Posted on 09/24/2012 7:54:28 PM PDT by Ernest_at_the_Beach
Among the more obvious catastrophes of the terrorist attack on our consulate in Benghazi the loss of a dedicated diplomat in J. Christopher Stevens and three brave Americans who tried to defend the station is perhaps a more significant loss for our counter-terrorism operations in the region. The New York Times reported last night that the CIA considers the loss of the Benghazi consulate as a catastrophic intelligence loss, which prompts even more questions about security for the site:
The attack in Benghazi, Libya, that killed Ambassador J. Christopher Stevens and three other Americans has dealt the Central Intelligence Agency a major setback in its intelligence-gathering efforts at a time of increasing instability in the North African nation.
Among the more than two dozen American personnel evacuated from the city after the assault on the American mission and a nearby annex were about a dozen C.I.A. operatives and contractors, who played a crucial role in conducting surveillance and collecting information on an array of militant armed groups in and around the city.
Its a catastrophic intelligence loss, said one American official who has served in Libya and who spoke on the condition of anonymity because the F.B.I. is still investigating the attack. We got our eyes poked out.
Before we go farther, has the FBI actually begun investigating the scene of the crime? According to CBS News this morning, the answer is no:use it for broadcast. Shouldnt that raise a few questions about the American response to this attack, too, that State can ignore?
The NYT analysis of this attack shows even further how silly the initial administration spin was. The station had been compromised, something Stevens apparently knew, as was their fallback safe house, which he discovered far too late. That strongly suggests that the terrorist network(s) that conducted this attack had significant data on the American mission in the eastern part of Libya, and attacked it not just for reasons of prestige. These networks have begun operating much more openly since the US-led NATO military mission deposed Moammar Qaddafi, and the CIA needed to keep track of groups like al-Qaeda in the Islamic Magreb and Ansar al-Sharia.
Now that we know that this station was critical to American intelligence efforts in an area rife with the kind of terrorist networks we have been fighting for the last eleven years, one has to ask why it was left so poorly secured. That question was relevant even without the CIA connection, as the terrorist networks had already made Benghazi an unsafe place for the US to conduct normal diplomatic tasks. If this was as critical an intelligence post as the NYT report suggests, the weak security arrangements can only be seen as staggeringly incompetent and worthy of a major Congressional investigation.
The bottom line, though, is that weve lost an important post to keep track of the radical Islamists set loose by the NATO intervention Obama championed. Its nothing short of a catastrophe for American security.>
Bumps in the road to Bam’s change; broken eggs on the way to Utopia, same thing.
If we were trying to corral all of the MANPADS...We might now know who has them.
wHAT OTHER INTELLIGENCE ARE WE LOOKING FOR?
Cheers!
your bumps in the road is just the beginning, before this guy is done there will be many more, this guy needs to be removed in nov.and that is no joke
Perhaps the FBI investigation will required more then four years to complete.
Perhaps it was because Zer0 and his State Department hag wanted our CIA to experience a setback. It would be one more step towards Israel's destruction.
That was the Libyan burn.
While serving in a “denied area” back in the day, “inches,” were the guidelines. We used a ruler to determine how many folders in each safe could be shredded in the estimated time it would take an enemy to breach all the layers of security, get to the upper floor of the mission building and break into our operations area. Fortunately we never had a real test.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.