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[All links added are mine – Oui]
Benghazi attack inquiry harshly criticizes US State Dept.
WASHINGTON (Reuters) – Security at the U.S. mission in Benghazi, Libya was grossly inadequate to deal with a Sept. 11 attack that killed a U.S. ambassador and three others because of failures within the State Department, an official inquiry found on Tuesday.
In a scathing assessment, the review cited “leadership and management” deficiencies at two department offices, poor coordination among officials and “real confusion” in Washington and in the field over who had the responsibility, and the power, to make decisions that involved policy and security concerns.
The attack killed Ambassador Christopher Stevens and three other Americans and set off a political furor as Republicans used the issue to attack President Barack Obama before the Nov. 6 election in which he won a second term in office.
« click for CIA talking points
The report’s harsh assessment seemed likely to tarnish the four-year tenure of Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, who said in a letter accompanying the review that she would adopt all of its recommendations.
“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,” said the unclassified version of the report by the official “Accountability Review Board [pdf].”
The board specifically faulted the department’s Bureau of Near Eastern Affairs, the regional office which is responsible for the Middle East and North Africa, and the Bureau of Diplomatic Security, its law enforcement and security arm.
The five-member board said U.S. intelligence provided no “specific tactical warning” of the attack and that there was “little understanding of militias in Benghazi and the threat they posed to U.S. interests” in the eastern Libyan city, where the central government has little influence.
The incident has raised questions about the adequacy of security at U.S. embassies [pdf] around the globe and where to draw the line between protecting American diplomats in dangerous places while giving them enough freedom to do their jobs.
Jon Alterman, head of the Middle East program at the Center for Strategic and International Studies, said the assessment reflected poorly on Clinton and its recommendations would probably make life harder for diplomats in the field
DID LOCAL GUARDS LEAVE GATE OPEN?
The report faulted as “misplaced” the mission’s dependence for security support on the “armed but poorly skilled” Libyan February 17 Martyrs’ Brigade militia members and unarmed guards hired by State Department contractor Blue Mountain Libya.
No Blue Mountain guards were outside the compound immediately before the attack to provide early warning, which was their responsibility. The report raised the possibility that Blue Mountain guards left the “pedestrian gate open after initially seeing the attackers and fleeing the vicinity. They had left the gate unlatched before.”
The board found little evidence that the February 17 guards alerted Americans to the attack or swiftly summoned more militia members to help once it was under way. There had been questions of reliability in the weeks preceding the attack.
“At the time of Ambassador Stevens’ visit, February 17 militia members had stopped accompanying special mission vehicle movements in protest over salary and working hours,” the report said.
Militant groups hold much of the power in post-Gadhafi Libya
The board recommended that the State Department create a new, senior position to oversee security at “high threat” posts, to strengthen security at such posts beyond what is usually provided by host governments, and to consult outside experts on “best practices” for operating in dangerous environments.
The department should also hire more security personnel at dangerous posts, ensure key policy and security staff serve there for at least a year and consider making it easier to punish those who perform poorly in future security incidents.
The political uproar over the Benghazi attack has already claimed one victim
U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations Susan Rice, widely tipped as a front-runner to replace Clinton when she steps down as secretary of state early next year, last week withdrew her name from consideration, saying she wished to avoid a potentially disruptive Senate confirmation process.
Republican lawmakers had blasted Rice for comments she made on several television talk shows in the aftermath of the attack in which she said preliminary information suggested the assault was the result of protests against an anti-Muslim video made in California rather than a premeditated strike.
The review, however, concluded that no protest took place before the attack. Rice has said she was relying on talking points drawn up by U.S. intelligence officials.
Benghazi and US Administratons’ Failure to Distinquish Strands of Islam
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Is the Obama administration playing semantics not calling the suspected brain behind the Benghazi deaths Al-Qaeda?
See my new diary – Benghazi: Leader Ansar al-Sharia is Major Al-Qaeda Asset
Militia groups attack police station to free prisoner spilling the beans on leaders behind Benghazi US Mission attacks. Read also Informed Comment –
Benghazi’s Deep Throat fingers Islamist Leaders for Attacks as State Dept Criticized on Consular Security
Well…yeah. Of course. Islamist movements are accepted by the majority of Muslim people in the areas being considered, Oui. Democracy in action and all that. This is not news. Just as was the whole Nixon/Reagan/Bush I/Bush II movement “accepted” by a majority of Americans…at least Americans who voted…for several decades. Once again…democracy in action. “Democracy”…majority rule…does not necessarily mean “justice.” Human memory is quite short and media hype is amazingly strong. So it goes. Has Bush II not been such an amazing fool we would still be being ruled by those clowns. As it is we have not come very far. So that goes as well.
Did the State Dept./CIA mess things up in Benghazi?
Of course.
They are both federal career bureaucracies full of we-can’t-fail-because-we-have-the-job functionaries.
The Post Office writ big.
Duh.
Will Clinton take the blame?
Slick as she is politically?
I doubt it.
Rice already went down. That’ll just about do it, I think.
Just business as usual, and the bureaucracy will continue barely altered.
So it goes.
Just as it’s always been.
So it goes.
Later…
AG
Hired contractors just cannot replace US Marines. But US Marines don’t provide a profit flow to Washington insiders.
I haven’t been able to find anything out about this company. Apparently, it is not publicly traded which makes me even more suspicious about who profits from them.
An interesting link here: http://www.reuters.com/article/2012/10/18/us-libya-usa-bluemountain-idUSBRE89G1TI20121018
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In the diary link “Blue Mountain” leads to my diary of Oct. 4, 2012. I wrote quite extensively about the unarmed security guards and the deal for a militia group to protect the US Mission. See also the documents retrieved from the US Mission compound days after the attack by journalists. FBI was unable to visit location for weeks and the Libyan government has no control over the militias and can’t provide security. Amb. Chris Stevens was in Benghazi on an economic mission with visits to AGOCO and Chemonics, an USAID contractor. The meeting with Lybian militia group providing security to the compound was … delayed for “another day”!
I found the priority by US diplomats and politics in Libya on doing core business for US corporations. In the nineties under President Clinton I felt his priority was advancing the US economy in dealing with foreign entities through USAID and CIA support. The Soviet Union was defeated and CIA dismantled its HUMINT assets amd started prioritizing economic espionage and losing focus on US homeland security. Clinton acting on behalf of fugitive Marc Rich and Pincus Greene with a Presidential pardon is rotten to the core. Just ask the NY prosecutors, they were dumbfounded and so was I.
What I’m looking for is board composition/CEO/major stockholders if public, who owns it if private.
They sound incompetent and in my experience with government contracting that smells of a political rip-off.
These things are hard to fins. There is often a large chain of dummy corporations.
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I had offered some links for insight into Blue Mountain Security located in Wales UK. Difficulty with the Libyan government, they most likely rejected foreign mercenaries to be posted, that’s why a local susidiary got the lucrative contract: Blue Mountain Libya.
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The Atlantic – The Welsh Security Contractor Behind America’s Benghazi Consulate Guards
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