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Clinton accuses WikiLeaks of blunting impact of Trump tape

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SYDNEY — Hillary R. Clinton Monday accused WikiLeaks of working with Russia to deflect attention away from an infamous tape of Donald J. Trump bragging about groping women in the runup to the US presidenti­al election.

The former secretary of state’s devastatin­g election loss to Mr. Trump remains raw and she again lashed out at WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange and his alleged role in damaging her candidacy.

“Assange has become a kind of nihilistic opportunis­t who does the bidding of a dictator,” she said in an interview with the Australian Broadcasti­ng Corporatio­n, referring to Russian President Vladimir Putin.

“WikiLeaks is unfortunat­ely now practicall­y a fully-owned subsidiary of Russian intelligen­ce.”

The US intelligen­ce community concluded Mr. Putin ordered an influence campaign to discredit Ms. Clinton and had a “clear preference” for Mr. Trump in last year’s poll.

Ms. Clinton used the bombshell Trump tape as an example of how WikiLeaks allegedly tried to deflect attention away from a bad news story, resurrecti­ng the incident in the wake of Hollywood mogul Harvey Weinstein’s fall from grace over his treatment of women.

In the 2005 videotape, which surfaced in October last year, Mr. Trump brags about being able to get away with groping women.

“When you’re a star, they let you do it,” he said. “Grab them by the pussy. You can do anything,” Mr. Trump added.

Mr. Trump said the comments were “locker- room banter.” Several women subsequent­ly accused him of sexual misconduct, which he denounced as lies.

Within hours of the tape emerging, WikiLeaks published more than 2,000 hacked e-mails from the personal account of Ms. Clinton’s campaign chair John Podesta, which she said blunted its impact.

“WikiLeaks, which in the world in which we find ourselves promised hidden informatio­n, promised some kind of secret that might be of influence, was a very clever, diabolical response to the Hollywood Access tape,” she said, referring to the Trump recording.

“And I’ve no doubt in my mind that there was some communicat­ion if not coordinati­on to drop those the first time in response to the Hollywood Access tape.”

Reacting on Twitter, Mr. Assange attacked Ms. Clinton as “creepy.”

“There’s something wrong with Hillary Clinton. It is not just her constant lying. It is not just that she throws off menacing glares and seethes thwarted entitlemen­t,” the Australian tweeted with a link to the ABC interview.

“Watch closely. Something much darker rides along with it. A cold creepiness rarely seen.”

Ms. Clinton claimed WikiLeaks’ actions were motivated by Mr. Assange’s personal dislike of her.

“I had a lot of history with him because I was secretary of state when WikiLeaks published a lot of very sensitive informatio­n from our State Department and our Defense Department,” she said.

“If he’s such a martyr of free speech, why doesn’t WikiLeaks ever publish anything coming out of Russia? You don’t see damaging, negative informatio­n coming out about the Kremlin on WikiLeaks,” Ms. Clinton added.

Mr. Assange, who has spent five years inside the Ecuador embassy in London to avoid extraditio­n to Sweden on sexual assault charges, has denied Russia was the source behind the leaked documents. — AFP

 ??  ?? FORMER US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton speaks during an interview with Mariella Frostrup at the Cheltenham Literature Festival in Cheltenham, Britain Oct. 15.
FORMER US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton speaks during an interview with Mariella Frostrup at the Cheltenham Literature Festival in Cheltenham, Britain Oct. 15.

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