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Obama,
Clinton escape blame in Benghazi report
by Neil Munro
The
State Department’s report on the Sept. 11,
2012 attack on the U.S. Embassy in Benghazi describes a series of
strategy and
management failures, but does not assign responsibility to any
individual
Americans — not even to the secretary of state or the president of the
United
States.
“Systemic
failures and leadership and
management deficiencies at senior levels within two bureaus of the
State
Department resulted in a Special Mission security posture that was
inadequate
for Benghazi and grossly inadequate to deal with the attack that took
place,”
says the report, which was written by the “Accountability Review Board
for
Benghazi.”
“However,
the Board did not find reasonable
cause to determine that any individual U.S. government employee
breached his or
her duty,” state the report’s authors, all picked by the administration.
However,
the report dismisses claims that the
attack emerged from protests over a little-known anti-Muslim YouTube
video.
That
theory was strongly pushed by Obama and
Secretary of State Clinton immediately after the attack, which came
only eight
weeks before the 2012 election.
“The
Board concluded that there was no protest
prior to the attacks,” the report says.
Clinton
was slated to testify to Congress this
week, but has instead called in sick for the week. In her place,
deputies will
answer questions about the administration’s reaction to the report.
Clinton’s
absence partly shields her from any
public criticism that might damage a possible run for the presidency in
2016.
Instead,
the report tries to blame Congress for
not funding Obama’s strategy in Libya, even though the president
ignored Congress
when developing and implementing the strategy in 2009 and his Libyan
intervention in 2011.
“The
solution requires a more serious and
sustained commitment from Congress to support State Department needs,”
insists
the report.
The
successful attack killed four Americans,
seriously wounded two other Americans, destroyed the two known U.S.
government
facilities in eastern Libya and gave jihadi groups more time and space
to
expand.
So
far, Obama has not launched a counter-attack
or even retaliated against jihadi groups.
Instead,
he has asked the FBI to investigate
the attack as a crime.
The
FBI does not have the legal authority or
practical ability to investigate a crime in Libya without approval from
the
weak central government, which is already under periodic attack from
the jihadi
groups.
In
2009, Obama developed and announced his
region-wide strategy, dubbed “A New Beginning,” which gambled that the
region’s
popular Islamist movements would suppress allied jihadi groups if they
were
allowed to gain power.
However,
the new or established Islamist
governments in Turkey, Qatar, Egypt, Libya and Tunisia have been unable
or
unwilling to suppress their ideological allies in various jihad groups,
such as
al-Qaida.
In
2011, Obama used airpower to attack Libya’s
secular authoritarian government, headed by Muammar Qaddafi.
Amid
the fighting, various jihadi groups looted
a large amount of weapons from Libya’s armories, partly because Obama
did not
deploy any U.S. or foreign troops to secure the armories or bolster a
new
central government.
The
decision to withhold ground forces clashed
with some of the lessons from the successful 2003 toppling of Iraq’s
dictator.
In
2003 and especially before the 2004
election, President George W. Bush was slammed by numerous media
outlets for
not securing the vastly large stockpiles of weapons in Iraq. For
example, in
late October 2004, the New York Times ran front-page articles about
weapons
stolen from the Al Qaqaa armory, creating a mini media-scandal.
In
contrast, the established U.S. media —
especially CNN and CBS — downplayed the Libyan failures during the 2012
election.
Moreover,
in 2011 and 2012, U.S. officials were
reluctant to recognize or describe the shortcoming in Obama’s strategy,
which
left Libya’s civil government weak, divided and vulnerable to attacks
from the
heavily armed jihadi groups.
The
new report repeatedly acknowledges the
problem, but doesn’t assign blame.
“The
Board found the Libyan government’s
response to be profoundly lacking on the night of the attacks,
reflecting both
weak capacity and near absence of central government influence and
control in
Benghazi,” said the 39-page report, whose unclassified chapters were
released
late Dec. 18.
“The
security vacuum left by Qaddafi’s
departure, the continued presence of pro-Qaddafi supporters, the
prevalence of
and easy access to weapons, the inability of the interim government to
reestablish a strong security apparatus … led to a volatile situation,”
it
adds.
Despite
the chaos, top-level officials refused
to recognize the dangers, say critics, partly because such recognition
would
highlight flaws in Obama’s strategy.
Among
senior officials, “there seemed to be no
attempt, however, to link formally the many anti-Western incidents in
Benghazi,
the general declarations of threat in U.S. assessments and a
proliferation of
violence-prone and little understood militias, the lack of any central
authority” to any formal consideration of an attack, the report says.
Instead,
there was a “pervasive realization
among personnel who served in Benghazi that [the State Department's
facility]
was not a high priority for Washington when it came to security-related
requests, especially those relating to staffing.”
The
Benghazi facility was not labeled as a recognized
diplomatic facility, but instead served as a villa for the ambassador
activities in Benghazi, says the report.
“Another
key driver behind the weak security
platform in Benghazi was the decision to treat Benghazi as a temporary,
residential facility, not officially notified to the host government,”
the
report says.
In
lieu of sending more U.S. security forces to
Benghazi, or beefing up defenses, State Department officials relied on
local
jihadi groups for defense, especially the so-called “Martyrs of 17
February
Brigade.”
The
group was named for several Benghazi
Islamists who were killed by Gadhafi’s security forces in 2006. They
were
killed when attacking the Italian consulate in Benghazi after an
Italian
government minister had defended the right of Europeans to speak freely
about
Islam.
The
February 17 group is “a local umbrella
organization of militias dominant in Benghazi (some of which were
Islamist),”
according to the report.
When
the jihadis attacked on Sept. 11, “the
Board’s inquiry found little evidence that the armed February 17 guards
offered
any meaningful defense … or succeeded in summoning a February 17
militia
presence to assist expeditiously.”
“Over
the course of its inquiry, the Board also
learned of troubling indicators of February 17?s loyalties and its
readiness to
assist U.S. personnel,” it adds.
However,
the board declined to identify the
motives of the February 17 group, or of the various jihadi groups.
Instead, it
merely gives local jihadi groups the vague label of “anti-American” in
the
report.
Throughout
the region, “al Qaeda (AQ) is
fragmenting and increasingly devolving to local affiliates and other
actors who
share many of AQ’s aims, including violent anti-Americanism, without
necessarily being organized or operated under direct AQ command and
control.”
That’s
a match for the administration’s global
strategy for reacting to Islamic terrorists, such as al-Qaida.
Under
that global strategy, Obama’s deputies
ignore the Islamic motivations of Islamic terrorism.
In
response, critics argue that White House
officials can’t fight something — or even defend against it — unless
they
recognize what it wants and fears.
Source:
dailycaller.com
Read
the article with a link to the full report
at Mail Magazine 24
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