This Is How Easy It Is to Enter the U.S. Consulate in Benghazi
It's been more than six weeks since the U.S. compound in Benghazi was attacked, but reporters are still turning up sensitive U.S. documents lying about the wreckage. Today, Foreign Policy published details from recently-recovered documents that "express strong fears" from Amb. Chris Stevens and other personnel that the security situation in Benghazi was untenable and additional security was not being provided. But forget about early warning signs for a second and consider the embarrassment that the FBI can't seem to do the job they were supposed to do more than a month ago: Search the Benghazi compound and make sure no more sensitive documents are floating around.
Today's document discovery, which includes State Department correspondence and messages to local and national Libyan authorities, feels like deja vu given the previous discoveries in the last two months. You might recall:
At the outset, you could give U.S. officials the benefit of the doubt that it was too dangerous to go back and secure the compound, but when journalists can so easily enter the compound and retrieve documents, it does seem a bit incompetent. FP says the FBI declined to comment when asked about the slow recovery process but the magazine found locals who were willing to talk. "According to a Benghazi resident who resides near the consulate, the FBI team spent only three hours examining the compound." Probably should've done a few more sweeps.
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John Hudson
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