Clinton offers forceful defense on Benghazi, emails

1Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Rodham Clinton speaks at the at the Iowa Democratic Wing Ding at the Surf Ballroom Friday, Aug. 14, 2015, in Clear Lake, Iowa.
2CLEAR LAKE, Iowa (AP) - Hillary Rodham Clinton offered a fierce defense of her handling of the 2012 Benghazi attacks and her use of a private email server as President Barack Obama's secretary of state, dismissing the controversies as "partisan games" in a speech before influential Iowa Democrats on Friday.
3"They'll try to tell you it's about Benghazi, but it's not," Clinton said, pointing to Republican-led congressional inquiries that she said had "debunked all the conspiracy theories."
4"It's not about emails or servers either. It's about politics," she said.
5"I won't get down in the mud with them. I won't play politics with national security," Clinton said at the annual Wing Ding, a Democratic fundraiser in northern Iowa that attracted three other presidential candidates.
6Clinton, who at one point quelled a coughing fit with a drink of water, sought to take on twin controversies that have buffeted her presidential campaign while presenting herself as combative, tough Democrat prepared to fight Republicans in the race to succeed Obama.
7Her appearance came days after she agreed to turn over to the FBI the private server she used as secretary of state.
8Republicans assert she was negligent in handling the nation's secrets.
9At the fundraiser, Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders, who has gained steam as a more liberal alternative to Clinton, received loud cheers when he pointed to his opposition to the Keystone XL pipeline, which has been reviled by environmentalists, and his vote against the Iraq War in the Senate.
10Sanders, whose recent appearance at a Seattle event was disrupted by activists with the Black Lives Matter movement, also took steps to emphasize his civil rights record.
11"No one will fight harder to end racism in America," he said.
12But the night was marked by Clinton's forceful defense.
13She began by noting that the Supreme Court case Citizens United, which led to a flood of campaign money, started with a "hit-job film" about her.
14"Now I'm in their crosshairs," she said of Republicans.
15Turning to her email controversies, Clinton said she would "do my part to provide transparency to Americans - that's why I'm insisting 55,000 pages of my emails be published as soon as possible" and turned over the server.
16"I won't pretend that this is anything other than what it is: the same old partisan games we've seen so many times before," she said.
17"So I don't care how many super PACs and Republicans pile on. I've been fighting for families and underdogs my entire life and I'm not going to stop now."
18Clinton also offered a light take on the email probe when she talked about launching a Snapchat social media account.
19"I love it," she said.
20"Those messages disappear all by themselves."
21Her speech included sharp critiques of potential Republican rivals Scott Walker, Jeb Bush and Marco Rubio.
22But she saved her most pointed barbs for Donald Trump, saying the attention in the GOP race had centered on a "certain flamboyant front-runner."
23The country, she said, shouldn't be distracted.
24"Most of the other candidates are just Trump with the pizazz or the hair."
25Activists like Lisa Brighton of Mason City, Iowa, welcomed Clinton's defense.
26Brighton said her "whole body felt on fire" while listening to Clinton defend herself.
27"She comforted us," Brighton said.