“White
House threatens to strike -- you guessed it -- Al-Qaeda. Get 'em,
Obama!”
---
Guy McPherson
AP:
Drones, forces set for possible Libya strike
Armed
drones are flying over northern Africa, and U.S. special forces are
on call, ready to attack if the Obama administration can identify who
was behind the deadly Sept. 11 assault on the American Consulate in
Libya, officials
tell the Associated Press.
16
October, 2012
AP
writes that the White House "is weighing whether the short-term
payoff of exacting retribution on al-Qaeda is worth the risk that
such strikes could elevate the group's profile in the region,
alienate governments the U.S. needs to fight it in the future and do
little to slow the growing terror threat in North Africa."
AP
bases its report on three current officials, a former Obama
administration official and an outside analyst who said
administration officials "have approached him asking for help in
connecting the dots to Mali," where al-Qaeda-linked rebels
seized the northern half of the country in spring.
"The
civilian side is looking into doing something, and is running into a
lot of push-back from the military side," the Washington-based
analyst told AP. "The resistance that is coming from the
military side is because the military has both worked in the region
and trained in the region. So they are more realistic."
The
key suspects are members of the Libyan militia group Ansar
al-Shariah. The group has denied responsibility, but eyewitnesses saw
Ansar fighters at the consulate, and U.S. intelligence intercepted
phone calls after the attack from Ansar fighters to leaders of
al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb, or AQIM, bragging about it. The
affiliate's leaders are known to be mostly in northern Mali, where
they have seized a territory as large as Texas following a coup in
the country's capital.
But
U.S. investigators have only loosely linked "one or two names"
to the attack, and they lack proof that it was planned ahead of time,
or that the local fighters had any help from the larger al-Qaeda
affiliate, officials say.
If
that proof is found, the White House must decide whether to ask
Libyan security forces to arrest the suspects with an eye to
extraditing them to the U.S. for trial, or to simply target the
suspects with U.S. covert action.
U.S.
officials say covert action is more likely. The FBI couldn't gain
access to the consulate until weeks after the attack, so it is
unlikely it will be able to build a strong criminal case. The U.S. is
also leery of trusting the arrest and questioning of the suspects to
the fledgling Libyan security forces and legal system still building
after the overthrow of Moammar Gadhafi in 2011.
On
Friday, Reuters
reported that after the attack on the Benghazi complex, which
killed Ambassador Christopher Stevens and three other Americans, the
CIA abandoned an intelligence-gathering site about a mile away that
was also attacked. Two of the three were killed there by a mortar
shell, sources told Reuters.
"The
publication of satellite photos showing the site's location and
layout have made it difficult, if not impossible, for intelligence
agencies to reoccupy the site," Reuters writes. About 40
personnel escaped to the Benghazi airport, the sources said.
The
previously secret post had been used for gathering information on the
proliferation of weapons stolen from Libyan government arsenals,
including surface-to-air missiles. The sources told Reuters the
post's security features included some fortifications, sensors and
cameras, which were more advanced than those at the villa where
Stevens died.
The
existence of the CIA base emerged last week at a hearing by the
Republican-controlled House Committee on Oversight and Reform, which
is investigating whether security lapses contributed to the attack.
Separately,
Reuters
reports today that the State Department suspected that two
Libyans hired to guard the Benghazi Consulate were involved in an
April incident attack in which a homemade bomb was hurled over the
wall of the mission.
Update
at 7:31 p.m. ET: The communications director for the House Oversight
Committee emailed to emphasize that a State Department official
showed a commercial satellite photo of the Consulate "annex"
at last week's hearing, which Reuters' Friday article points out. No
one at the open hearing described it as a "CIA base," a
term used by The Washington Post's Dana Milbank in an opinion piece,
"Letting
us in on a secret," which Reuters also referenced. Rep.
Jason Chaffetz, R-Utah, and the committee chairman, Rep. Darrell
Issa, R-Calif., objected to the display of the image.

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