There's
A Reason Why All Of The Reports About Benghazi Are So Confusing
3
November, 2012
At
this point it's clear that the US had something to hide at Benghazi,
and that's why reports coming out of the Libyan city have been so
confusing.
Two
key details provided about the the Sept. 11 attack in
Benghazi that killed four Americans cannot be underestimated.
"The
U.S. effort in Benghazi was at
its heart a CIA operation,"
officials briefed on intelligence told
the Wall Street Journal,
and there's evidence that U.S. agents—particularly murdered
U.S. ambassador Chris Stevens—were at least aware of heavy
weapons moving from Libya to Syrian rebels.
WSJ reports
that the State Department presence in Benghazi "provided
diplomatic cover" for the previously
hidden CIA mission, which
involved finding and repurchasing heavy weaponry looted from Libyan
government arsenals. These weapons are presumably from Muammar
Gaddafi's stock of
about 20,000 portable heat-seeking missiles, the bulk of which
were SA-7 surface-to-air
anti-aircraft missiles.
What's
odd is that a Libyan ship—which reportedly weighed
400 tons and
included SA-7s—docked in southern Turkey on
Sept. 6 and
its cargo ended
up in the hands of Syrian rebels.
The man who organized that
shipment, Tripoli Military Council head Abdelhakim
Belhadj, worked
directly with
Stevens during the Libyan revolution.
Stevens'
last meeting on Sept. 11 was with Turkish Consul General Ali
Sait Akin, and a
source told Fox News that Stevens
was in Benghazi "to negotiate
a weapons transfer in an effort to get SA-7 missiles out of the hands
of Libya-based extremists."
Since
Stevens and his staff served as "diplomatic cover" for the
CIA—only
seven of
more than 30 Americans evacuated from Benghazi worked for the
State Department—the spy agency would certainly know about heavy
weapons and Libyan
jihadists flooding
into Syria if Stevens did.
Given
that most of the weapons going
to hard-line jihadists in
Syria are U.S.-made and are being handed
out by the CIA,
it's not a stretch to wonder if the CIA is indirectly arming Syrian
rebels with heavy weapons as well.
If
President Obama's position is to refrain
from arming rebels with
heavy weapons, but regime change in Syria is advantageous, then a
covert CIA operation with plausible deniability seems to be the only
answer. It's a dicey dance, especially if it's exposed.
In
an article titled "Petraeus’s
Quieter Style at C.I.A. Leaves Void on Libya Furor," Scott
Shane of the The
New York Times notes
that CIA Director David Petraeus has "managed the delicate
task of supporting rebels in Syria’s civil war while trying to
prevent the arming of anti-American extremists."
In
regards to Benghazi, Petraeus has "stayed away in an effort to
conceal the agency's role in collecting intelligence and providing
security," the WSJ reported, noting that during the attack "some
officials at State and the Pentagon were largely in the dark about
the CIA's role."
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