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Pentagon admits Defense Secretary Ash Carter used personal email


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You expect better judgement from your Secretary of Defense……….and you should.

Carter served as US Assistant Secretary of Defense for International Security Policy during Clinton's first term (1993-1996), Under Secretary of Defense for Acquisition, Technology, and Logistics (2009-2011), and Deputy Secretary of Defense (2011-2013). This employee of the U.S. people is a Harvard graduate, a Rhodes Scholar and studied at Oxford. With all that in mind, he knew better than to use his personal e-mail. The mystery is, why did he like Hillary Clinton do so?

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Associated Press / December 17, 2015

The Pentagon acknowledged Wednesday that Defense Secretary Ash Carter used a personal email account to do some of his government business during his first months on the job.

Carter's press secretary, Peter Cook (not Carter himself), released a statement saying Carter believes his use of personal email for work-related business was a mistake (By that admission, the American people are supposed to be nice and let him off the hook).

Cook declined to say whether it was a violation of Pentagon email policies.

Cook said Carter stopped the practice, but Cook refused to say when.

The Pentagon statement was in response to a report published late Wednesday by The New York Times (http://www.nytimes.com/2015/12/17/us/politics/defense-secretary-ashton-carter-conducted-some-official-business-on-a-personal-email-account.html?_r=0). The newspaper reported it had obtained 72 work-related emails that Carter sent or received from his personal email account.

Hillary Clinton came under heavy criticism when it was revealed in March that she had used a personal email account as secretary of state. Carter took office in February.

"After reviewing his email practices earlier this year, the secretary believes that his previous, occasional use of personal email for work-related business, even for routine administrative issues and backed up to his official account, was a mistake," Cook wrote.

"As a result, he stopped such use of his personal email and further limited his use of email altogether."

The Times said the emails it received under the Freedom of Information Act were exchanges between Carter and Eric Fanning, who was his chief of staff at the time and is now the acting secretary of the Army.

The emails were on a variety of work-related topics, the Times said, including speeches, meetings and news media appearances. In one such email, Carter discussed how he had mistakenly placed a note card in a "burn bag," the Times reported. Such bags are typically used to destroy classified documents.

Cook said Carter "does not use his personal email or official email for classified material. The Secretary has a secure communications team that handles his classified information and provides it to him as necessary."

Carter "takes his responsibilities with regard to classified material very seriously," Cook said.

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