John Kennedy Distances Himself from Ukraine Comments: ‘I Was Wrong’

LAGOP Rally, December 9, 2016, Dow Hangar, Baton Rouge, Louisiana, Tammy Anthony Baker, Photographer

Senator John Kennedy is distancing himself from remarks he made regarding the Ukraine scandal when he argued that the nation could have been accountable for the Democratic National Committee back in 2016.

Kennedy maintained that his questionable theory that Kiyv may have attempted different ways of interference, adding that there is “proven and unproven” evidence that both Ukraine and Russia meddled in the election, The Hill reported.

Appearing on CNN, Kennedy acknowledged that he was “wrong” to say just a day prior that there weren’t definitive answers on who hacked the DNC ahead of the 2016 election. Kennedy claimed he’d misheard a question from Fox News anchor Chris Wallace while appearing on “Fox News Sunday,” causing him to answer incorrectly.

“I was answering one of his questions, and he interjected with a statement and asked me to react to it. What I heard Chris say was only Russia tried to interfere in the election, and I answered the question. That’s not what he said,” Kennedy said on CNN’s “Cuomo Prime Time”, noting that Wallace’s question focused on DNC servers. 

“Chris is right. I was wrong,” he said. “The only evidence I have, and I think it’s overwhelming, is that it was Russia who tried to hack the DNC computer. I’ve seen no indication that Ukraine tried to do it.”

The U.S. intelligence community has concluded that Russia sought to interfere in the election to harm Democratic nominee Hillary Clinton‘s candidacy and help Trump.  

Wallace noted the intelligence community’s conclusion in Sunday’s interview, but Kennedy pushed back, saying that “it could also be Ukraine.” There is no evidence Ukraine had any role in the DNC hack.

The House in late September launched an impeachment inquiry into allegations that Trump pressured Ukraine to open investigations into former Vice President Joe Biden, who is also a 2020 presidential candidate, and a conspiracy theory related to the 2016 election.  

In a July 25 phone call with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky, Trump asked the new Ukrainian leader to look into matters related to CrowdStrike, a U.S.-based internet security company that initially examined the breach of the DNC, according to a partial transcript released by the White House. 

The request was an apparent reference to a conspiracy theory that casts doubt on the assessment that Russians were responsible for hacking the DNC. 

Tom Bossert, a former White House homeland security adviser, has called the allegation a “completely debunked” conspiracy theory.

Fiona Hill, a former top Russia analyst for the White House, also strongly disputed the idea that Ukraine interfered in the 2016 election while testifying before Congress last week. 

“Based on questions and statements I have heard, some of you on this committee appear to believe that Russia and its security services did not conduct a campaign against our country, and that perhaps, somehow, for some reason, Ukraine did,” Hill said in her opening statement.

“This is a fictional narrative that has been perpetrated and propagated by the Russian security services themselves,” she said.

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