Russia waging ‘warfare’ by interfering in elections: Haley

NEW YORK - Russia is using election interference as a “weapon of choice” to undermine democracy worldwide and must be held accountable for this “warfare,” US Ambassador to the United Nations Nikki Haley said Thursday.

“When a country can come and interfere in another country’s elections, that is warfare, it really is,” Haley told a panel discussion in New York organized by the George W. Bush institute. “We didn’t just see it here - you can look at France, you can look at other countries. They are doing this everywhere. This is their weapon of choice,” she said. The US Congress is looking into an alleged Russian campaign aimed at influencing the outcome of the 2016 election and a special counsel, Robert Mueller, has been appointed to oversee a federal investigation into the allegations.

Election interference is warfare “because you are making sure that the democracy shifts from what the people want,” said Haley, seen as among the most influential members of President Donald Trump’s administration. “We have to be so hard on this,” Haley said about the Russian role. “We have to hold them accountable.” illary Clinton has pinned part of the blame for her loss to Trump in the November vote to Russian hacking of her campaign emails and use of social media. Moscow has denied the allegations.

Putin threatens retaliation if

RT channel is targeted by US

Russian President Vladimir Putin said Thursday that Moscow will retaliate if the United States takes measures against Kremlin-controlled media group RT.

Washington is pressuring the channel to register as a “foreign agent”, which would force it to disclose personal information of employees and those interviewed.

Speaking at the annual Valdai Club meeting of international experts in Sochi, Putin said Moscow would take similar actions against US media in Russia if legal steps are taken to limit RT’s activities in the United States.

“We will act in a way that reflects their moves and we will do this quickly. As soon as we see steps being taken that limit the actions of our media there will be a tit-for-tat response,” he said.

Putin praised RT as “doing brilliant work” and said the channel was much smaller than the dominant US and British media working internationally, which he called the “Anglo-Saxon monopoly”.

RT this month said the channel was given a deadline of October 17 to register under the Foreign Agents Registration Act (FARA).

The Russian justice ministry also sent warning letters to “a number of US media operating in Russia” warning them of the “unacceptability of breaching Russian law”.

Russia has a law requiring non-governmental organisations with foreign funding to register as foreign agents, but it has never been used to target media organisations.

The law has instead led to the shuttering of dozens of groups working on anything from environmental protection to HIV prevention.

Relations between Moscow and Washington have plummeted to their lowest level since the Cold War and numerous investigations in the US are looking into whether Russia meddled in 2016 elections to swing the vote in favour of President Donald Trump.

Under pressure from investigators, Facebook agreed last month to hand over the content and targets of Russia-backed political messages on the social network in the 2016 election.

Haley said the private sector needs to help US authorities confront Russia. Asked about threats facing the United States, Haley listed North Korea, Iran and the Islamic State group in Iraq and Syria, but she also discussed Russia’s role in sowing instability. “Russia can’t necessarily win anything. They don’t have a big enough military. They don’t have a strong economy, so they insert themselves in every situation to create chaos,” she said.

Two former US secretaries of state, Madeleine Albright and Condoleezza Rice, told the panel that Russia was resorting to more sophisticated cyber tactics to weaken the United States. “We are being attacked in a new way, in a new system,” said Albright, who also served as UN ambassador.

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