Jan. 28 (UPI) -- The Russian government
arrested four men for treason after an investigation that U.S.
intelligence officials speculated was in response to their own inquiry
about Russia's hacking of the U.S. presidential election.
The men arrested include three high profile leaders of its
intelligence agency and a contractor working for the cybersecurity
office of the Russian national intelligence agency FSB, the successor to
the KGB.
U.S. officials said they
could not be certain
whether the arrests are in response to U.S. officials citing with "high
confidence" that Russia intentionally interfered with the election to
help
Donald Trump win. However, for Director of National Intelligence
James Clapper
to make the proclamation the U.S. government is as close to certain as
it can be of Russia's role in hacking Democratic groups and
Hillary Clinton's campaign, it likely would require human intelligence in addition to Russia's electronic fingerprints.
If the United States did obtain confirmation about Russian hacking
from a mole inside the FSB, it would have had to been a source high up
in the power structure because knowledge of such an operation would
likely not have spread beyond the senior-most officials there.
U.S. analysts cautioned
it was also possible the FSB was using the existence of a potential
leak to the United States as cover to purge itself of members involved
in an internal power struggle.
Though the reason for the arrests remains unclear, one thing appears
certain: The Russian government wanted news of the charges to become
public. As opposed to handling the matter internally, the arrests were
reported almost simultaneously by multiple Russian media outlets on
Thursday.
Russian officials went so far as to arrest one of the suspects,
Sergei Mikhailov, a deputy director of the Center for Information
Security, in a scene that could have been torn out of a spy novel. They
barged into a meeting between senior intelligence officials, put a bag
over Mikhailov's head and hauled him out of the room, according to
multiple accounts in the Russian media.
The arrests are believed to have taken place in early December, just days after the U.S. intelligence report was published.
Analysts told The New York Times there could be several reasons the
Kremlin would want the information public. If the arrests are indeed
tied to the U.S. intelligence report, it would be a tacit acknowledgment
Russia successfully meddled in a U.S. presidential election -- a way to
take credit and show other foreign governments the Kremlin has the
ability to do so again. Analysts also speculated a public treason trial
could serve as a venue to air more potentially damaging information
gleaned about the United States -- and new President Donald Trump --
without using back channels such as the website WikiLeaks to make it
public.
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