Russia may have meddled in both the Scottish independence and Brexit referendums, a highly-anticipated report into allegations of Russian interference in British democracy is set to reveal.
The suppressed report – the product of an 18 month-long investigation conducted by parliament’s cross-party Intelligence and Security Committee – is set to be published this week.
The document could reignite fears that Russia intervened in the 2016 Brexit referendum.
But some have dubbed it an attempt to ‘sabotage’ Britain’s decision to leave the EU as it is impossible to say for certain whether Russia had any impact on the vote at all.
Founder of campaign group Leave.EU Arron Banks has launched a legal bid to delay publication of the report so that he has a chance to reply.
Russia may have meddled in both the Scottish independence and Brexit referendums, a highly-anticipated report into allegations of Russian interference in British democracy is set to reveal. Pictured: Russian President Vladimir Putin
The so-called ‘Bad Boy of Brexit’ has been accused of hiding the ‘true source’ of £8million in loans linked to the campaign group. The National Crime Agency (NCA) said it has found ‘no evidence that any criminal offences have been committed’.
Some alleged that this was Russian money put forward to influence the Brexit referendum – claims Banks said were ‘b******s’.
He said: ‘Russian interference in Brexit has become a mythical mantra for hardcore Remainers as they sought to try to discredit the result in any way they could.
‘We are living in an age where political opponents are not prepared to accept defeat at the ballot box and use other methods.’
MP Andrew Bridgen told the Sunday Express: ‘Too often we have seen that Remainers cannot accept defeat and have repeatedly used any means possible to attempt to undermine and discredit the result.’
Founder of campaign group Leave.EU Arron Banks (pictured) has launched a legal bid to delay publication of the report so that he has a chance to reply
The report is also set to raise concerns about potential interference in Scottish politics, The Sunday Times reports.
In 2016 – before the Brexit referendum – the Exchange Tower in the shadow of Edinburgh Castle became the UK headquarters of Sputnik, the Russian state news agency paid for by Vladimir Putin.
It broadcast UK-wide radio shows and was dubbed a ‘Kremlin stooge’ by an MSP.
And Alex Salmond – the former Scottish First Minister – was widely criticised for taking a job with Putin’s ‘propaganda’ channel, RT on its English-language service.
It follows allegations that leaked documents on US-UK trade talks were ‘amplified’ online by Russia during the 2019 election to help Jeremy Corbyn win.
The then-Labour leader brandished a 451-page dossier at press conferences saying they proved the NHS was ‘for sale’ in a post-Brexit trade deal.
While Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab very carefully stopped short of pinning the blame on the Russian state and Vladimir Putin directly, he insisted ‘Russian actors’ were involved in ensuring the documents came to light.
The Russian embassy in London said it ‘will never interfere’ in internal affairs in the UK and said the allegations are ‘foggy and contradictory’.
Labour said it condemned ‘any attempt by Russia, or any foreign power, to interfere in our country’s democratic processes’. ‘Labour stands ready to work cross-party to protect our nation’s security,’ a spokeswoman said.
Raab today said the UK will ensure the world knows the nature of the ‘reprehensible behaviour’ that Russia is engaged in following accusations that Russia’s intelligence services tried to steal details of research into coronavirus vaccines.
Russia’s ambassador to the UK Andrei Kelin rejected the claims and said there was ‘no sense’ in the allegations made by Britain, the United States and Canada.
Speaking on Sky News’ Sophy Ridge On Sunday programme, Mr Raab said it was ‘outrageous and reprehensible’ that the Russian government is engaged in such activity.
The report is also set to raise concerns about potential interference in Scottish politics. Pictured: Scotland’s First Minister Nicola Sturgeon
He said: ‘We’re absolutely confident that the Russian intelligence agencies were engaged in a cyber attack on research and development efforts and organisations in this country and internationally with a view either to sabotage or to profit from the R&D that was taking place.
‘And I think the point is, first of all we’ve seen this as part of a wider systematic approach to cyber taken by Russia, and at the time that the world is coming together to try and tackle Covid-19, particularly come up with a global solution for a vaccine, I think it’s outrageous and reprehensible that the Russian government is engaged in this activity.
‘So what we’re doing with our allies is making sure people know, making sure the organisations know so that they can better defend against it, but also just calling Russia out, we will do this.
‘Now you will see us holding Russia to account and making sure that the world knows the nature of the reprehensible behaviour that they’re engaged in.’
It follows allegations that leaked documents on US-UK trade talks were ‘amplified’ online by Russia during the 2019 election to help Jeremy Corbyn win. Pictured: The papers were brandished by the then-Labour leader Corbyn during the campaign last year
Mr Raab added: ‘As a leading member of the international community, a permanent member of the Security Council, Russia should be engaged in that collaborative international effort.’
Also speaking on the programme, shadow foreign secretary Lisa Nandy said that Labour ‘got it wrong’ on Russia, having ‘prevaricated’ after the Salisbury attack in which former Russian military officer Sergei Skripal and his daughter Yulia were poisoned.
Following the May 2018 incident, then Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn was criticised for not condemning Russia more firmly over its actions.
Ms Nandy told Sophy Ridge On Sunday: ‘I think we got it wrong on Russia and I made a feature of this during the Labour leadership campaign because I felt that it really needed to be said.
‘When the Salisbury attacks happened, we prevaricated, we equivocated, we called for dialogue at a moment when chemical weapons had been used on the streets of the UK.
‘And what that did was not only to let an authoritarian regime that has invaded its neighbours, that has interfered in elections across European democratic countries over several years, that has had an appalling record of human rights against its own people, against LGBT people, Muslims and other minorities, and used chemical weapons on the streets of the UK, we didn’t just let them off the hook, we also let the Conservative Government off the hook.
‘Because I believe the Conservatives have been desperately slow to wake up to the threat that is posed by the current Putin administration and we should have been much quicker to act in relation to that.’
Ms Nandy added: ‘By prevaricating about issues like Salisbury, we let the Tories off the hook. I strongly believe that that has to change and that we have to have a much more strategic approach to Russia.’