awm, on 2013-May-15, 21:13, said:
I think this is a pretty transparent political ploy to make Barack Obama and/or Hillary Clinton look bad.
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The thing is, there are legitimate questions that could be asked about why a consulate in a pretty dangerous part of the world wasn't better protected, and perhaps about how US intelligence didn't anticipate this event. However, as far as I can tell these legitimate questions are not the focus of the investigation.
I'd suggest that this is because Pickering/Mullen ARB actually did look into the pre-attack situation. See
http://www.state.gov...tion/202446.pdf
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Instead, the investigation focuses on why UN Ambassador Susan Rice didn't immediately announce on TV that it was a terrorist attack and start laying blame. The other questions seem to be "who knew what when?" and "who changed the talking points and why?" and "when Obama said this was an act of terror, was that the same as saying it was a terrorist attack, and why didn't he name specific terrorist organizations?" None of these strike me as being legitimate issues at all.
Is this slant accurate? by which I mean, are these things the focus or just the tip of the iceberg? I would say the investigation focuses only upon what was known when, a turn of phrase that was famously made popular in the course of the Watergate hearings. The fact that the talking points were -- shall we say -- "edited" is just evidence of what DOS and WH may actually have known but claimed in front of God and everyone else not to have known.
Why would anyone have a problem announcing a terrorist attack on an embassy/consulate/installation if there was no political iron in the fire? I don't believe that government failed promptly to announce a terrorist attack in any of the situations hrothgar posted from the Cesco article--for instance. It seems to me to be relevant to the common good whether someone, or several someones, in a position of trust and responsibility initiated a coverup because s/he knew/knows that the actual screwup was not a poor decision made in good faith on incomplete information but a selfishly motivated, considered decision, made with knowledge of the facts, purely to protect a political position. The Watergate burglary was trivial; a failure to act in the Benghazi scenario -- no one now disputes that there was real-time information -- seems to me at best cowardly and incompetent and at worst immoral. I'd like to see any and all information that might indicate which it was/is.
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Obviously the government may not want to lay everything out in a public forum when an investigation and possible counterstrike is still ongoing! In fact it would have been irresponsible for the administration to give out this information at that time... and even if they misjudged the sensitivity of the situation slightly that hardly merits an investigation.
Huh? I'm aware of no evidence of any thought of a counterstrike? (A CIA operative claims we know who did it and he's still walking around.)
I assume you mean investigation of what happened. What, they couldn't believe the drone footage or the Libyan president or their own folks on the ground? Of course, this administration
is very good at 'ongoingly investigating' problems to death....
Irresponsible how?
Do you believe that 'misjudgment of sensitivity' is an accurate description of the facts as now known? That's as good an obfuscatory/minimalizing label as any I've ever seen. Congratulations.
Again, I'm amazed that many, maybe most, can see the smoke but conclude -- without seeing any need to investigate -- there is no fire. The fact that the synchophant press is now acting something like real journalists are supposed to act should be a tipoff to anyone with eyes to see.