- California Assembly OKs highest minimum wage in nation
- S. Korea unveils first graphic cigarette warnings
- US joins with South Korea, Japan in bid to deter North Korea
- LPGA golfer Chun In-gee finally back in action
- S. Korea won’t be top seed in final World Cup qualification round
- US men’s soccer misses 2nd straight Olympics
- US back on track in qualifying with 4-0 win over Guatemala
- High-intensity workout injuries spawn cottage industry
- CDC expands range of Zika mosquitoes into parts of Northeast
- Who knew? ‘The Walking Dead’ is helping families connect
Clinton email on North Korea deemed secret, not ‘top secret’
WASHINGTON (AP) — The Obama administration settled a long-running dispute over a sensitive email on Hillary Clinton’s private account, as intelligence agencies classified part of an exchange on North Korea’s nuclear program for containing “secret” information, but no “top secret” material as previously claimed.
State Department spokesman John Kirby said the message will be published Monday in a batch of nearly 4,000 documents, finishing the release of Clinton’s work emails from her time as secretary of state. A portion will be censored and classified at the lower, secret level, he said. The intelligence community had argued for months that the email included material at the highest classification level.
“Based on subsequent review, the intelligence community revisited its earlier assessment,” Kirby told reporters. He added: “The original assessment was not correct and the document does not contain top secret information.”
No emails Clinton wrote or received were marked as classified at the time of transmission, which Clinton has repeatedly cited in her own defense. But some 1,800 emails have since been subsequently classified at some level so far.
Kirby stressed that the North Korea exchange had only been “provisionally” upgraded in classification, suggesting the department doesn’t even fully accept the lesser finding. Officials faced a Monday deadline set by a federal judge to release the final documents from the private server Clinton exclusively used while in government.
“The information available to diplomats and the judgments they form do not necessarily need to be classified just because there are parallel intelligence sources,” Kirby said.
He also said an unclassified email between Clinton and President Barack Obama would be withheld from publication Monday. The department held back 18 such messages last month to protect the president’s ability to receive advice from his aides, saying they’d be released eventually like other presidential records.
Another email on an unidentified law enforcement matter will be withheld. Kirby said that one also is unclassified.