Aizle wrote:
What I'm curious to find out is what the sources of intel were at the time the comments were made. Hindsight is 20/20 and frankly I give any administration some leeway when it's the immediate aftermath. I'm sure there was a **** ton of stuff going on and it's very easy in that situation to get things wrong.
I still don't see anything sinister in the comments that were made and frankly don't believe that this was some big cover up.
That said, it has become obvious that we weren't handling security concerns over there properly and that's definitely a problem that needs to be addressed.
The freaking State Department said there was no protest, State Department Officials "made clear that they were not the ones who reached a "conclusion" about a protest being the causal, or preceding, event before the violence that claimed Stevens and three other U.S. diplomats' lives." Yet, UN Ambassador (a State Department position) Susan Rice, insisted multiple times on the 16th that the video trailer was the reason for the protest that precipitated the attack.
If the State Department is reporting the cause for the attack was something that they didn't believe was the cause, who made the decision to go with that line of explanation?
Once again, there was no protest, Ambassador Stevens escorted a Turkish diplomat out the front gate at ~8:30; the attack began at ~9:40 pm with agents hearing loud noises, gunfire and explosions near the front gate. They sound the alarm...
The above timeline was known in "near real time" as Deputy Assistant Secretary of State Charlene Lamb has testified.
Why rush to present a conclusion that differs from the known facts?
_________________
"Dress cops up as soldiers, give them military equipment, train them in military tactics, tell them they’re fighting a ‘war,’ and the consequences are predictable." —Radley Balko