The
List Of Discrepancies In This State Department Account Of The
Benghazi Attack Are Outrageous
12
October, 2012
September
10 was a normal day in Benghazi for Ambassador Chris Stevens.
He
showed up at work, ran around town conducting business and in
consideration of September 11 the following day, he spent the night
at the consulate.
The
following is the State Department's version of what actually
happened: Stevens never left the consulate compound on the eleventh,
preferring to conduct meetings within the nine-foot walls topped by
barbed wire, rather than venture out and risk any hostilities on the
anniversary of 9/11.
Much
has been made of Stevens' request for additional security, but he
actually got four local militia in addition to his five security
officers assigned to the consulate that day.
By
8:30 p.m. the crew had spent an uneventful day within the walls and
likely thought they were home free.
It
was then that Stevens walked a Turkish official outside the
compound's main entrance, noticed all was quiet and went inside to
retire for the night.
Within
about an hour of the official's departure, guards hear gunfire,
explosions and a general uproar outside the front gate. They run to
the cameras and see a massive group of armed men pouring into the
compound before sounding the alarm, calling the Tripoli embassy,
Washington officials, Libyan authorities, and a local US quick
response team about a mile away.
Then
the guards break from the monitors and the phones grabbing weapons on
their way to sweep Stevens and IT specialist Sean Smith to the
consulate's safe room.
One
agent takes the pair inside while the rest gear up with rifles, body
armor and everything they'll need for battle.
The
safe room is well-fortified and contains water, medical supplies and
windows that open from the inside. What it doesn't have is a proper
ventilation system to prevent the fire ripping through the building's
furnishings, from filling the room with smoke.
While
the attackers can't get into the safe room, they manage to kill
Stevens and the IT specialist with the smoke and drive the agent out
a window. Despite repeated dives back into the safe room, the guard
can't find the other men and clambers to the roof of the compound
where he calls in reinforcements.
The
four remaining American agents rush to Stevens' building in an
armored vehicle to find the collapsed agent and set up a perimeter.
Finally, after taking turns going into the safe room on hands and
knees the guards find Stevens and his companion dead on the floor.
As
they're getting the bodies into the armored vehicle, the response
team shows up with about five dozen Libyan militiamen who attempt to
secure the perimeter. They can't, and decide to all retreat to the
response team's compound.
Carrying
the two bodies in the armored vehicle, agents leave the consulate
traveling a leisurely 15 mph to avoid drawing attention. Not far from
where they started, a team of men urgently signal them inside an
enclosed area, but sensing an attack agents hurry off drawing AK-47
fire from as close as two feet away.
Hand
grenades are thrown at and beneath the vehicle taking out two of its
tires, so agents respond by crossing a median, and driving into
traffic to make their escape.
Once
inside the response team's compound, the team takes up positions and
draws gunfire and rocket propelled grenade attacks well into the
morning.
While
that had been going on, a team of reinforcements from the US Embassy
in Tripoli had arrived at the Benghazi airport to assist. They join
the fight, but it's not enough and two more agents are killed by a
mortar attack.
It's
become a full blown battle and at about 4 a.m. the decision is made
to get the hell out. The hours until daylight are filled with
assembling a convoy capable of carrying everyone from the city to
safety.
The
group and the deceased finally arrive at the airport on the twelfth
and evacuate on two flights.
None
of this takes into account Steven's body with the locals, or any
other of the several details leaked to the press, but it does wrap
the attack up in one neat package.
The
perpetrators of the attack are still at large.

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