They showed Clinton turning up for meetings that had been canceled
and worrying about how much time she had with her new boss,
revealing growing pains in the relationship between her and former
election rival Obama in the early months of her time as America's
top diplomat.
In an email to two aides on June 8, 2009, Clinton was unsure if the
White House had held a Cabinet meeting and whether she should
attend.
"I heard on the radio that there is a Cabinet mtg this am. Is there?
Can I go? If not, who are we sending?" Clinton wrote.
A State Department official wrote back that the government was
holding a meeting, but not a full cabinet meeting that she needed to
be at.
As Clinton sought to navigate her relationship with the Obama White
House, she corresponded with several former aides and advisers to
her husband, former President Bill Clinton.
They included Sidney Blumenthal, a former White House speech writer,
Sandy Berger, the former National Security Adviser and Mark Penn,
who served as a political adviser to both Bill Clinton and to
Hillary Clinton's 2008 White House bid.
As the Obama administration was conducting a review of its policy in
Afghanistan, for example, Penn emailed her and advised her not to
ignore the threat posed by the Taliban.
While they were fierce competitors on the campaign trail Clinton and
Obama eventually struck up a cordial working relationship in the
four years she spent as secretary of state.
As she runs for the White House again at the November, 2016
election, Clinton's relationship with her fellow Democrat will come
under further scrutiny.
While she has aligned herself with the Obama administration on
issues that are popular with the base of Democratic supporters such
as immigration reform, she has also tried to make her own mark by
distancing herself from Obama on trade.
Back in 2009, there were a few misunderstandings, according to an
email Clinton sent about what she thought was a meeting at the White
House.
"I arrived for the 10:15 mtg and was told there was no mtg," she
wrote to aides. "This is the second time this has happened. What's
up???" she asked.
The emails released on Tuesday are among some 30,000 work emails
relating to Clinton that a judge has ordered to be released in
batches after a controversy broke out earlier this year when she
acknowledged using a personal email account rather than a government
one for State Department business.
As she began her tenure, Clinton worried about perceptions that she
was not meeting enough with the president, given that former
President Richard Nixon used to see his secretary of state Henry
Kissinger daily.
"In thinking about the Kissinger interview, the only issue I think
that might be raised is that I see POTUS at least once a week while
K saw Nixon everyday," she said in an email to a spokesman, using
Washington shorthand for President of the United States.
[to top of second column] |
"Do you see this as a problem?” she asked spokesman Philippe Reines.
OBAMA COMPARISONS
Informal adviser Blumenthal showed concern in an email that the
former first lady would be compared unfavorably to Obama as a public
speaker.
"This speech can't afford to be lackluster. It will then be held up
in invidious comparison to Obama's glittering best efforts. Your
speech must have, amid the policies, a distinctive and authoritative
voice,” Blumenthal wrote to Clinton about an address she was going
to give at a foreign policy think tank.
A controversial figure, Blumenthal has had ties to the Clinton
family since Bill Clinton's White House years.
He gave Hillary Clinton detailed advice on issues ranging from
British politics to Afghanistan and Iran even though he was not
employed by the U.S. government.
Blumenthal seemed to act as a middle-man between Clinton and former
British prime minister Gordon Brown on the Northern Ireland peace
process, according to an email he sent in 2009.
Blumenthal was barred from a job at the State Department by aides to
Obama because of lingering distrust over his role advising Clinton's
run against Obama, according to The New York Times.
The adviser emailed Clinton on June 23 around 10 p.m. with the
subject line, "Hillary: if you're up, give me a call. Sid." In the
preceding days, he had sent her detailed memos on Iran's 2009
election crisis.
James Cole, a lawyer for Blumenthal, did not reply to an email
requesting comment.
Blumenthal last month said he wrote to Clinton only as a friend and
a private citizen.
(Additional reporting by Susan Cornwell, Amanda Becker, Lesley
Wroughton, Kevin Krolicki, Alex Wilts, Emily Stephenson and Caren
Bohan; Editing by Catherine Evans)
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