The Commercial Appeal

Obama says he won’t meddle in Hillary Clinton email inquiries.

He says Clinton was careless, but did not endanger security

- By Anne Gearan

President Barack Obama insisted Sunday that there will be no White House or political influence on the FBI or the Justice Department as they look into the security of the private email system Hillary Clinton used for government work when she was secretary of state.

“I can guarantee that,” Obama said in an interview with “Fox News Sunday.” It was his first interview with the network in two years.

Obama also defended his former secretary of state, even as he said that he had to be “careful” because of the ongoing investigat­ion. He strongly suggested that the mishandled classified documents that have come to light in a review of Clinton’s unorthodox email system were not the nation’s most highly guarded secrets.

“There’s classified and then there’s classified,” Obama told interviewe­r Chris Wallace with a smile.

“I continue to believe that she has not jeopardize­d America’s national security,” the president said, though he noted that “there was a carelessne­ss in terms of managing emails.” Clinton has already acknowledg­ed that.

“I also think it’s important to keep this in perspectiv­e,” Obama added, saying that the Democratic presidenti­al front-runner “did an outstandin­g job” as secretary of state.

Clinton’s decision to use a privately owned and managed system for all her email, personal and private, hangs over her candidacy. Classified informatio­n was found in an after-the-fact security review of emails to and from Clinton when she was secretary of state, between 2009 and 2013. She has said that bypassing the State Department email system was a mistake but insisted as recently as last week that there is no chance she will be indicted as a result of the FBI inquiry.

In the interview, the president gave one of his most thorough explanatio­ns of his view on countering terrorism, saying that the U.S. response should be true to American values and laws and not rooted in fear.

“It has been my view consistent­ly that the job of the terrorists, in their minds, is to induce panic, induce fear, get societies to change who they are,” Obama said. “And what I’ve tried to communicat­e is, ‘You can’t change us. You can kill some of us, but we will hunt you down, and we will get you.’ And, in the meantime, just as we did in Boston, after the marathon bombing, we’re going to go to a ball game.”

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