AP Photo/Andrew Harnik
- Special counsel Robert Mueller's indictment Friday of 13 Russian nationals and three organizations paints a stark picture of Russia's election interference.
- The indictment threw a wrench into President Donald Trump's claims that the Russia investigation is a "hoax" and a "witch hunt" with no justifiable basis.
- The charges will also force the White House to decide whether it will hold the Russian government accountable for its actions, experts said.
The FBI's investigation into Russia's interference in the 2016 US election took a major step forward on Friday, when special counsel Robert Mueller's office announced eight charges against 13 Russian nationals and three Russian entities for carrying out social media "interference operations targeting the United States."
And with the indictment, Mueller dealt a significant blow to one of President Donald Trump's central claims about the legitimacy of the investigation.
The charges released on Friday were directed primarily at the Internet Research Agency (IRA), a notorious Russian "troll factory" located in St. Petersburg that focused on sowing political discord during the 2016 race by using Russian bots to spread fake
The 13 Russian nationals named in the court filing were indicted for working in "various capacities to carry out" the agency's goals. Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein said during a press conference that the defendants' underlying conduct did not alter the outcome of the race.
Shortly after the indictment was released, Trump took to Twitter to declare himself vindicated in the Russia probe.
"Russia started their anti-US campaign in 2014, long before I announced that I would run for President. The results of the election were not impacted. The Trump campaign did nothing wrong - no collusion!" he tweeted.
The charges were hailed as a triumph by a president who frequently complains on Twitter and to advisers about the Russia investigation, which he has characterized as a "hoax," a "witch hunt," and "fake news." He also often accuses former Democratic nominee Hillary Clinton of colluding with Russia and the FBI to undermine his election victory and presidency.
He also suggested during the 2016 campaign season that the people responsible for infiltrating the Democratic National Committee and a top Clinton campaign official's emails could have been Chinese hackers, or "a guy sitting on their bed who weighs 400 pounds."
But those theories hit a snag with the release of Friday's indictment, which served to reinforce, in minute detail, the intelligence community's assessment in January 2017 that Russia mounted an elaborate campaign to interfere in the 2016 race to elevate Trump to the presidency.
'This was well funded, well planned, and successfully executed'
Associated Press/Dmitry Lovetsky
The indictment lays out a stark picture of how Russia's social-media scheme operated and who was involved, including specific allegations about Russia-linked Facebook accounts, ads, rallies, and emails.
"That level of detail should make it very hard for anybody to say that there's nothing there, that there's no Russian interference to worry about," said David Sklansky, a professor at Stanford Law School.
Moreover, he added, the charges will likely require the White House to "make a decision about whether they want to continue pretending that the Russians didn't have a favored side in the race, or that the side Russia favored was Clinton."
The IRA began its efforts to interfere in the election as early as 2014 - a detail the White House pointed to as evidence that the Trump campaign was not involved, because Trump did not declare his candidacy until June 2015.
But as the campaign season got into full swing, the defendants began to engage "in operations primarily intended to communicate derogatory information about Hillary Clinton, to denigrate other candidates such as Ted Cruz and Marco Rubio, and to support Bernie Sanders and then-candidate Donald Trump," the court filing said.
In particular, workers were told to spread content related to US
As the campaign season began drawing to a close, the defendants began a concerted effort to encourage minority voters - most of whom typically lean Democratic - to abstain from casting ballots, or to vote for third-party candidates like Jill Stein. The strategy appeared to align with that of former Trump campaign chairman Paul Manafort, who made promoting Stein a bedrock of his campaign strategy in early- and mid-2016.
"This was well funded, well planned, and successfully executed," said former federal prosecutor Jeff Cramer, adding that it would be "naive" to assume the Russians wouldn't do it again.
Reuters/Jorge Silva
A 'black eye' for the White House
The next step in Mueller's investigation, experts said, will be to gauge whether any Americans were knowingly involved in the influence campaign, and more narrowly, whether any members of Trump's campaign participated. The special counsel will also likely continue looking into the nature and extent of top-ranking Russian officials' involvement in the conspiracy.
The White House released an official statement about the indictment on Friday, shortly after Trump declared himself and his campaign innocent on Twitter.
Trump "has been fully briefed on this matter and is glad to see the Special Counsel's investigation further indicates-that there was NO COLLUSION between the Trump campaign and Russia and that the outcome of the election was not changed or affected," the statement said.
Harry Sandick, a former assistant US attorney for the Southern District of New York, acknowledged that the charges unveiled Friday did not implicate any Americans as being knowing co-conspirators.
But "did Trump's campaign know about these activities, and if so, does that explain the frantic ongoing desire to block this investigation? Even if Trump's campaign had no role, it is surely a black eye given Trump's statement clearing Russia of wrongdoing," he said.
The Trump administration has been criticized for adopting a softer stance towards Russia in what critics say is an effort to appease Putin, who frequently praises Trump.
Most recently, the White House decided not to impose the new sanctions on Russia stemming from a law Trump signed in August designed to punish Russia for its election meddling. The State Department said earlier this month that just the law's existence deterred Russian defense sales, and that it did not need to be additionally enforced.
The Department of Justice has begun extradition proceedings in light of Friday's indictment, but it's unlikely the Russians charged on Friday will face legal consequences, given the nature of Russian extradition laws. Former counterintelligence veterans agreed and said Saturday that because Russia is engaged in information warfare against the US, the Kremlin wouldn't think twice about endorsing activities considered illegal in the country.
Even so, Sklansky said, Mueller's team may "believe that it's part of their job to charge the crimes that they uncover, whether or not they'll be able to successfully bring the charged individuals to justice."
The question of whether or not the Russians will face consequences may not be the most significant outcome of the indictment, he added.
"The intelligence community has been unanimous for some time that this is a serious concern, and the White House has been contradicting its own intelligence agencies by claiming that this is a witch hunt," Sklansky said. "But now, it's not just US intelligence officials - there's a very detailed bill of particulars that's been made public which makes it much more difficult for anybody to credibly suggest that Mueller's investigation is some kind of hoax."
Cramer noted the charges do pose one risk to the defendants: "Safe to say these individuals won't be traveling anywhere in the future unless they want to risk getting picked up."