Northeast Stinger
Helluva Engineer
- Messages
- 10,790
Thank you for your diplomatic response.You are certainly entitled to your own opinion stinger. I find it laughable you claim my opinion is inaccurate.
My opinion is that the State Department / administration knew, or should have known, the situation on the ground was not stable and was unsafe for the mission and intelligence assets present. The Brits had the common sense to pull their people out. We did not. After choosing to remain we failed to provide adequate military assets to protect our people. This was a failure in leadership pure and simple (also an opinion) God save us from decision makers who would repeat these mistakes.
All of the investigations into this did not yield any thing close to the kind of evidence that would justify the continuing partisan haranguing that we have gotten on the topic. And though you are certainly entitled to your opinion, that was never the official finding of any of the major investigations.
By contrast consider the attack that occurred in Lebanon in 1982. 241 Americans died, not 4. There was one main investigation (conducted by the Reagan Administration who were the ones responsible for the policy in the first place) not over 50 investigations. The military chain of command was found to be at fault but no one was relieved of command and no one was asked to resign from the Administration, as had been repeatedly called for in the case of Benghazi. Several recommendations were made after the attack in Lebanon, virtually most of which were never followed.
Recommendations have been made in the aftermath of Benghazi. We shall see if they make a difference. One troubling thing to me was that, not unlike the false information about Iraq having nuclear and biological weapons prior to the Iraq invasion, the administration once again pointed to the CIA as the source of their bad intelligence talking points. So apparently all of the stuff that went wrong during the Bush Administration has still not been cleaned up.