Benghazi
Emails: State Department Sought To Change Libya Talking Points
10
May, 2013
.
WASHINGTON
-- Political considerations influenced the talking points that U.N.
Ambassador Susan Rice used five days after the deadly Sept. 11
assault in Benghazi, Libya, with State Department and other senior
administration officials asking that references to terror groups and
prior warnings be deleted, according to department emails.
The
latest disclosures Friday raised new questions about whether the
Obama administration tried to play down any terrorist factor in the
attack on a diplomatic compound just weeks before the November
presidential election. Ambassador Chris Stevens and three other
Americans were killed when insurgents struck the U.S. mission in two
nighttime attacks.
The
White House has insisted that it made only a "stylistic"
change to the intelligence agency talking points from which Rice
suggested on five Sunday talk shows that demonstrations over an
anti-Islamic video devolved into the Benghazi attack.
Numerous
agencies had engaged in an email discussion about the talking points
that would be provided to members of Congress and to Rice for their
public comments. In one email, then-State Department spokeswoman
Victoria Nuland worried about the effect of openly discussing earlier
warnings about the dangers of Islamic extremists in Benghazi.
Nuland's
email said such revelations "could be abused by members of
Congress to beat the State Department for not paying attention to
(central intelligence) agency warnings," according to a
congressional official who reviewed the 100 pages of emails.
The
official spoke only on condition of anonymity because the official
was not authorized to speak publicly about the emails that still have
not been released.
The
final talking points that weekend reflected the work of several
government agencies – CIA, FBI, State Department, the Office of the
Director of National Intelligence – apparently determined to cast
themselves in the best light as the investigation was just getting
underway.
A
scathing independent report in December found that "systematic
failures and leadership and management deficiencies at senior levels"
of the State Department meant that security was "inadequate for
Benghazi and grossly inadequate to deal with the attack that took
place."
Eight
months after the attack, the long-running and bitter dispute between
the Obama administration and congressional Republicans on the subject
shows no sign of abating. The GOP argues that the administration
deliberately tried to mislead Congress and the American people. The
White House insists that Republicans are trying to politicize the
issue.
"There's
an ongoing effort to make something political out of this,"
White House spokesman Jay Carney said Friday of the disclosure of the
emails, which the administration had provided to lawmakers. "The
problem with that effort is that it's never been clear what it is
they think they're accusing the administration of doing."
Republicans
have complained that the administration was trying to conceal that
the attack was the work of terrorists and not a protest over an
anti-Islamic film that got out of hand. Such revelations just before
the election perhaps could have undercut President Barack Obama's
record on fighting terrorism, including the killing of 9/11
mastermind Osama bin Laden, one of his re-election strengths.
The
State Department emails and other internal administration
deliberations were summarized last month in an interim investigative
report by Republicans on five House committees. New details about
political concerns and the names of the administration officials who
wrote the emails concerning the talking points emerged on Friday.
Following
Capitol Hill briefings in the days after the attack, members of
Congress asked the CIA for talking points to explain the assault, and
the CIA under the direction of David Petraeus put together an
assessment.
It
said Islamic extremists with ties to al-Qaida took part in the
attack, cited reports linking the attack to the group Ansar
al-Sharia, mentioned the experience of Libyan fighters and referred
to previous warnings of threats in Benghazi.
The
reference to al-Sharia was deleted, but Nuland wrote later that night
that changes she had seen "don't resolve all my issues and those
of my building leadership, they are consulting with NSS," a
reference to the National Security staff within the White House.
She
also wrote that she had serious concerns about giving information to
members of Congress "to start making assertions to the media
that we ourselves are not making because we don't want to prejudice
the investigation."
Senior
administration officials, including Jake Sullivan, deputy chief of
staff at the State Department, and Ben Rhodes, the White House deputy
national security adviser, met that Saturday morning to discuss the
talking points.
Following
the meeting, Deputy CIA Director Mike Morell produced a final set of
talking points that deleted mentions of al-Qaida, the experience of
fighters in Libya and Islamic extremists.
The
next day, Sunday, Sept. 16, Rice appeared on the talk shows and said
evidence gathered so far showed no indication of a premeditated or
coordinated strike. She said the attack in Benghazi, powered by
mortars and rocket-propelled grenades, appeared to be a copycat of
demonstrations that had erupted hours earlier outside the U.S.
Embassy in Cairo, spurred by accounts of a YouTube film attributed to
a California man mocking the Prophet Muhammad.
"In
fact this was not a preplanned, premeditated attack. That what
happened initially was that it was a spontaneous reaction to what had
just transpired in Cairo as a consequence of the video," she
said. "People gathered outside the embassy, and then it grew
very violent. Those with extremist ties joined the fray and came with
heavy weapons, which unfortunately are quite common in
post-revolutionary Libya, and that then spun out of control."
Administration
officials said Friday they deleted the references to terror groups
because it was then unclear – and still is – who was responsible
for the attack.
Rice's
depiction of the chain of events contrasted with one offered by
Libya's Interim President Mohammed el-Megarif, who said at the time
there was no doubt the perpetrators had predetermined the date of the
attack.
"It
was planned, definitely. It was planned by foreigners, by people who
entered the country a few months ago," el-Megarif said. "And
they were planning this criminal act since their arrival."
At
a House hearing on Wednesday, Rep. Trey Gowdy, R-S.C., read from an
email he said was written by Beth Jones, the State Department
official responsible for Near Eastern affairs, the day after the
Benghazi attack that suggested the State Department had at least some
belief that the attack was the work of terrorists.
According
to Gowdy's reading, the Sept. 12, 2012, email by Jones said: "I
spoke to the Libyan ambassador and emphasized importance of Libyan
leaders continuing to make strong statements. ... When he said his
government suspected that former Gadhafi regime elements carried out
the attacks, I told him that the group that conducted the attacks,
Ansar al-Sharia, is affiliated with Islamic terrorists."
The
Republican lawmaker said the email by Jones was sent to a number of
State Department officials, including Nuland.
Yet
Rice still went on the Sunday talk shows several days later to
"perpetuate a demonstrably false narrative," Gowdy said.
State
Department spokeswoman Jen Psaki said Friday that the department
reviewed the talking points on Friday, Sept. 14, and raised two
primary concerns.
"First,
that the points went further in assigning responsibility than
preliminary assessments suggested and there was concern about
preserving the integrity of the investigation. Second, that the
points were inconsistent with the public language the administration
had used to date – meaning members of Congress would be providing
more guidance to the public than the administration."
An
official familiar with the emails said former Secretary of State
Hillary Rodham Clinton was unaware of Nuland's concerns about the
talking points. The official spoke on condition of anonymity because
she was not authorized to discuss the matter publicly.
The
White House has long maintained that it played a minimal role in
crafting the talking points, pinning that process on intelligence
agencies. The White House also said it made just one "stylistic"
change to the talking points, which was to change the reference to
the Benghazi compound from a "consulate" to a "diplomatic
mission."
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