Latest batch of Hillary Clinton’s emails released

It covers the period when US forces killed Bin Laden and uprising in Arab

October 01, 2015 10:50 am | Updated November 17, 2021 03:01 am IST - Washington

With this latest batch, 37 percent of Clinton’s 30,000 work-related emails are now public.

With this latest batch, 37 percent of Clinton’s 30,000 work-related emails are now public.

The US State Department has released on 6,300 additional pages of Hillary Rodham Clinton’s emails, covering a period when US forces killed Osama bin Laden and the Arab Spring rocked American diplomacy.

The release is the latest in the agency’s rolling production of emails chronicling Clinton’s tenure as Secretary of State and canvasses the major US foreign policy upheavals of 2011.

All of the messages were written by Clinton or sent by others to the private email account she used as America’s top diplomat, a month-old revelation that continues to hamper her campaign for the Democratic presidential nomination.

With this latest batch, 37 percent of Clinton’s 30,000 work-related emails are now public. The State Department plans to release them all by January.

Clinton has faced increasing questions over whether her unusual email setup, which included a homebrew server at her New York home, amounted to a proper form of secrecy protection and records retention.

The emails themselves, to which many reacted heavily before public release, have provided no shocking disclosures thus far.

The former first lady and New York senator had maintained that nothing was classified in the correspondence, but the intelligence community has identified messages containing “top secret” information.

Clinton had insisted that all of her work emails were being reviewed by the State Department, but Pentagon officials recently discovered a new chain of messages between Clinton and then Gen. David Petraeus dating to her first days in office that she did not send to the State Department.

As part of yesterday’s release, officials upgraded the classification level of portions of 215 emails, State Department spokesman John Kirby said.

Almost all were “confidential,” the lowest level of classification. Three emails were declared “secret,” a mid-tier level for information that could still cause serious damage to national security, if made public.

“The information we upgraded today was not marked classified at the time the emails were sent,” Kirby stressed. .

“It has been subsequently upgraded.”

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