Some foreign leaders settle for stealing billions of
dollars. Russia’s president, Vladimir Putin, may have wanted to steal something even more
valuable: an American presidential election.
As our election takes a turn that could be drawn from
a Cold War spy novel (except it would be too implausible), Putin has an obvious
favorite in the race: Donald Trump. “It’s crystal clear to me” that Putin favors Trump,
says Michael McFaul, a Stanford professor who was ambassador to Russia until
2014. “If I were Putin, I would rather deal with Trump, too, given the things
he has said about foreign policy.”
Look, Democratic Party leaders exchanged inappropriate
emails showing bias for Hillary Clinton over Bernie
Sanders, and a hacker’s disclosure has properly triggered a ruckus. But that
scandal pales beside an effort apparently by a foreign dictatorship to disrupt
an American presidential election.
It also seems scandalous to me that Trump on Wednesday
effectively invited Russia to hack into Clinton’s computers for deleted emails
from when she was secretary of state, saying at a press conference, “Russia, if
you’re listening, I hope you’re able to find the 30,000 emails that are
missing.”
Yes, Trump is entertaining. But increasingly, the
antonym of “gravitas” is “Trump.” Clinton could have responded by inviting
Russia to hack into Trump’s computers and release his tax returns; she didn’t
because the hack would be illegal and her plea would be unpresidential.
In his press conference,
Trump also cast doubt on the idea that Russia hacked the Democratic National Committee’s computers. “It’s probably not Russia,” he said,
suggesting it might be China, or “some guy with a 200 I.Q.”
So let’s go through the evidence.
America’s intelligence agencies have assessed with “high
confidence” that Russia’s government was behind the hack, and private security companies
have identified two Russian teams of hackers that were inside D.N.C. computers.
One team is called Cozy Bear and is linked to the F.S.B., the successor to the
K.G.B., and another is called Fancy Bear and is linked to the G.R.U., or
Russian military intelligence. Cyber experts are very familiar
with both Cozy Bear and Fancy Bear.
The next question is whether Russia was also behind
the release of the stolen emails to WikiLeaks. Someone using the name Guccifer
2.0 claimed to be behind the hack, denied Russian involvement and claimed to be
Romanian — but wrote Romanian badly. ThreatConnect, a private security firm, issued a meticulous report showing that
Guccifer used a Russia-based VPN (virtual private network) service and
displayed other “heavy traces of Russian activity.”
“Guccifer 2.0 is a Russian propaganda effort,”
ThreatConnect concluded.
After talking to experts, I have the sense that
there’s considerable confidence that Russia is the culprit, but more doubt
about whether Putin gave the order and about whether the aim was to benefit
Trump or simply to create havoc.
“I think the most likely explanation is that someone
in Russian intelligence, probably very high up, decided to help Donald Trump,”
said Benjamin Wittes, a security expert at the Brookings Institution, but he
added that there’s no solid evidence for this.
One reason for caution is that history shows that
“intelligence community” is sometimes an oxymoron. In the 1980s, the United
States accused Russia of conducting chemical warfare in Southeast Asia, citing
“yellow rain” in jungles there. Years later, it turned out that this “yellow
rain” may have actually been bee excrement.
Democrats should be particularly wary of hinting that
Trump is some sort of conscious pawn of the Russians, or is controlled by
Moscow through financial investments. It’s true that his son Donald Trump Jr.
said in 2008 that “we see a lot of money pouring in from Russia.” But do you
really think that if Trump were an agent he would have exaggerated his ties, as
he did last year, saying of Putin, “I got to know him very
well”? In fact, Trump
acknowledged Wednesday, he has never even met Putin.
The reason Moscow favors Trump isn’t some conspiracy.
It’s simply that Putin dislikes Clinton, while Trump’s combination of
international ignorance and catastrophic policies would benefit Putin. In
particular, Trump’s public doubts about NATO renounce
more than half a century of bipartisan orthodoxy on how to deal with Russia,
and undermine the Western alliance that checks Putin.
One nightmare of security specialists is Russia
provoking unrest among ethnic Russians in Estonia, Latvia or Lithuania and then
using rioting as an excuse to intervene. NATO members would be obliged to
respond, but frankly it’s not clear that they would — and Trump’s loose
rhetoric increases the risk of paralysis and a collapse of the alliance.
In that
sense, Trump poses a national security risk to the West, and that’s reason
enough Putin would be thrilled to see him elected president.
No comments:
Post a Comment