Donald Trump rejects CIA Russia hacking report

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BBC News Sting

President-elect Donald Trump has rejected as "ridiculous" a CIA assessment that Russian hackers tried to sway the election in his favour.

He told Fox News the Democrats were putting out the reports because they were embarrassed at the scale of the election defeat.

On Friday, CIA officials told US media they had concluded that Russians hackers were trying to help Mr Trump.

Russian officials have repeatedly denied the hacking accusations.

Mr Trump said it might have been Russia but it was impossible to know.

"They have no idea if it's Russia or China or somebody sitting in a bed some place," he said.

President Barack Obama has ordered a complete review of the hacks, which targeted emails at the Democratic Party and the emails of a key aide to presidential nominee Hillary Clinton.

The contents of the emails, passed to Wikileaks and posted online, were embarrassing to the Democrats and shook up the presidential campaign.

Senior Republicans have now joined Democrats in calling for a full investigation.

Republican Senator John McCain, chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee, said in a joint statement on Sunday with top Democrats that the CIA's report "should alarm every American".

He said in an interview that the congressional investigation should be more thorough than the one ordered by the White House.

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Trump and Putin have described each other in positive terms

In October, US government officials pointed the finger at Russia, accusing it of meddling in the campaign to undermine the electoral process.

But on Friday, the intelligence community went further when US media reports said the CIA had "high confidence" that Russians were trying to influence the election in Mr Trump's favour.

Russians had hacked the Republican party but chose not to reveal the contents of what they found, the reports said.

But Mr Trump told Fox News Sunday: "I think it's ridiculous. I think it's just another excuse. I don't believe it."

He said the Democrats were behind the news reports, not the CIA, because they suffered such a big defeat.

While backing the Obama review, the president-elect warned that it should not pin the blame solely on Russia but on other countries or individuals too.

Republican party spokesman Sean Spicer said the party had not been hacked and the intelligence report was wrong.

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Exxon Mobil boss Rex Tillerson has emerged as favourite to be secretary of state

Mr Trump also said in the interview he did not need daily intelligence briefings.

"I'm a smart person, I don't need to be told the same thing in the same way for eight years."

Elsewhere in the interview, he said:

  • oil tycoon Rex Tillerson, tipped to be his secretary of state, is "a world class player"

  • his children will run his company but will not "make deals" so no conflicts of interest

  • the phone call with Taiwan that prompted protests from China was not planned in advance

  • he won't be bound by the "One China" policy unless Beijing makes concessions on trade

  • "no one really knows" if climate change is real and a decision on the Paris treaty will come quickly

Mr Trump, an outsider who stunned the political world by beating Hillary Clinton in last month's election, will assume office on 20 January.

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CIA director John Brennan tells the BBC what global threats Donald Trump will face as US president