Kathleen Willey, the former volunteer aide to Bill Clinton who says she was sexually harassed by the president in the 1990s, is now sounding the alarm about the potential danger of Hillary Clinton becoming president.

"Hillary Clinton is the war on women, and that's what needs to be exposed here," Willey said Sunday night on Aaron Klein's WABC Radio show.

"The point is what this woman is capable of doing to other women while she's running a campaign basically on women's issues. It just doesn't make any sense. She singlehandedly orchestrated every one of the investigations of all these women [who accused her husband of sexual crimes]. They're the people reminding us of how sordid this all is."

Click below to listen to Part 1 of Klein's interview with Kathleen Willey:

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Willey continued to rail against both Bill and Hillary Clinton, saying, "They take up all the oxygen in the room, and everybody is depressed. We're gonna go back to all the sordid details [if Hillary runs for president]. They need to just go away because they're forcing themselves on us is the way I feel. Just pack your bags. You've had your 15 minutes. ... Stop forcing us to have to look at this stuff again. We're sick of it!"

Willey stressed it was not herself who was the one responsible for dredging up old dirt.

"They're the ones that are reminding us of all that behavior. Not me! They're the ones."

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And Willey also lashed into feminist organizations who never seem interested in the harassment against her by the Clintons.

"All of these women's groups, they're all pro-Hillary, they need to ... talk to someone like me and listen here, what Hillary Clinton has done to me and many, many, many other women. They are so hypocritical, it's unbelievable. And this is the woman that wants to be president."

Click below to listen to Part 2 of Klein's interview with Kathleen Willey:

As WND reported, Willey and her husband, Ed, were Democratic activists who founded Virginians for Clinton and helped send Bill and Hillary to the White House in 1992.

While serving as a volunteer in the White House and facing financial hard times, Willey says she met with Bill Clinton in the Oval Office to request a paying position. But instead of getting help, she says, she was subjected to "nothing short of serious sexual harassment." Distraught, Willey fled Clinton's presence, only to discover that her husband Ed had committed suicide that same tragic afternoon.

Later, she was drawn "unwillingly" into the Paula Jones lawsuit, the Ken Starr investigation and impeachment proceedings.

Willey also claims the Clinton tag team was behind a string of events that can only be described as a mob-style intimidation campaign to keep her silent that even included breaking into her home to steal her memoirs of the events.

Nonetheless, Willey wrote about her experiences with Bill Clinton's sex addiction and Hillary Clinton's revenge in the book "Target: Caught in the Crosshairs of Bill & Hillary Clinton."

Willey wrote "Target" when Hillary Clinton was running for president the first time in 2007, and her comments today are all the more relevant now that Clinton is considering a 2016 presidential bid and a number of figures are examining the former first lady's reactions to her husband's indiscretions in the Oval Office.

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Just last month, for example, Sen. Rand Paul, R-Ky., made headlines by bringing up Bill Clinton's notorious affair with another White House volunteer, Monica Lewinsky, on "Meet the Press."

Paul told host David Gregory, "The media seems to have given President Clinton a pass on this. He took advantage of a girl who was 20 years old and an intern in his office. There is no excuse for that, and that is predatory behavior."

"And then they have the gall to stand up and say Republicans are having a war on women?" Paul asked rhetorically. "So yes, I think it's a factor. It's not Hillary's fault, but it is a factor in judging Bill Clinton and history."

Then earlier this month, the Washington Free Beacon broke the explosive news of a confidential memo issued in 1992 by Stan Greenberg and Celinda Lake, top pollsters for Bill Clinton's presidential campaign, detailing their "research on Hillary Clinton."

The memo is one of many previously unpublished documents from the archives of one of Hillary Clinton's best friends and advisers, documents that portray Hillary as a strong, ambitious and "ruthless" Democratic operative.

"The full contents of the archive, which before 2010 was closed to the public, have not previously been reported on and shed new light on Clinton's three decades in public life," the Free Beacon reports. "The records paint a complex portrait of Hillary Clinton, revealing her to be a loyal friend, devoted mother, and a cutthroat strategist who relished revenge against her adversaries and complained in private that nobody in the White House was 'tough and mean enough.'"

The Free Beacon's report also includes mention of Willey as well as Hillary's reactions to the Lewinsky scandal and reports of Bill's affairs and rumored affairs with Gennifer Flowers, Elizabeth Ward and Lencola Sullivan.

Additional research by Drew Zahn and Joshua Klein.

Is Hillary the personification of 'war on women'? No, a Hillary presidency would be the crowning achievement of women in the U.S.

No, Hillary is a shining example for American women

No, Hillary is a great role model for women and a champion of feminism

No, she's the personification of a major war on beauty

Yes, she is an enabler of her husband's predatory behavior

Yes, she covered up her husband's philandering for decades

Yes, her entire resume is built on being Bill Clinton's 'first lady'

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