WASHINGTON _It's one of the greatest ironies of the 2016 presidential campaign: Hillary Clinton _ long averse to public scrutiny _ forced to deal with the theft and disclosure of thousands of private emails exchanged by her campaign aides and advisers.
The hacked emails of campaign chairman John Podesta have offered unprecedented insight into how the Democratic nominee and her team grappled with unexpected developments and self-inflicted setbacks.
The Clinton campaign has refused to validate the emails, noting that U.S. intelligence agencies say they were stolen by Russian government hackers in an effort to affect the election.
Here's what's behind some of the more attention-grabbing emails:
��Shortly after the New York Times reported on an investigation into the apparent use by Clinton of a private email server, Podesta emailed Cheryl Mills, a longtime Clinton aide who was her chief of staff at the State Department.
"We are going to have to dump all those emails so better to do so sooner than later," Podesta wrote.
To Clinton critics, it seemed to be a brazen order to purge the communications.
But her supporters call that a misunderstanding of Washington parlance. They say Podesta was clearly referring to a "news dump," Washington-speak for releasing a large amount of unflattering documents in an effort to put the issue to rest. Podesta likely was saying the team should quickly release all of the emails Clinton sent from her private account and leave reporters to make sense of them.
��After the existence of the email server became public, President Barack Obama was among those who was quickly asked about what he knew. After a press aide circulated Obama's statement in an interview that he learned of the server as the public did, through news reports, Mills expressed concern.
"We need to clean this up _ he has emails from her _ they do not say state.gov," she wrote.
The White House has said even if the president observed that Clinton was using a nongovernment email address, he would not have known the details about how the account was set up or whether it relied on a private server.
��Among the more intriguing revelations was the apparent rift that developed between Chelsea Clinton and Doug Band, a former senior aide to Bill Clinton.
As Chelsea Clinton took a more hands-on role in the Clinton Foundation and Clinton Global Initiative, she appeared increasingly uncomfortable with Band and the manner in which he appeared to be intermingling the foundation's charitable endeavors with his fledgling business interests. In an email to Podesta, Band pushes back.
"I don't deserve this from her and deserve a tad more respect or at least a direct dialogue for me to explain these things. She is acting like a spoiled brat kid who has nothing else to do but create issues to justify what she's doing because she, as she has said, hasn't found her way and has a lack of focus in her life. I realize she will be off of this soon but if it doesn't come soon enough."
He also notes his efforts in arranging $50 million in payments for the former president, an apparent example of the complicated mingling of business deals and charity work at the foundation.
��In what Clinton opponents call an illustration of the "pay-for-play" culture of the Clinton Foundation, Clinton's nascent presidential campaign team navigated the complications of an apparent agreement the foundation made for the former secretary of state to participate at a Clinton Global Initiative event in Morocco.
Huma Abedin, Clinton's closest aide, writes that Clinton's attendance was the condition upon which the Moroccans agreed to host the meeting. "This was HRC's idea," she said, using Clinton's initials. "Our office approached the Moroccans and they 100 percent believe they are doing this at her request. The King has personally committed approx $12 million both for the endowment and to support the meeting. It will break a lot of china to back out now when we had so many opportunities to do it in the past few months. She created this mess and she knows it."
Robby Mook, now Clinton's campaign manager, appears to be concerned a month later that Clinton is still scheduled to attend. "We really need to shut Morocco and these paid speeches down," he wrote. After the matter was released, Mook cited the fact that Clinton ultimately did not participate as proof that the matter was resolved.
��There were various moments of high concern within the campaign, particularly in the early stages of the primary and especially as Vice President Joe Biden considered joining the race.
Podesta was often on the receiving end of nervous questions, some from inside the campaign and more often from outside, about Biden's plans. Among those reaching out at one point: Dreamworks CEO Jeffrey Katzenberg, a top Clinton donor. "Want to discuss POTUS and Biden," he wrote in October.
"Still can't figure out whether he'll rally himself to do it," Podesta wrote in August.
As Biden increased his public profile heading into the fall, concerns seemed to rise. Neera Tanden, a longtime Clinton supporter who worked with Podesta at the Center for American Progress, wrote to Podesta Sept. 1 that she heard Biden was telling union leaders he was running. "Lord, have mercy," Podesta responded.
