The
picture shows damage inside the burnt US consulate building in Benghazi on
September 13, 2012, following an attack on the building late on September 11 in
which the US ambassador to Libya and three other US nationals were killed.
Even
after an assault a US diplomatic mission in Libya left four Americans dead,
officials from the Obama administration insist that security on the scene was
up to snuff, despite rampant warnings of a terrorist attack.
The
attack in Benghazi, Libya on September 11 killed four US citizens, including
Ambassador John Stevens, and conflicting reports are considering either the
strike as either a response to an anti-Islam film produced in America or else a
more broad terrorist attack involving al-Qaeda affiliates. Regardless of the
reasoning, though, the assault this month has largely left authorities in the
US scrambling for answers and explanations. Nonetheless, the State Department
says that they did everything in their power to prevent an atrocity.
Speaking
to the Wall Street Journal this week, a senior official with the US Department
of State says that the administration’s “principal concerns” in Libya involved
monitoring any attempts to damage the consulate with an improvised explosive
device (IED), exactly what happened on June 6 when an explosive detonated
outside the Benghazi compound. That being said, the department pleads that they
took the necessary steps to protect the mission and its staff, even after the
raid that ravaged the building earlier this month after took Mr. Steven’s life.
"Our
security plan worked,” a second State Department official explains to the
Journal.
Depending
on who you ask, however, whatever security was in play in Libya might not have
been enough. The New York Times reports that neither of the two US compounds in
Benghazi were adequately secured, despite the administration’s claims that
argue otherwise.
Senator
Susan Collins (R-Maine) said at a congressional hearing this week that the
attack should have been anticipated “based on the previous attacks against
Western targets, the proliferation of dangerous weapons in Libya, the presence
of Al Qaeda in that country and the overall threat environment.” The Times says
that American facilities in town were unprepared, however, and lacked
protection from either the Marines or other military personnel, although
initial news reports suggested just the contrary.
The
Journal adds in their report this week that US officials repeatedly issued
alerts in neighboring Egypt before anti-American protests ramped up ahead of
the anniversary of the September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks. Sure enough, on
9/11 this year there were indeed protests outside the American embassy in
Cairo, but those demonstrations are being blamed on “Innocence of Muslims,” a
shoddily made American film uploaded to YouTube that portrays Islamic prophet
Mohammad as a savage buffoon.
The
White House initially suggested that the attack in Benghazi was conducted in
response to the film as well, but evidence that has surfaced since points
towards a terrorist attack. And although the US took great strides to ensure
that another 9/11 didn’t occur at their Cairo establishment, security was lax
enough in Libya to allow four Americans to be killed.
Days
after White House Press Secretary Jay Carney suggested that the
administration’s intelligence implies that the Benghazi attack was a
spontaneous response to the film, a senior counterterrorism official disputed
that claim.
"We
are looking at indications that individuals involved in the attack may have had
connections to al-Qaeda or al-Qaeda's affiliates, in particular al-Qaeda in the
Islamic Maghreb," Matt Olsen, director of the National Counterterrorism
Center, said during a Senate hearing Wednesday. "I would say yes, they
were killed in the course of a terrorist attack on our embassy,"
As far
as the Obama administration is concerned, however, the war on terror is being
waged as successfully as ever before.
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