In new emails leaked by a hacker, former secretary of state Colin Powell offers unvarnished and highly negative opinions about both Donald Trump and Hillary Clinton.

He calls Trump “a national disgrace and an international pariah” who led a “racist” birther movement. And he says that he resented Clinton dragging him into her email problems and that “everything (she) touches she kind of screws up with hubris.”

The emails were first reported by BuzzFeed and the Intercept after being posted under password protection on DCLeaks.com, a site with ties to other recent hacks of American political figures and groups. A Powell spokeswoman confirmed to The Washington Post that the emails are Powell’s.

“We have confirmed that the general has been hacked and that these are his emails,” spokeswoman Peggy Cifrino said. “We have no other comment at this time.”

The Washington Post has also accessed the emails. While the emails are still being combed through, here are the highlights of what we’ve seen:

Of the birther movement, which Trump led earlier this decade by publicly questioning whether President Barack Obama was born in the United States, Powell said its underpinnings were clear.

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“Yup, the whole birther movement was racist,” Powell wrote to journalist and former aide Emily Miller on Aug. 21. “That’s what the 99% believe. When Trump couldn’t keep that up he said he also wanted to see if the certificate noted that he was a Muslim.”

Powell added: “As I have said before, ‘What if he was?’ Muslims are born as Americans everyday.”

Powell added in August 2015, according to the Intercept: Trump “appeals to the worst angels of the GOP nature and poor white folks.”

In another email to Miller on Aug. 21, Powell scoffs at Trump’s apparent effort to reach out to African Americans in recent weeks and says Trump takes them “for idiots.”

“He is at 1% black voters and will drop. He takes us for idiots,” Powell writes. “He can never overcome what he tried to do to Obama with his search for the birth certificate hoping to force Obama out of the Presidency.”

“It is time to start ignoring him. You guys are playing his game, you are his oxygen,” he wrote to CNN’s Fareed Zakaria in December 2015. “He outraged us again today with his comments on Paris no-go for police districts. I will watch and pick the timing, not respond to the latest outrage.”

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(So-called “no-go” zones are places in Europe allegedly so dominated by Muslims that police have given up trying to monitor them. There is little evidence that they actually exist.)

Powell suggested in another email that even critical coverage of Trump didn’t really work: “To go on and call him an idiot just emboldens him.”

Writing in July 2015 after Trump publicly aired the phone number of Sen. Lindsey Graham, S.C., a rival GOP presidential candidate, Powell said: “Trump has no sense of shame.”

Powell’s rancor is not reserved only for Trump. And Clinton’s decision to cite his use of private email as secretary of state to justify her private email server has clearly proven a sore spot — both in these emails and in previous Powell comments.

“I have told Hilleary’s (sic) minions repeatedly that they are making a mistake trying to drag me in, yet they still try,” he wrote in May to Democratic consultant Vernon Jordan. “The media isn’t fooled and she is getting crucified. The differences are profound and they know it.”

The two situations indeed aren’t completely analogous, as The Washington Post’s Fact Checker has written, but Clinton has used Powell to suggest that her private email server wasn’t totally novel.

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Just last month, Powell suggested that Clinton had shot herself in the foot by not apologizing immediately and by dragging out the email story. “HRC could have killed this two years ago by merely telling everyone honestly what she had done and not tie me to it,” he said, according to the Intercept.

In August 2015, Powell added: “They are going to dick up the legitimate and necessary use of emails with friggin’ record rules. I saw email more like a telephone than a cable machine. … Everything HRC touches she kind of screws up with hubris.”

Powell also seemed to say in 2015 that he believes there “is something to” concerns about Clinton’s health.

According to emails highlighted by Intercept reporter Lee Fang, in March 2015, Democratic donor Jeffrey Leeds emailed Powell and said Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse, D-R.I., recalled a joint event at which, according to Leeds’s recounting of Whitehouse’s comments, Clinton “could barely climb the podium steps.”

Powell responded: “I think there is something to it. On HD tv she doesn’t look doesn’t look good. She is working herself to death.”

One area in which Powell has sympathy for Clinton is on Benghazi, the GOP reaction to which he labeled a “stupid witch hunt,” as BuzzFeed first reported. And fellow former secretary of state Condoleezza Rice appeared to agree.

“Benghazi is a stupid witch hunt. Basic fault falls on a courageous ambassador who thoughts Libyans now love me and I am ok in this very vulnerable place,” Powell wrote to Rice in December 2015, referring to former ambassador to Libya Christopher Stevens, who was killed in the attack.

Powell added, though, that Clinton bore some blame: “But blame also rests on his leaders and supports back here. Pat Kennedy, Intel community, (State Department) and yes HRC” — referring to Clinton.

“Completely agree,” Rice responded.