Hillary Clinton’s email names 'biggest jerk' in US diplomacy

Clinton admitted she used private email account while secretary of state.

Update: 2016-01-02 08:12 GMT
The State Department has been releasing the totality of Clinton's work emails from her time as US top diplomat. (Photo: AP)

Washington: Who is the biggest jerk in US diplomacy? America was left guessing after a tantalising near-revelation in the latest batch of Hillary Clinton's emails to be made public.

The State Department has been releasing the totality of Clinton's work emails from her time as US top diplomat, amounting to tens of thousands of missives peppered with sometimes quirky insights.

"Just for the record, if she does not already know, ......... is one of the biggest jerks in the foreign service," the US ambassador to Germany John Kornblum is quoted as saying in a newly-released email from Clinton advisor Sidney Blumenthal.

Dated March 31, 2011 the partially-redacted message warns Clinton about a possible candidate to succeed William Burns as US under secretary for political affairs.

"Not only can he not get along with people or think clearly on anything, he also went over totally to the dark side during the Bush administration," the then ambassador is quoted as saying of the candidate, whose name is blacked out.

"He once literally shouted me down at a conference where I suggested the Bush administration was hurting US relations with Europe."

The frank missive was part of a batch of 5,500 emails made public on New Year's Eve, in line with a court order triggered by Clinton's use of a private email as secretary of state in 2009-2013.

The State Department is required to release all 55,000 pages of Clinton's work-related emails by January 20.

Clinton has acknowledged she exclusively used a private email account and private server while secretary of state, opting against a government account despite official recommendations.

The issue erupted into a scandal as the Democratic frontrunner was kicking off her 2016 presidential campaign, and remained a Republican talking point for months.

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