Elections The Analytic Process and Cyber Incident Attribution PDF Office of the Director of National Intelligence January 6 2017 Retrieved January 29 2019 Multiple sources Lone Hacker Claims Responsibility for Cyber Attack on Democrats NBC News Reuters June 16 2016 Guccifer leak of DNC Trump research has a Russian s fingerprints on it June 16 2016 Retrieved July 26 2016 The 4 Most Damaging Emails From the DNC WikiLeaks Dump ABC News July 25 2016 Assessing Russian Activities and Intentions in Recent US Elections The Analytic Process and Cyber Incident Attribution PDF Office of the Director of National Intelligence January 6 2017 Retrieved January 29 2019 pages 2 3 Leaked DNC emails reveal details of anti Sanders sentiment The Guardian July 24 2016 McCarthy Kieren WikiLeaks fights The Man by er publishing ordinary people s personal information The Register Retrieved July 25 2016 Peterson Andrea July 28 2016 Snowden and WikiLeaks clash over leaked Democratic Party emails The Washington Post Carney Jordain July 22 2016 Wasserman Schultz called top Sanders aide a damn liar in leaked email The Hill Retrieved July 30 2016 a b FBI Investigating DNC Hack Some Democrats Blame on Russia Bloomberg Politics July 25 2016 a b Bears in the Midst Intrusion into the Democratic National Committee June 15 2016 Retrieved July 26 2016 a b Alperovitch Dmitri June 15 2016 Bears in the Midst Intrusion into the Democratic National Committee CrowdStrike Retrieved December 24 2016 a b Poulsen Kevin January 6 2017 How the U S Hobbled Its Hacking Case Against Russia and Enabled Truthers The Daily Beast Retrieved January 8 2017 Threat Group 4127 Targets Hillary Clinton Presidential Campaign SecureWorks Archived from the original on July 20 2016 Retrieved July 26 2016 Thielman Sam July 26 2016 DNC email leak Russian hackers Cozy Bear and Fancy Bear behind breach The Guardian Cyber researchers confirm Russian government hack of Democratic National Committee The Washington Post Retrieved July 26 2016 Lipton Eric Sanger David E Shane Scott December 13 2016 The Perfect Weapon How Russian Cyberpower Invaded the U S The New York Times The Dukes Whitepaper PDF a b U S Department of Homeland Security and Federal Bureau of Investigation December 29 2016 GRIZZLY STEPPE Russian Malicious Cyber Activity PDF United States Computer Emergency Readiness Team Retrieved January 2 2017 Does a BEAR Leak in the Woods ThreatConnect August 12 2016 Archived from the original on November 1 2016 Retrieved December 21 2016 Threat Group 4127 Targets Hillary Clinton Presidential Campaign SecureWorks June 16 2016 Archived from the original on July 20 2016 Retrieved January 23 2017 Gallagher Sean December 12 2016 Recapping the facts Did the Russians hack the election A look at the established facts ArsTechnica Retrieved December 31 2016 Dutch agencies provide crucial intel about Russia s interference in US elections January 25 2018 Retrieved July 30 2018 Russia Hacker Indictments Should Make the Kremlin Squirm Bloomberg News July 16 2018 Retrieved July 30 2018 Sanger David E Rosenberg Matthew July 19 2018 From the Start Trump Has Muddied a Clear Message Putin Interfered The New York Times Retrieved July 30 2018 a b Joint Statement from the Department Of Homeland Security and Office of the Director of National Intelligence on Election Security Department of Homeland Security October 7 2016 nbsp This article incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain a b c Wilkie Christina July 13 2018 5 key takeaways from the latest indictment in Mueller s Russia probe CNBC Retrieved July 30 2018 a b c 12 Russian Agents Indicted in Mueller Investigation The New York Times July 13 2018 Retrieved August 6 2018 a b c d The Republicans defensiveness about Russian hacking is revealing The Economist July 21 2018 Retrieved December 27 2018 Watson Kathryn April 13 2017 CIA director calls WikiLeaks Russia aided non state hostile intelligence service CBS News McKirdy Euan January 4 2017 WikiLeaks Assange Russia didn t give us emails CNN Retrieved January 2 2019 Johnson Alex July 25 2016 WikiLeaks Julian Assange No Proof Hacked DNC Emails Came From Russia NBC News WikiLeaks Assange denies Russia behind Podesta hack Politico November 3 2016 Retrieved December 10 2016 U S intel report identifies Russians who gave emails to WikiLeaks officials Reuters January 6 2017 Retrieved February 12 2017 Bowden John February 14 2018 Leaked Twitter messages indicate WikiLeaks bias against Clinton report The Hill Retrieved January 5 2019 Lee Micah Currier Cora February 14 2018 In Leaked Chats WikiLeaks Discusses Preference for GOP Over Clinton Russia Trolling and Feminists They Don t Like The Intercept Retrieved March 10 2019 span, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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