Russia knew damaging secrets about Hillary Clinton under Barack Obama? Tulsi Gabbard's clip goes viral on X
A viral tweet shared on January 10, 2026 by X (formerly Twitter) user @Real_RobN reignited a stormy debate over US political history, alleging explosive intelligence claims about former President Barack Obama and former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton during the 2016 election. The post centered on a controversial clip featuring Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard, in which she discussed declassified reports and intelligence interpretations about what Russia knew but didn’t release ahead of that campaign.
The tweet repeated assertions claiming that Obama “knew Hillary Clinton was mentally unfit for office” and withheld that information from the public, linking this to an original Intelligence Community Assessment (ICA). According to the viral post, Russia possessed “high-level DNC emails” concerning Clinton’s health and behaviour but chose not to release them. This narrative that has gained traction among some users, even though there is no independently verified evidence that such an ICA ever stated those exact findings.
The caption of the viral tweet read, "Here is: The Director of National Intelligence, Tulsi Gabbard, drops a bomb Russia wasn’t the only one sitting on explosive secrets — Barack Hussein Obama knew Hillary Clinton was mentally unfit for office and deliberately hid it from the American people. Even the DNC questioned whether, if elected, she would be capable of carrying out the duties of the presidency. The original ICA (Intelligence Community Assessment) confirmed that Hillary Clinton was suffering from “intensified psycho-emotional problems, including uncontrolled fits of anger and aggression,” and was placed on a daily regimen of “heavy tranquilizers.” Yet Barack Obama withheld a national-security threat from the American people and instead deliberately manufactured an ICA report in an attempt to overthrow the United States government. Think about it — a psychopath in the White House on heavy tranquilizers. Tell me, exactly how would that have turned out? Blackmail? Sabotage? Espionage? World War III? (sic)."
In mid-2025, Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard released a tranche of once-classified documents from a House Intelligence Committee report and other materials related to Russia’s actions in the 2016 election. These documents, which have circulated in right-wing media and comment threads, led to claims that Russia had access to damaging information about Hillary Clinton’s physical and mental health and that US leaders were aware of it.
According to news reports, the newly declassified material does include references suggesting that Russia’s Foreign Intelligence Service (SVR) possessed internal Democratic National Committee communications about Clinton’s health status, described in the reports as “extraordinarily alarming” to some within the DNC and that this information was kept secret.
Crucially, none of the verified reporting says that any official intelligence product classified Clinton as “mentally unfit” or that Obama actively suppressed such a formal finding. The broader context in reporting emphasises that these interpretations have been highly politicised, extrapolated far beyond what the documents clearly demonstrate.
In the clip shared with the tweet, Gabbard reportedly linked the absence of a timely release of damaging material to Russia’s strategic calculations, claiming that Moscow assumed Clinton would win and only planned to disclose harmful information near her expected inauguration.
She is heard saying in the clip, "One of the most significant pieces of evidence that was revealed in that report we released yesterday is the fact that Russia claimed to have very, very damaging information, high-level DNC emails relating specifically to Hillary Clinton's physical and mental health, and DNC leaders questioning whether or not, if elected, she would even be capable of carrying out the duties of the presidency. Russia had this."
Gabbard added, "If they wanted to swing the election for Donald Trump, they would have released it in September, October of 2016 at a pivotal time to swing momentum into Donald Trump's direction and damage Hillary Clinton's campaign. They did not do that deliberately. They understood that Hillary Clinton would likely be the inevitable president of the United States. They didn't think Trump could win, like a lot of other people, and so they were withholding this damaging information about Hillary Clinton and planning to release it in the days or weeks leading up to her expected inauguration in order to, once again, sow chaos within the United States."
This claim has not been independently verified. Similar framing was widely discussed in media reporting on the declassified documents.
While Gabbard and supportive outlets describe these revelations as exposing a “contrived narrative” propagated by Obama–era officials, critics and journalists have countered that the released reports do not substantiate claims of an intentional suppression of a bipolar or mental-health determination about Clinton, nor do they conclusively show a cover-up of intelligence findings.
The release of these documents has already sparked additional political responses. The US Department of Justice in 2025 reportedly formed a task force to assess the matter, evaluating whether any legal steps should follow the release of the materials tied to Russia’s role in the 2016 campaign. Meanwhile, critics including former intelligence analysts have pushed back on the most dramatic interpretations of the declassified texts, arguing that Gabbard’s framing often magnifies or mischaracterizes what the raw documents actually describe.
As of now, the narrative around these declassified intelligence documents and the interpretation amplified by the viral tweet remains fluid and highly partisan. There is no authoritative confirmation that intelligence agencies ever concluded that Hillary Clinton was “mentally unfit” for office in any official capacity, nor that former President Obama deliberately hid such a conclusion.
Instead, what is publicly available consists of selectively declassified documents that many analysts say have been extrapolated into larger claims and political narratives beyond their original scope.
The caption of the viral tweet read, "Here is: The Director of National Intelligence, Tulsi Gabbard, drops a bomb Russia wasn’t the only one sitting on explosive secrets — Barack Hussein Obama knew Hillary Clinton was mentally unfit for office and deliberately hid it from the American people. Even the DNC questioned whether, if elected, she would be capable of carrying out the duties of the presidency. The original ICA (Intelligence Community Assessment) confirmed that Hillary Clinton was suffering from “intensified psycho-emotional problems, including uncontrolled fits of anger and aggression,” and was placed on a daily regimen of “heavy tranquilizers.” Yet Barack Obama withheld a national-security threat from the American people and instead deliberately manufactured an ICA report in an attempt to overthrow the United States government. Think about it — a psychopath in the White House on heavy tranquilizers. Tell me, exactly how would that have turned out? Blackmail? Sabotage? Espionage? World War III? (sic)."
