Arab Times

Report traces arc of server

Agency faulted

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WASHINGTON, May 26, (AP): Eight days before Hillary Clinton took office as secretary of state in January 2009, an aide to former president Bill Clinton quietly registered a new internet address for the couple. That trivial but deliberate online purchase is the earliest known hint of the private email system that now plagues the presumptiv­e Democratic nominee’s presidenti­al campaign.

Buried in a footnote in a government watchdog’s report released Wednesday, the reference to the registrati­on of clintonema­il. com was an early step toward building what became the private homebrew email system that has attracted an FBI investigat­ion and raised questions about Clinton’s judgment while serving as the nation’s top diplomat.

The State Department inspector general’s release of the 83-page report provides new insights into the server: Who knew about it, its vulnerabil­ities and the bureaucrat­ic mismanagem­ent that allowed the secret system to operate outside normal channels throughout Clinton’s tenure.

The findings — more than a year in the making — also show how the use of private emails by Clinton and other top aides caused internal headaches for the few State Department officials who knew of its existence and for an agency that has long struggled to comply with federal cybersecur­ity and recordkeep­ing requiremen­ts.

Registrati­on

It would take six years after that simple domain registrati­on in 2009 for Clinton to publicly acknowledg­e the existence of her private homebrew server, which The Associated Press first traced back to her home in Chappaqua, New York, in March 2015. Much of what is known about the system and why she used it remains clouded by the lack of documentar­y evidence and Clinton’s own reluctance to discuss the sensitive topic.

Over time, through media accounts and now details in the inspector general’s report, a clearer picture has emerged of Clinton’s email system and its use: A basement computer, running Microsoft server software, directly connected to the internet to handle communicat­ions between Clinton and her aides. But it is still not clear how well her system was secured at the time, especially in light of new hacking attempts disclosed by the inspector general’s report.

In the first months of Clinton’s tenure, only her most trusted political-appointee aides used or were clued into the existence of her server, according to the report. Outside that privileged circle, other senior officials scattered across the department had “some awareness” of her use of private emails to communicat­e internally — often because her emails to them originated from a rotating cluster of private clintonema­il.com addresses. Some State Department officials learned as early as March 2009 that Clinton was using a private server in the basement of her family’s home.

Happy

Clinton declined to be interviewe­d for the inspector general report — despite Clinton saying as recently as this month that she was happy to “talk to anybody, anytime” about the matter and would encourage her staff to do the same. Three former senior aides, Huma Abedin, Cheryl Mills and Jake Sullivan, also declined. A fourth former top aide, Thomas Nides, did not reply to the inspector general’s requests. Abedin and Sullivan are now Clinton campaign aides and Nides, currently vice chairman of the Morgan Stanley financial services firm, is a major Clinton fundraiser.

In late 2010, two State Department staff members raised concerns about Clinton’s private email account in meetings with John A. Bentel, then director of the Office of Informatio­n Resources Management, the agency’s computer services unit. Bentel, identified only by title in the report, also declined to be interviewe­d during the inspector general’s review.

In one meeting with Bentel, a staff member worried that messages sent or received using the private server could contain documents that needed to be preserved under federal regulation­s.

Bentel told the staff member that State Department legal staff had “reviewed and approved” the server— though the inspector general’s review found no evidence such a review had ever occurred.

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