Tag Archives: Ambassador

SCANDAL: Hillary Clinton’s Chief of Staff Fired Ambassador for Using Private Email

Following the revelation last week that rumored 2016 Democratic Presidential candidate Hillary Clinton insisted on using her private email to conduct government business during her tenure as Secretary of State from 2009-2013, a former U.S. ambassador, who was fired in 2012 for similar practices, spoke out about his experience.

On Friday, former U.S. ambassador to Kenya Scott Gration told The Daily Caller that in 2012, Hillary Clinton’s chief of staff Cheryl Mills fired him “based on an inspector general’s report which found, among other things, that he routinely used an unauthorized email account to conduct official government business.”

Gration told CNN that Mills “obviously knew Secretary Clinton was using commercial email,” and said that he was “very surprised to learn of the double standard.

I make no apology for ‘rocking the boat’ in the State Department to improve physical security, to enhance cyber policy, and to conduct several other initiatives that the State Department Inspector General misrepresented to build the case that Secretary Clinton’s Chief of Staff used to terminate my tenure as the US Ambassador in 2012,” Gration said.

The August 2012 report from the Office of the Inspector General stated that Gration had been found conducting official business on non-Department automated information systems, which is a practice that should be “limited to only maintaining communications during emergencies.”

Gration’s “requirements for use of commercial email in the office” and his “flouting of direct instructions to adhere to Department policy have placed the information management staff in a conundrum,” according to the Inspector General.

The report went on to say that Gration’s use of private email to conduct government business left the State Department balancing the “desire to be responsive to their mission leader” with the “need to adhere to Department regulations and government information security standards.”

The use of unauthorized information systems increases the risk for data loss, phishing, and spoofing of email accounts, as well as inadequate protections for personally identifiable information,” the report stated. “The use of unauthorized information systems can also result in the loss of official public records as these systems do not have approved record preservation or backup functions.”

The State Department told CNN that in addition to the private emails, there were  “several concerns with management and leadership” regarding Gration’s position. According to CNN, the State Department’s “continued referencing of the other allegations against Gration came amidst fruitless attempts by CNN to ask the department spokespeople to explain why it was acceptable for Secretary Clinton to use private email to conduct official business given that the 2012 Inspector General’s report against Gration repeatedly hammered him for the use of ‘commercial email for official government business.'”

In April 2014, the Washington Times reported that the Office of the Inspector General released a report which revealed that between 2008 and 2014, the State Department “misplaced and lost some $6 billion due to the improper filing of contracts,” mainly during Clinton’s tenure as Secretary of State.

The report stated that State Department contracts worth “more than $6 billion in which contract files were incomplete or could not be located at all,” and that these unaccounted funds posed a “significant financial risk and demonstrates a lack of internal control over the Department’s contract actions.”

March 9, 2015, 3:30 p.m. Eastern: UPDATE: In a statement to us from Scott Gration, he maintained that he was fired for the “use of Gmail in the US Embassy,” and claimed that the Inspector General’s report, “Contains many egregious lies, falsehoods, and distortions on a variety of subjects.”

I hope the following details help to set the record straight on my use of a commercial email account during my tenure as the US Ambassador to Kenya,” Gration said. “My experience was somewhat different than Secretary Clinton’s use of her commercial account, yet I was ‘fired’ for the use of Gmail in the US Embassy, my insistence on improving our physical security posture, and other twisted and false allegations.”

While the report from the Office of the Inspector General claimed that Gration ignored State Department instructions and “willfully disregarded regulations concerning the use of commercial email for official government business,” he tells us that he made an effort to have his “unclassified State Department emails” and his “Gmail messages displayed as separate accounts on the same State Department Blackberry.”

March 10, 2015: UPDATE: Benghazi Chairman: There are “Huge Gaps” in Hillary Clinton’s Email Records

March 12, 2015: UPDATE: Fact Check: Holes in Hillary’s Email Story

Sweden Recognizes Palestinian State, Draws Criticism from Israel

On Thursday, Sweden became the largest country in Western Europe to recognize a Palestinian state. This decision received strong criticism from Israel, which responded by promptly withdrawing its ambassador from Stockholm.

Sweden’s Foreign Minister, Margot Wallstrom, insisted that the Palestinians have met all of the necessary standards for recognition, saying that they have “a territory, a people and government.

The Associated Press reported that Sweden’s choice “reflects growing international impatience with Israel’s nearly half-century control of the West Bank, east Jerusalem and its blockade of the Gaza Strip.”

In addition to withdrawing their ambassador from Sweden, Israel’s Foreign Minister, Avidor Lieberman, defined Sweden’s declaration as “a miserable decision that strengthens the extremist elements and Palestinian rejectionism.”

The Swedish government must understand that relations in the Middle East are more complex than one of Ikea’s flat-pack pieces of furniture, and would do well to act with greater sensitivity and responsibility,” Lieberman said.

According to the New York Times, Sweden’s decision to recognize Palestine was made by the country’s new prime minister, Stefan Lofven, who “ignored Israeli protests and followed through on a pledge he made at his inauguration this month.”

A Senior Palestinian official, Hanan Ashrawi, said that Sweden had made a “principled and courageous decision.”

On behalf of the Palestinians, Ashrawi said they hope both other members of the European Union, and other countries around the world, “will follow Sweden’s lead and recognize Palestine before the chances for a two-state solution are destroyed indefinitely.

According to the Associated Press, although Israel claims, “Palestinians can gain independence only through peace negotiations, and that recognition of Palestine at the U.N. or by individual countries undermines the negotiating process,” Palestinians say that Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu “isn’t serious about the peace negotiations.”

As previously reported, Sweden’s declaration to recognize a Palestinian state follows the same decision made earlier in October by members of Britain’s Parliament.

The Swedish Foreign Ministry took to its Twitter account to announce the decision with a Tweet that said the Swedish government “expressed hopes for peaceful coexistence” between Israel and Palestine.

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