Less than a week before Biden's said he would not run, , Podesta was part of an email discussion with senior campaign officials and outside officials about a CNN report that indicated the vice president, if he ran, would have immediate access to the Obama campaign's highly valuable email list.
In the days before Biden's decision was made, Podesta inserted himself into the discussion by openly seeming to prod Biden to finally reveal his plans. He brushed off claims that he was "bullying" Biden.
��One of the most-discussed individual emails was one that Clinton critics have cast as evidence of a bias toward Catholics on the part of Clinton's campaign hierarchy. Donald Trump even alluded to it at the Al Smith Dinner, an event hosted by the New York Catholic Archdiocese, as he claimed that Clinton "hated Catholics."
The context was a discussion about the Catholicism of Fox Chairman Rupert Murdoch and NewsCorp CEO Robert Thomson.
"I imagine they think it is the most socially acceptable, politically conservative religion _ their rich friends wouldn't understand if they became evangelical," campaign communications director Jennifer Palmieri wrote.
Asked about the email last month, Palmieri said she did not recognize it. She also noted that she is Catholic.
Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti was briefly a punching bag last year when he apparently flaked on a meeting in June 2015. John Podesta suggested he had little patience for Garcetti.
"Maybe he can hold out to be MOM's VP," he wrote, joking that the mayor could end up as the running mate to Martin O'Malley, a long-shot Democratic primary candidate.
In another email, Podesta said the campaign should add Garcetti "to the BdB file," a reference to New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio, who had also annoyed the Clinton team.
��Even Clinton loyalists occasionally questioned her political instincts.
In particular, Clinton concerned some of her allies with her reluctance to apologize last year for using a private email server while serving as secretary of State.
"Everyone wants her to apologize. And she should. Apologies are like her Achilles heel," Tanden wrote in an email to Podesta. Before that, Podesta expressed his own concerns about Clinton's political radar.
"We've taken on a lot of water that won't be easy to pump out of the boat. Most of that has to do with terrible decisions made pre-campaign, but a lot has to do with her instincts," he wrote to Tanden.
��David Brock, who started his career as a Clinton antagonist but is now one her family's fiercest defenders, was the subject of particular derision.
Podesta and Tanden traded messages describing Brock as an "unhinged narcissist" and a "menace."
Brock runs two super PACs supporting Clinton, but his tactics weren't always welcome by her campaign. He particularly stoked aides' anger in January when he called for Sen. Bernie Sanders, Clinton's septuagenarian opponent in the Democratic primary, to release his medical records.
"Maybe he actually is a republican plant," Tanden wrote to Podesta. "Hard to think of anything more counter productive than demanding Bernie's medical records."
��After leaving her post as the country's top diplomat, Hillary Clinton made millions of dollars delivering speeches for banks and other organizations, and she refused to release the transcripts when she began her presidential campaign.
But some of her remarks were exposed in the hacked emails.
Many of Clinton's comments were consistent with her eventual platform as a presidential candidate � she talked about spreading renewable energy, making the economy more fair and suggested the country should keep building on Obama's health care law.
However, the speeches also displayed a chumminess with her Wall Street audiences that was at odds with her campaign rhetoric. At one point Clinton suggested that political calculations were the reason elected officials wanted to crack down on banks after the financial crisis.
Trump and his allies have tried to turn some of Clinton's other remarks into attack lines, pointing to her support for "open trade and open borders."
Clinton has said her remark about borders was a specific reference to increasing access to "energy that is as green and sustainable as we can get it."
��Donna Brazile, who replaced Debbie Wasserman Schultz to become interim chair of the DNC after a separate leak of emails raised questions about the national party's impartiality in the Democratic primaries, appears to have given the Clinton campaign a heads-up on planned debate question during the primary campaign.
An email came in March before ahead of a candidate town hall that was to be hosted by CNN and TV One. The subject line and the comment from Brazile indicated her concern about whether Clinton would be equipped to answer the question. Palmieri indicated it was a subject about which Clinton had been asked before but concedes, "not everyone likes her answer."
In a statement after the email became public, Brazile denied having access to the questions forum hosts would ask. She said she occasionally shared her thoughts with all campaigns.
"I never had access to questions and would never have shared them with the candidates if I did," Brazile said.
Brazile resigned from CNN Oct. 14.