The Sentinel-Record

Report: UK officials ‘avoided’ looking into Russian meddling

- DANICA KIRKA SYLVIA HUI JAMEY KEATEN

LONDON — A long-awaited report on Russian meddling in British politics criticized the U.K. government for failing to investigat­e whether Moscow interfered in the 2016 Brexit referendum, with the document’s authors describing the lack of curiosity about this threat to democracy as a major failure at the heart of power.

The report from Parliament’s Intelligen­ce and Security Committee also painted a damning portrait of Russian involvemen­t in British society more generally, including attempts to influence government policy by wealthy Russians with ties to President Vladimir Putin and the British financiers who help them.

Stewart Hosie, a committee member and member of Parliament for the opposition Scottish National Party, accused the government of “actively avoiding allegation­s of Russian meddling, which he said was unforgivab­le after evidence emerged that Moscow had interfered with the Scottish independen­ce referendum in 2014 and the U.S. presidenti­al election two years later. The panel called for the government to appoint a commission to look into the issue and report back to the public.

“There has been no assessment of Russian interferen­ce in the EU referendum and this goes back to nobody wanting to touch the issue with a 10-foot pole, Hosie said during a press conference after the report was delivered to Parliament.

The government stalled publicatio­n of the report for more than seven months, with the main opposition Labour Party suggesting that Prime Minister Boris Johnson and his Conservati­ve Party were trying to avoid further questions about links between Russia and the pro-Brexit campaign. Johnson helped lead the campaign for Britain to leave the European Union and has made delivering Brexit his primary goal since he became prime minister last July.

Committee members said Russia’s goal in seeking to influence elections was to amplify existing divisions, and thus destabiliz­e Western political systems. While the report said it would be “difficult — if not impossible — to prove” whether Russian meddling influenced the result of the EU referendum, it was clear that the government “was slow to recognize the existence of the threat.”

The report concludes that Russia sees Britain as one of its top intelligen­ce targets, adding that Moscow’s attempts to influence the U.K. are the “new normal” and successive government­s have welcomed Russian oligarchs with open arms. Russians with “very close links” to Putin are “well integrated into the U.K. business, political and social scene — in ‘Londongrad’ in particular,” the report said.

In a 20-page response, the government denied that it had “badly underestim­ated” the Russian threat and rejected the call for a commission to investigat­e alleged Russian meddling during the Brexit referendum.

“We have seen no evidence of successful interferen­ce in the EU Referendum,” the statement said.

But it may prove difficult for Johnson to avoid a further inquiry because the committee’s recommenda­tion is non-partisan and has the weight of Parliament behind it, according to Nigel Gould-Davies, senior fellow for Russia and Eurasia at the Internatio­nal Institute for Strategic Studies.

“This is a national security issue, he said. “The report is very clear that it’s probably impossible to assess whether Russian operations made a difference or not. But I think everyone with a concern about British national security can share the view that it’s important to understand the extent and seriousnes­s of that attempt in order, among other things, to make sure that such attempts are not successful in the future.”

Russian Foreign Ministry spokespers­on Maria Zakharova dismissed the committee’s findings, calling them “Russophobi­a.”

The report’s authors said they were subjected to unpreceden­ted delays in making the document public, with officials stalling its release for more than seven months after it was first submitted to Johnson on Oct 17. The committee didn’t offer a theory about why the report was delayed, but claimed the government’s explanatio­ns were not true.

The government initially said the report couldn’t be published until it was reviewed for national security issues, which postponed its release until after the Dec. 12 general election. Further holdups were caused by delays in appointing new members to the Intelligen­ce and Security Committee.

Finally, Johnson named five Conservati­ve lawmakers to the nine-person panel in hopes his handpicked candidate would be chosen as chairman and block the report. The gambit failed when a renegade Conservati­ve was chosen to head the committee with backing from opposition parties.

Another parliament­ary panel — the Digital, Culture, Media and Sport Committee — previously published the results of its own inquiry into disinforma­tion and “fake news,” which called on election regulators and law enforcemen­t to investigat­e reports that a British businessma­n with links to Russia donated 8.4 million pounds ($10.6 million) to the Brexit campaign. The National Crime Agency said in September that it found no evidence of criminal offenses related to the donation.

Gould-Davies said Russia could not have achieved the type of influence it has in Britain without the support of “vested interests within the country.

“There is an army of people in the financial industry, in the property sector as well, who have served as intermedia­ries helping Russian money find safe places here, helping in other ways Russians to prosper here at the same time as the Russian state is presenting a growing threat to Britain, he said. “And that situation strategica­lly cannot be sustained.”

The intelligen­ce committee report covered the full range of the Russian threat to the U.K., including election interferen­ce, espionage and targeted assassinat­ions such as the attempt to kill former spy Sergei Skripal in the English city of Salisbury two years ago.

The report urged British authoritie­s to beef up their defenses, saying the “clearest requiremen­t for immediate action” is new legislatio­n to give British intelligen­ce the tools they need to combat a “very capable” adversary and tackle the illegal financial dealings of Russian elites in Britain and their “enablers.”

It called for better coordinati­on with Western allies, and said Britain should be ready to lead internatio­nal action and develop new rules against “offensive cyber” operations.

The report also faulted unspecifie­d social media companies for “failing to play their part.” It said the British government should force the companies to seriously confront “covert hostile state use of their platforms and “name and shame” those that fail to act.

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