The Dec. 20, 2009 email chain, entitled "Update," started with a message from Michael Froman, who served as a deputy assistant to President Obama and deputy national security adviser for international economic affairs.
The email, which is redacted because it contains information classified as "Confidential," was sent to Jake Sullivan, Clinton's foreign policy adivser at the State Department, and several Obama aides. Sullivan sent it to Hillary Clinton who then forwarded it to Chelsea, who emailed under the pseudonym "Diane Reynolds."
Comment: Note:
From: H
To: Diane Reynolds <dreynolds@clintonemail.com>
Original Message From: Sullivan, Jacob J <Sullivan))@state.gov>
To: H
Original Message From: Froman, Michael B. To Donilon, Thomas E.; McDonough, Denis R.; Sullivan, Jacob J.; Rhodes, Benjamin J.
Subject: Update
Class: Confidential
Benjamin J. Rhodes is Deputy National Security Advisor for Strategic Communications for U.S. President Barack Obama and is an Advisor on the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action with Iran.
Thomas E. "Tom" Donilon is an American lawyer and former government official who served as National Security Advisor in the Obama administration.
Denis Richard McDonough is the 27th and current White House Chief of Staff.
Jacob Jeremiah "Jake" Sullivan is an American policymaker and the top foreign policy advisor to Hillary Clinton's 2016 election campaign.
Michael B. Froman is an American lawyer who has served as the U.S. Trade Representative since 2013. He has been Assistant to the President of the United States and Deputy National Security Advisor for International Economic Affairs, a position held jointly at the National Security Council and the National Economic Council.
The entire text of the classified email is redacted because it contains foreign government information.
The State Department labeled the email a "near dupilcate," indicating that it was mostly similar to other emails that the agency has released from the trove of documents that Clinton turned over in Dec. 2014.
Clinton did not delete other responses she made to others on the email thread.
"Wow — you can't make this up — sorry to have missed all of that! Let me know if you learn anything else," she wrote to Sullivan. The State Department released that portion of the email conversation in February.
But perhaps the most significant part of the email is that Clinton forwarded classified information to her daughter, who is and was a private citizen with no government role and no apparent security clearances.
It is unclear when or why Clinton deleted the email. She gave the State Department around 30,000 emails she claimed were related to her State Department work. She deleted a similar number claiming they were personal and dealt with yoga routines, food recipes and Chelsea's wedding.
FBI director James Comey said in July that investigators recovered several thousand work-related emails from Clinton's server. The batch of emails released Friday are from that recovered trove.





Reader Comments
to our Newsletter