What Tulsi Gabbard is actually pointing to: Intelligence documents and interpretation
In mid-2025, Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard released a tranche of once-classified documents from a House Intelligence Committee report and other materials related to Russia’s actions in the 2016 election. These documents, which have circulated in right-wing media and comment threads, led to claims that Russia had access to damaging information about Hillary Clinton’s physical and mental health and that US leaders were aware of it.
According to news reports, the newly declassified material does include references suggesting that Russia’s Foreign Intelligence Service (SVR) possessed internal Democratic National Committee communications about Clinton’s health status, described in the reports as “extraordinarily alarming” to some within the DNC and that this information was kept secret.
Tulsi Gabbard’s commentary vs established intelligence community findings
She is heard saying in the clip, "One of the most significant pieces of evidence that was revealed in that report we released yesterday is the fact that Russia claimed to have very, very damaging information, high-level DNC emails relating specifically to Hillary Clinton's physical and mental health, and DNC leaders questioning whether or not, if elected, she would even be capable of carrying out the duties of the presidency. Russia had this."
Gabbard added, "If they wanted to swing the election for Donald Trump, they would have released it in September, October of 2016 at a pivotal time to swing momentum into Donald Trump's direction and damage Hillary Clinton's campaign. They did not do that deliberately. They understood that Hillary Clinton would likely be the inevitable president of the United States. They didn't think Trump could win, like a lot of other people, and so they were withholding this damaging information about Hillary Clinton and planning to release it in the days or weeks leading up to her expected inauguration in order to, once again, sow chaos within the United States."
While Gabbard and supportive outlets describe these revelations as exposing a “contrived narrative” propagated by Obama–era officials, critics and journalists have countered that the released reports do not substantiate claims of an intentional suppression of a bipolar or mental-health determination about Clinton, nor do they conclusively show a cover-up of intelligence findings.
Broader US political backdrop and viral controversy on X
The release of these documents has already sparked additional political responses. The US Department of Justice in 2025 reportedly formed a task force to assess the matter, evaluating whether any legal steps should follow the release of the materials tied to Russia’s role in the 2016 campaign. Meanwhile, critics including former intelligence analysts have pushed back on the most dramatic interpretations of the declassified texts, arguing that Gabbard’s framing often magnifies or mischaracterizes what the raw documents actually describe.
Instead, what is publicly available consists of selectively declassified documents that many analysts say have been extrapolated into larger claims and political narratives beyond their original scope.
Top Comment
T
Tony Bucca
3 hours ago
WHOA...STOP THE PRESSES! YOU MEAN TO TELL ME "X" was once called "Twitter?"Read allPost comment
end of article
Featured in Etimes
- 'Dhurandhar' day 40 Vs 'The Raja Saab' day 5 (LIVE)
- Tusshar and Jeetendra sell commercial property for Rs 559 cr
- Celina's husband gave her divorce notice on 15th anniversary, denied access to her children
- Sussanne wishes Hrithik-Saba 'endless love and the best of life'
- Palak stands with Karan amid cheating allegations
- Jaya B, Big B dance at Abhishek-Aishwarya's wedding in a priceless PIC
Trending Stories
- Happy Pongal 2026: Quotes, wishes, messages, cards, greetings, pictures and GIFs
- Happy Makar Sankranti 2026: Top 50 wishes, messages and quotes to share with your loved ones
- 10 steamed and nutritious breakfast dishes of India
- Happy Bhogi 2026: Top 50 wishes, images, quotes to share on WhatsApp, Facebook, Instagram status and stories
- 'I tried hard to fit in': Meet the Chef from Bihar who is turning 'poor man’s food’ into power dishes for PMs and billionaires
- 8 modern baby boy names taken from old Sanskrit words, with a fresh twist
- Supreme Court SLP Hearing: Bench to hear urgent film appeal; CBFC faces political backlash
- 8 plants that bring calm, luck, and positive energy to your home
- Kerala Release Date Set: Madras High Court clears 'Jana Nayagan' for Jan 14; release awaits appeal
- How to deal with difficult people without losing your cool: 6 effective psychology-based tips
Photostories
- 5 reasons why wildlife enthusiasts are heading to Ranthambore right now
- 5 legendary landmarks in Asia named after animals
- Makar Sankranti 2026: How to make traditional Moong Dal Khichdi at home
- Why anxiety disorder in teens is on the rise
- Beautiful Makar Sankranti saree looks inspired by Bollywood actresses in 2026
- Bengaluru’s metro lifeline gets a boost: Yellow line to roll out 7th train, shorter waits ahead
- Shark Tank India: From a lavish house worth Rs 50 crores to high-end car collection- Namita Thapar’s lavish lifestyle
- Makar Sankranti 2026: 10 traditional foods to celebrate the harvest and the sun
- 8 jungle experiences that only Masai Mara offers and how to visit on a budget
- 7 questions to ask your child’s teacher if your child struggles with attention
Up Next