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Russia Is Said to Be Interfering to Aid Sanders in Democratic Primaries

WASHINGTON — Russia has been trying to intervene in the Democratic primaries to aid Sen. Bernie Sanders, according to people familiar with the matter, and Sanders said Friday that intelligence officials recently briefed him.

Russia Is Said to Be Interfering to Aid Sanders in Democratic Primaries

The disclosure came a day before the Nevada caucuses, where Sanders is a favorite, and followed revelations a day earlier that Moscow was interfering on President Donald Trump’s behalf this year, as it did in 2016.

Sanders denounced Russia in a statement, calling President Vladimir Putin an “autocratic thug” and warning Moscow to stay out of the election. Drawing a contrast with Trump, he said he would stand against any efforts by Russia or another foreign power to interfere in the vote.

“The intelligence community is telling us Russia is interfering in this campaign right now in 2020,” Sanders separately told reporters in Bakersfield, California, where he was to hold a rally. “And what I say to Mr. Putin: ‘If I am elected president, trust me, you will not be interfering in American elections.’ ”

He also told reporters that he was briefed about a month ago. Asked why the disclosure came out now, he said, “I’ll let you guess about one day before the, the Nevada caucus. Why do you think it came out?”

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On Friday, the president aggressively disputed that Russia was interfering on his behalf. He called the disclosures a hoax and part of a partisan campaign against him. At a campaign rally in Las Vegas, Trump suggested that Putin would prefer Sanders, “who honeymooned in Moscow.”

Russia’s interference measures and their intensity so far remain murky and somewhat in dispute, even as intelligence officials sound alarms.

At the classified briefing of House Intelligence Committee members last week, along with the classified briefing by the FBI to Sanders last month, intelligence officers said that Russia was actively interfering in the campaign, and people who heard the House briefing said intelligence officials said Russia had a preference for Trump.

Richard Grenell, the American ambassador to Germany whom Trump appointed this week to replace Joseph Maguire as the acting director of national intelligence, asked the agencies under his purview Friday to provide the raw information and analysis that went into the briefing, people familiar with the matter said.

(BEGIN OPTIONAL TRIM.)

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Grenell’s appointment has drawn criticism from former intelligence officials who question his lack of experience and his record as a partisan ideologue. He immediately began a major personnel reshuffle, forcing out the official acting as the top deputy to the director of national intelligence.

Other officials have hastened planned exits, as Grenell looks to install his own team.

Grenell was appointed the acting director after Trump was told about the briefing for House Intelligence Committee members, although administration officials have said it was not a direct cause of Maguire’s removal.

(END OPTIONAL TRIM.)

At the House briefing last week, senior intelligence officials said Russia was continuing its election interference campaign, including intervening in the Democratic primaries.

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The briefing was a supposed to be a repeat of an unremarkable classified session with the Senate Intelligence Committee in January and to inform lawmakers about a broad range of election threats, not just Russian interference. But lawmakers alighted upon the disclosures about Russia’s support for Trump and challenged the briefer, Shelby Pierson, the nation’s election security czar.

Intelligence officials disputed that Pierson said that Russia was actively aiding the reelection of the president. She did say Russia is seeking to influence U.S. elections, including the primaries.

But people who heard the briefing said that the intelligence officers presenting the material said, in response to questions from lawmakers, that Russia was trying to get Trump reelected.

That assertion enraged Republicans and eventually angered Trump when he heard a garbled account of the briefing. He complained that Democrats would use Moscow’s support for him against him, said people familiar with the matter.

Republicans have disputed that Russia supports Trump, insisting that Putin simply wants to broadly spread chaos and undermine the democratic system.

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They have also argued that Sanders’ gestures of peace toward the Soviet Union at the end of the Cold War might make him appealing to Putin.

As mayor of Burlington, Vermont, in the 1980s, Sanders, a self-described democratic socialist, formalized a sister-city relationship with the Russian city of Yaroslavl. He also traveled there in 1988 with his wife, Jane O’Meara Sanders, a trip that political opponents, and even the couple, have referred to as their honeymoon.

But some current and former officials expressed doubt that Russian officials think that Bernie Sanders has some hidden affinity to Moscow. Instead, they said that a Russian campaign to support Sanders may ultimately be aimed at aiding Trump.

While intelligence officials are uncertain about the thinking of their Russian counterparts, Moscow could potentially consider Sanders a weaker general election opponent for Trump than a more moderate Democratic nominee, according to two people familiar with the matter.

The Washington Post first reported the briefing of the Sanders campaign. The campaign sought to pin the blame for the disclosure on the Trump administration, suggesting it was retribution for critical remarks Sanders had made about Grenell in 2018.

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Russia also worked to support — or at least not harm — Sanders in 2016. Operatives at a Russian intelligence-backed troll factory were instructed to avoid attacking Sanders or Trump, according to a report by special counsel Robert Mueller and an indictment he secured of 13 Russians working on the operation.

Both the indictment and Mueller’s report quoted internal documents from the Internet Research Agency ordering operatives to attack Hillary Clinton’s campaign. “Use any opportunity to criticize Hillary and the rest except for Sanders and Trump — we support them,” the document said.

Russian operatives used the troll factory in 2016 to pose on social media as Americans and sow divisions among already divisive issues like immigration, religion and race. It was one part of the Kremlin’s multipronged attack on the election that also included hacks of Democratic emails, payments to unsuspecting Americans to stage pro-Trump rallies in battleground states and at least one scouting trip to the United States in 2014.

(STORY CAN END HERE. OPTIONAL MATERIAL FOLLOWS.)

Sanders said the Russians were again trying to interfere in the campaign. Some “ugly stuff on the internet” had been attributed to his campaign that could be coming from falsified accounts, he said.

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His online army of supporters is both coveted by his rivals and a source of irritation and even fear because of their at times vitriolic behavior. During the Democratic debate Wednesday night in Las Vegas, Sanders suggested that Russia may at least in part be to blame.

“All of us remember 2016, and what we remember is efforts by Russians and others to try to interfere in our election and divide us up,” he said. “I’m not saying that’s happening, but it would not shock me.”

This article originally appeared in The New York Times .

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