Lenas wrote:
When Reagan took a bullet and then got shoved into a car, was the SS no longer providing security for him because he had already been injured?
No, they were continuing to provide security. Providing security is something you do before a threat actually materializes. You also continue it after the threat has abated. When you show up in the middle of or aftermath of an incident and start taking action, that's not what we customarily refer to as "providing security". That's defending the principle. When Hinckley shot the president,
Let me give you another example. Lets suppose we set up an infantry platoon patrol base. It is cutomarily a triangle with a squad on each side. If the perimter is probed, only the squad on that side will fire, for obvious reasons. The other two squads are still providing security, even though they are not actively engaging the enemy. The engaged squad has gone beyond providing security; it is now engaging the enemy.
In fact, if one were to refer to a person's heroic attempt to defend another from harm when the defender had no obligation to do so as simply "providing security", that would be a major downplaying of the heroism of what they did. If what you're saying about Obama's statement is true, then he unnecessarily obfuscated his own point, and in the process belittled the voluntary heroism of these two men by calling it merely "providing security".
Technically, according to the dictionary, you could call what they did providing security, but people don't say that in actual practice.
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Remember this thread all you want, but I'm not jumping through any hoops. That's how I interpret his statement. Two US operatives were in an area under attack by enemy forces and they responded by defending civilians and countrymen, ultimately losing their lives in the process. If that's not a continuation of their [military] service then I don't know what is. You're getting stuck on what their official mission was at the time and disregarding what they were doing at the time of their deaths so you can make Obama out to be a liar.
No, we're not getting stuck on anything. It is very common practice when a member of the military leaves the service and goes to a civilian position within the government to refer to that as continuing his service. That's what that customarily refers to. You are trying to insert "military" in there, instead of it referring to public service or government service. Military service is just one type of government/public service.
What you're doing is looking for ways to excuse Obama from being a liar on this.
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They were retired from the military, yes? But what was their charge while they were enlisted, to protect the nation and its citizens, right? That's exactly what they were doing when they voluntarily decided to take up arms and defend a US ambassador. That's a continuation of what their service to our military was when they were still members of it. It's not the reason that they were in Libya, but there are no falsehoods in the statement that they continued their [former] service.
In a moral sense they may have been continuing their military service. However, by working for the CIA they were both morally and in actuality continuing their
public service, which is the most obvious thing for Obama to refer to. Either he said what he wanted to say in an incredibly convoluted manner, and in the process belittled their actions, or he just didn't want to admit that either A) security was that bad B) we had people looking for SAMs or C) both. Given the already-publicly-known threat of loose MANPADs, A) is the most likely.