MOSCOW — An aide to
Russia’s deputy prime minister, who was among the first people to post a video
online containing a bugged phone call between two US diplomats, says neither he
nor the Russian government played a role in leaking the tape.
Dmitry Loskutov told The Associated Press by phone on Friday
that he was surfing a social networking website on when he came across the
video, in which the top US diplomat for Europe, Victoria Nuland, disparages the
European Union. He said his decision to repost the video had no connection to
his work for the Russian government.
US State Department spokeswoman Jen Psaki said Moscow’s
apparent role in publicizing the video was “a new low in Russian tradecraft.”
The suspicions were aired Thursday after an audio of the
call was posted to the Internet and amid continuing criticism of the United
States in Europe and elsewhere over NSA spying on foreign leaders and the US.
They also came as the Russia-hosted Winter Olympics opened under tight security
to prevent possible terrorist attacks and highlighted distrust between
Washington and Moscow that has thrived despite the Obama administration’s
attempt to “reset” relations with the Kremlin.
The White House and State Department stopped just short of
directly accusing Russia of surreptitiously recording the call between Nuland,
and the US ambassador to Ukraine, Geoffrey Pyatt. But both took pains to point
out that a Russian government official was the first or among the first to call
attention to the audio of the conversation that was posted on YouTube.
White House spokesman Jay Carney pointed to the Russian
official’s tweet and Russia’s clear interest in what has become a struggle
between pro-Moscow and pro-Western camps in the former Soviet Republic.
“I would say that since the video was first noted and
tweeted out by the Russian government, I think it says something about Russia’s
role,” Carney told reporters. He would not comment on the substance of the
conversation, in which the Nuland and Pyatt voices also discuss their opinion
of various Ukrainian opposition figures.
In the audio, voices resembling those of Nuland and Pyatt
discuss international efforts to resolve Ukraine’s ongoing political crisis. At
one point, the Nuland voice colorfully suggests that the EU’s position should
be ignored. “F*ck the EU,” the female voice said.
An aide to Russian deputy prime minister, Dmitry Rogozin,
was among the first to tweet about the YouTube video, which shows photos of
Nuland and Pyatt and is subtitled in Russian.
In the tweet, posted some seven hours before existence of
the video became widely known on Thursday, the Rogozin aide, Loskutov, opined:
“Sort of controversial judgment from Assistant Secretary of State Victoria
Nuland speaking about the EU.”
State Department spokeswoman Jen Psaki did not dispute the
authenticity of the recording and said that Nuland had apologized to European
Union officials for her remarks.
The YouTube video was posted on February 4 and is titled the
“Marionettes of Maidan” in Russian. Maidan is the name of the main square in
the Ukrainian capital of Kiev, which has become the center of opposition
protests.
The US has repeatedly denied allegations, many of them from
Russian officials, that it is taking sides in the Ukraine crisis and Psaki
repeated that stance on Thursday.
“It is no secret that Ambassador Pyatt and Assistant
Secretary Nuland have been working with the government of Ukraine, with the
opposition, with business and civil society leaders to support their efforts,”
Psaki said. “It shouldn’t be a surprise that at any points there have been
discussions about recent events and offers and what is happening on the
ground.”
“Of course these things are being discussed,” she said. “It
doesn’t change the fact that it’s up to the people on the ground. It is up to
the people of Ukraine to determine what the path forward it.”
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