Photographer: Harald Dettenborn, CC license
Hillary Clinton used a personal email account and server for all official business while she was Secretary of State from 2009 to 2013. Although she seems not to have broken any laws outright, she has certainly made it more difficult to process Freedom of Information Act requests lodged with the State Department, for example, and the State Department must comply with such requests and must make official correspondence available. She therefore does seem to have violated the spirit of such rules. Transparency is a big buzzword these days and it is seen as a way to combat corruption, crime, laziness, and dishonesty, all laudable targets. But enforcing these rules is difficult, to say the least, and it is also not clear that transparency is always the best thing for diplomacy.
More
problematic than the arbitrary percentages of personal email
account use is the question of enforcement: Presumably, Clinton
could use her personal account for any personal correspondence. But
it would be Clinton herself who would judge what’s personal--which is exactly what she has been accused of by opponents. Since the
personal emails are not looked at, who is to say whether they are
personal or not? In effect, then, there is absolutely no difference
between Clinton claiming to use her personal account only for
personal emails and Clinton claiming to have deleted only personal
emails from her records before handing over what she claims is
everything else (which is the current situation).
Opponents argue there is no way to verify this, but this would be
the case if she had used her personal account only for personal
emails, too, which would apparently have been perfectly fine. The rule thus appears pretty unenforceable unless all government officials were prohibited from ever having any private email correspondence.
The problem is that making negotiations, rather than just their outcomes, public can make diplomacy nearly impossible--and without diplomacy and negotiation, cooperation becomes nearly impossible as well. Without cooperation, everyone is worse off: shared economic benefits don't materialize, wars become more likely, collective action on pollution and climate change can't occur, etc. The reason is simple: Both sides need to be free to offer unpopular things in exchange for what they want. Deals
often fall through. The public might accept slaying a sacred cow in
exchange for a big deal, but revealing that a leader was willing to
do so and did not achieve the hoped-for outcome could cause cries
of “traitor!” Secret
negotiations thus allow the two sides (or even two negotiators) to
speak openly with one another without constantly worrying about how
their domestic audiences are reacting to what they are saying and
how this might affect their re-election chances or other aspects of
political capital. Though a deal was not reached in the end anyway, the Camp David negotiations between Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Barak and Palestinian Auhtority President Yassir Arafat are illustrative: They both offered things in secret that they could not have offered if opposition back home had constantly been up in arms (e.g. both of them moved towards sharing Jerusalem, which, in public, neither had dared to say they could do).
Clinton went against the spirit, at least, of transparency regulations, but those regulations are inherently arbitrary and it is also easy to see why she would wish to skirt them. The negotiations leading to a deal (though not the deal itself) should be
permitted to remain secret and be protected from the scrutiny of all but a few insiders, at least for a time. Doing the opposite would not only be impractical (as it would require ALL correspondence to be publicly available, as I have shown), it would be undesirable in the case of diplomacy.
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