To: RitaOK
I don't know if there is more than one hospital in Benghazi but one of them was occupied by the very group that attacked the embassy, Ansar al Shariah, and was used as their base.
So if he was dropped off at that hospital he was put right into the hands of the terrorists by the "looters."
11 posted on
10/28/2012 10:16:41 PM PDT by
piasa
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To: piasa
Another thing weird about the "looters" explanation is that the embassy and annex took an assualt from some 150 people with small arms, mortars and rpgs, some 60-70 of whom met their demise under fire from our guys and we're supposed to believe the "looters" decided to emerge from safety and run toards all of that, then wade into the line of fire of either the terrorists or our guys - soon enough during or after the battle to find the ambassador still barely alive?
Those're some bold "looters" there.
12 posted on
10/28/2012 10:23:02 PM PDT by
piasa
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To: piasa
Sean Smith could not find Stevens in the mission house before he himself died. Stevens spent a LOT of time breathing hot dorsal fumes and smoke, maybe hours, maybe not, but oh my, life threatening in the best of circumstances.
I thought about who would bother to take him to the hospital, unless it was late Libyan rescuers, or the enemy who did not mean for him to be harmed, but kidnapped perhaps. The administration stayed mum, yet they knew the hospital used Stevens cell phone numbers to try to make contact with his last calls, likely to Tripoli.
14 posted on
10/28/2012 10:48:28 PM PDT by
RitaOK
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