President Barack Obama's former top
military intelligence official said Hillary Clinton should pull out of the
presidential race while the FBI investigate her use of a private email server
for official government communication while secretary of state.
Lt. Gen. Michael Flynn, the retired
chief of the Defense Intelligence Agency, made the call in an interview with
Jake Tapper on "The Lead."
"If it were me, I would have been
out the door and probably in jail," said Flynn, who decried what he said
was a "lack of accountability, frankly, in a person who should have been
much more responsible in her actions as the secretary of state of the United
States of America."
Clinton campaign spokesman Brian Fallon
later told Tapper the general's suggestion was "just silly" and
pointed to similar FBI probes of former Secretary of State Colin Powell and of
aides to former Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice.
"In both of those two cases, you
now have the same agency looking at their emails, personal emails, and saying
that there is information that in retrospect they think should be treated as
classified," Fallon said. "The exact same situation playing out in
the two previous secretaries before Secretary Clinton. So I think that tells
you everything about the relative seriousness of this."
When pressed by CNN, Flynn said,
"I don't have any personal evidence" that Clinton or one of her
staffers took material off a classified server and put it on an unclassified
server.
Since leaving office, Flynn has
been fiercely critical of the Obama administration's approach to the
Middle East and has told Tapper that the President's advisors are more
concerned with appearances than hard realities. Flynn said he has made himself
available for advice to any presidential campaign that has asked, Democrat or
Republican, and five campaigns have taken advantage of the offer, including
Donald Trump's.
The FBI confirmed in a February 2
letter to U.S. District Court Judge Emmet Sullivan that it is officially
investigating Clinton's use of a private server at her home in Chappaqua, New
York, to conduct business while she was secretary of state.
Two government agencies have flagged
emails on Clinton's server as containing classified information, according to a
January 14 letter that Intelligence Community Inspector General I. Charles
McCullough III sent lawmakers. Some emails were on "special access
programs," a subset of the highest "Top Secret" level of
classification that falls under even tougher control rules than other Top
Secret information.
The Democratic presidential candidate
has repeatedly pointed to State Department findings that at the time the emails
were sent, the information wasn't classified. The State Department has said
that some emails were classified retroactively.
The Clinton campaign has also pointed
to a dispute between the State Department and the intelligence community over which
kinds of documents should be classified. And it has charged that the
investigation is politically motivated.
Fallon has said Clinton's campaign
believes McCullough is working with Republican lawmakers to make sure the
information becomes public to embarrass their candidate. Republicans asked the
inspector general to investigate in March.
"This over-classification excuse
is not an excuse," Flynn said Friday. "If it's classified, it's
classified."
Flynn, who headed the Defense
Intelligence Agency from July 2012 to August 2014, told Tapper that Clinton
"knew better" given the roles that she has had as a senator, a
secretary of state, "even back when she was married to the president of
the United States, she was going to have privileged information in that
regard."
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