Obama defends Clinton email ‘mistake’

File photo: Obama gave a 60-day warning for South Africa to meet its commitments to allow US poultry, beef and chicken to be imported into the country or face paying tariffs on its exports to the US of citrus products, macadamia nuts and wine.

File photo: Obama gave a 60-day warning for South Africa to meet its commitments to allow US poultry, beef and chicken to be imported into the country or face paying tariffs on its exports to the US of citrus products, macadamia nuts and wine.

Published Oct 12, 2015

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Washington - Hillary Rodham Clinton’s use of a private email server to conduct government business when she served as secretary of state was a mistake but didn’t endanger national security, President Barack Obama said during an interview airing on Sunday on CBS’s “60 Minutes.”

Obama said public officials have to be more sensitive about how they handle information and personal data.

Yet he also said the criticism of Clinton, who is leading the Democratic race for the presidential nomination, has been “ginned up” because of politics.

“I think she’d be the first to acknowledge that maybe she could have handled the original decision better and the disclosures more quickly,” Obama said.

Obama downplayed the threat to national security, and when it was pointed out that his administration has prosecuted people for having classified material on their private computers, the president said he didn’t get the impression there was an intent to “hide something or to squirrel away information.”

He also said he was not initially aware of her use of the private email server.

There are still questions being raised about the security of that system.

Obama also discussed his views on Syria during the interview.

The administration said on Friday it is abandoning a failed Pentagon effort to build a new ground force of moderate rebels and overhauling its approach to instead partner with established rebel groups.

The change also reflects growing concern in Obama’s administration that Russia’s intervention has complicated the Syrian battlefield and given new life to President Bashar Assad.

Obama said he was “sceptical from the get-go” about the notion of creating an army of moderate forces within Syria.

“My goal has been to try to test the proposition, can we be able to train and equip a moderate opposition that’s willing to fight IS? And what we’ve learned is that as long as Assad remains in power, it is very difficult to get those folks to focus their attention on IS,” Obama said.

Obama said part of the strategy behind the administration’s efforts was to “try different things.”

He added that “in a situation that is as volatile and with as many players as there are inside of Syria, there aren’t any silver bullets.”

While the Pentagon is abandoning its effort to train rebels, a CIA program that since 2013 has trained about 10 000 rebels to fight Assad’s forces is ongoing.

AP

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