Russian govt denies interfering with the U.S election after Hillary Clinton's emails are hacked revealing damaging information
Russia
 has denied interfering with the U.S presidential elections after 
Hillary Clinton campaign /Democratic party emails were hacked.
Wikileaks'
 Julian Assange released series of hacked emails potentially damaging to
 the Clinton campaign which made the Clinton campaign and the White 
House immediately release statements blaming Russia for the hacks with 
the White House promising to give a 'proportional' response instead of 
denying the contents of the mails.
The hacked 
mails reveal that the Clinton Campaign shared information with the U.S 
Department of Justice as regards her 36,000 mails deleted from her 
private server, the mails also show her supporting open trade deals but 
criticize open trade deals in public during rallies.
The mails
 also reveal that Hillary Clinton chose her running mate Tim Kaine over a
 year ago and not as recently as she made the public to believe. 
Wikileaks Julian
 Assange has reportedly promised to release more mails in the coming 
days but Russia's foreign minister Sergey Lavrov has denied Russia's 
involvement in America's political sphere.
In 
an interview with CNN's Christiane Amanpour in Moscow, Lavrov said it 
was "flattering" that American officials think Russia is meddling in the
 election, but the accusations were baseless.
"It's
 flattering, of course, to get this kind of attention -- for a regional 
power, as President Obama called us some time ago," Lavrov told CNN on Wednesday.
"Now
 everybody in the United States is saying that it is Russia which is 
running the [U.S.] presidential debate," he said. "We have not seen a 
single fact, a single proof."
On the recent 
lewd remarks on Donald Trump made in a recently released 2005 video, 
Lavrov remarked, after pointing out English was not his first language, 
"There are so many p**sies around your presidential campaign on both sides that I prefer not to comment."
Asked
 about this threatened response by the American government on Russia for
 the email hacks, Lavrov said: "It's not worth, I believe, speculating. 
If they decided to do something, let them do it. But to say that Russia 
is interfering in the United States' domestic matters, is ridiculous."
Many
 Americans, since the mail leaks, have called on Hillary Clinton's 
campaign chairman John Podesta to resign but he said it was "a 
reasonable conclusion, that… the Trump campaign had advance warning 
about what Assange was going to do."
''WikiLeaks seems to be doing everything they can on behalf of our opponent,"
Russia's president Vladmir Putin has also revealed that influencing the American election is not one of Russia's interests.
"There
 was a whole hysteria about that being of interest to Russia, but there 
is nothing within the interest of Russia," Putin said, speaking at an 
investment forum in Moscow on Wednesday.
Putin said he didn't see why Russia was a "main issue in the election campaign," and that it was "gratifying but puzzling."
In
 a joint statement, the Department of Homeland Security and the Office 
of the Director of National Intelligence said the intelligence community
 is "confident" the hacks and documents published by WikiLeaks and 
DCLeaks.com and those claimed to have been carried out by a hacker known
 as Guccifer 2.0 are "consistent with the methods and motivations of 
Russian-directed efforts."
"These thefts and 
disclosures are intended to interfere with the U.S. election process. 
Such activity is not new to Moscow – the Russians have used similar 
tactics and techniques across Europe and Eurasia, for example, to 
influence public opinion there," the statement reads. "We believe, based
 on the scope and sensitivity of these efforts, that only Russia's 
senior-most officials could have authorized these activities."
"It
 would be extremely difficult for someone, including a nation-state 
actor, to alter actual ballot counts or election results by cyber attack
 or intrusion," they said. "This assessment is based on the 
decentralized nature of our election system in this country and the 
number of protections state and local election officials have in place."



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