Intelligence services like the Russians and Chinese look for high-level U.S. Government communications with intense interest, and their technical acumen is impressive. Kremlin spy penetration of the White House is not a new problem, but it has taken on new angles in the Internet age. Smart counterintelligence officers assume that all unclassified .gov networks are compromised — many have similar doubts about more secure networks too — and anything sent out unencrypted, with the Clinton name right on it, could be intercepted by many intelligence services with ease.
We are at the point now where, thanks to Team Clinton’s destruction of tens of thousands of “private” emails, the American public will never know what the Secretary of State was up to — but the Kremlin surely does. Kudos to the Associated Press for suing to see what can still be seen, but anybody acquainted with Clintonian ways should not expect much to emerge, ever. If Hillary was up to anything shady in those destroyed emails — and given recent revelations of foreign fundraising by the Clinton Global Initiative that appears at least unethical, anyone sentient must wonder — people in Moscow who do not like us will be aware of it. The word you are looking for is kompromat.
via Why Hillary’s EmailGate Matters | The XX Committee.
Not only has the communications of the highest levels of our government been utterly compromised, because of Clinton’s destruction of emails, we don’t even have the ability to reconstruct just what has been compromised.
The Imitation Game, a recent movie, celebrated the efforts of Alan Turing and others to crack German coded communications. Great effort and expense were used to achieve modest penetrations.
Here, Clinton simply gave away the store. It’s flabbergasting.
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