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2016 elections, Bill Clinton, CIA, classification, David Petraeus, emails, FBI, Hillary Clinton, Im-Politic, intelligence, John Deutch, Justice Department, national security, server, State Department
I’m not a national security lawyer and lack any on-the-job military or intelligence experience. But I can’t help thinking that one of the biggest reasons to be outraged about the scandal stemming from Hillary Clinton’s handling of official emails as Secretary of State is being missed.
There’s no doubt that Clinton’s campaign is on the line here. If the emails already found on her private server or thumb drive, or yet to be found or recovered, have contained classified material, she likely faces legal liabilities and would almost certainly need to bow out of the White House race. Two related, emerging Clinton defenses – that these materials actually weren’t sensitive in real-world terms, and that the government classifies too indiscriminately – should be moot points. Making and acting on such judgments isn’t an individual’s call. Ask retired top U.S. General and former CIA chief David Petraeus, and former Director of Central Intelligence John Deutch.
The former was convicted of sharing classified information with his lover, received a suspended sentence and a hefty fine, and avoided jail time thanks only to a plea bargain. The latter was found to have used inadequately protected computers in his home and while on travel to work with classified materials. An appointee of President Bill Clinton, Deutch avoided criminal prosecution due to a Justice Department decision considered so controversial that the former spy chief was still in legal jeopardy until January, 2001 – when he was spared by a president pardon.
Hillary Clinton, of course, set up an entire private computer system for handling official emails – an offense that’s arguably much more serious legally, and more threatening to national security, than those committed by Petraeus and Deutch.
Politically speaking, however, neither Petraeus nor Deutch was running for office – though Petraeus was often mentioned as a potential political star. Hillary Clinton’s quest for the presidency means that her likely computer problems aren’t only legal. Her judgment has already been called into question, and is sure to be slammed further the more she and her defenders insist that sensitive material wasn’t classified when she received it. Even if true, Clinton’s failure to understand that such memos and emails needed special protection mocks her claim to possess the experience needed to lead effectively.
But as badly as all of these charges reflect on Clinton, the under-appreciated scandal, as I see it, is that her cavalier attitude toward official information and procedures is now diverting valuable government manpower and resources that are urgently needed to handle much more dangerous threats to national security.
With the nation confronted with ISIS and other terrorist groups striking targets overseas and inspiring attacks in the United States, nuclear challenges from Iran and North Korea, and belligerence from China and Russia, it’s appalling that anyone in the intelligence community or the FBI or the State Department is spending any time or money on figuring out whether and to what extent Hillary Clinton broke the rules. And the longer these issues remain unresolved, the longer this unconscionable and dangerous waste of U.S. defense and intelligence wherewithal will continue.
And another tidbit about Hillary’s email problem.
http://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2015/aug/16/number-of-hillary-clintons-emails-flagged-for-clas/
What I’ve been reading is that there are suspicions that Hillary’s staff, e.g., Huma, removed all notations of classification for the precise reason that it would then give Hillary “plausible deniability”. This is a heaping-big felony, and I wonder if Huma REALLY would take the multi-year fall for Hillary.
Your guess on this (so far inside baseball) stuff is at least as good as mine!
None of this matters to the average voter.
If a sitting President can, caught on a “hot mike”, make promises to be more flexible to the president of a hostile power (Russia)… and get re-elected anyway… none of the dangers of Hillary’s server matter. Not the potential blackmail, not the exposure of secrets – none of it.
Thanks, David. You may be right about the average voter’s reaction to all of this. But for what it’s worth, Hillary Clinton’s poll numbers – especially with Democrats – haven’t exactly improved since all these email and Clinton Foundation revelations have started to come out. And if she faces legal problems, her campaign could be toast whatever the voters think.
True on that.
I’ve heard speculation that Hillary will not – CAN NOT – drop out. Between her and Bill they’ve accepted so many “donations” to the Foundation (obviously in anticipation of quid pro quo payback) that she DARES not voluntarily drop out.
What’s far more likely is that as her numbers slip further, especially as the number of classified mails grow, there will be increasing back-channel pressure for her to drop out. I fully expect, between her ego and her obligations (from above) that she will start threatening to unbury bodies. If that happens the Democrat party will get ripped apart.