A Libyan man investigates the inside of the U.S. consulate in Benghazi, Libya, on Sept. 12.(Photo: Mohammad Hannon, AP)
WASHINGTON -- Lawmakers want to know why security was "grossly
inadequate" at the U.S. diplomatic mission in Libya when militants
stormed the facility on Sept. 11, killing the ambassador and three other
Americans, and why the military failed to respond faster during the
nine-hour assault.
Members of the Senate and House foreign affairs
committees on Thursday were to question Deputy Secretary of State
William Burns, who is in charge of policy, and Deputy Secretary of State
Thomas Nides, who is in charge of management, at back-to-back
congressional hearings.
Their public testimony comes two days
after an independent review panel issued a blistering report blaming
management failures at the State Department for the lack of security at
the Benghazi compound. It also comes as fallout from the report forced
four State Department officials to step down Wednesday.
"Why, if
we quickly did find out it was in part a terrorist attack, why wasn't
there better security on that evening with the ambassador in Benghazi
and in the consulate and what do we need to do to make sure?" said Sen.
Johnny Isakson, R-Ga., a member of the Senate Foreign Relations
Committee.
"People keep forgetting that was about a nine-hour
attack moving from the consulate to the annex. We had already called up
troops from Fort Bragg (North Carolina) and got them to Sicily before
the attack was over," he said. "We knew it was a big-time attack. We
flew in two planes from Djibouti, additional assets from Croatia. We
need to find out who knew what when."
U.S. Ambassador Chris
Stevens was killed in the attack along with information specialist Sean
Smith and former Navy SEALs Glen Doherty and Tyrone Woods, who were
contractors working for the CIA. Stevens was the first U.S. ambassador
killed in the line of duty since 1979.
An unclassified version of
the report by the Accountability Review Board concluded, "Systematic
failures and leadership and management deficiencies at senior levels
within two bureaus of the State Department resulted in a Special Mission
security posture that was inadequate for Benghazi and grossly
inadequate to deal with the attack that took place."
The report
singled out the Bureau of Diplomatic Security and the Bureau of Near
East Affairs for criticism, saying there appeared to be a lack of
cooperation and confusion over protection at the mission in Benghazi, a
city in eastern Libya that was relatively lawless after the revolution
that toppled Libyan strongman Moammar Gadhafi.
Obama
administration officials said those who resigned were Eric Boswell,
assistant secretary of state for diplomatic security; Charlene Lamb,
deputy assistant secretary responsible for embassy security; and Raymond
Maxwell, deputy assistant secretary of state who oversees the Maghreb
nations of Libya, Algeria, Tunisia and Morocco. The officials spoke on
condition of anonymity because they weren't authorized to discuss
personnel matters publicly.
Some of the three may have the option of being reassigned to other duties, the officials said.
State
Department spokeswoman Victoria Nuland said the department had accepted
the resignations of four people: Boswell and three others she declined
to identify.
The resignations did little to mollify lawmakers who
will question Burns and Nides and who insist that Secretary of State
Hillary Rodham Clinton testify in the coming weeks despite her plan to
leave the administration.
Clinton had been scheduled to testify
before the committees, but canceled after fainting and sustaining a
concussion last week while recovering from a stomach virus. Clinton is
under doctors' orders to rest.
"She is ultimately responsible for
the department and U.S. posts around the world. Her testimony before the
Senate Foreign Relations Committee is indispensable to any effort to
address this failure and put in place a process to ensure this never
happens again," Sen. Marco Rubio, R-Fla., said.
The report's
findings underscore a fundamental problem the State Department has been
trying to address for decades without success: how to protect diplomats
while allowing them to perform their duties to reach out to foreign
governments and the public to promote U.S. interests and values.
In a letter to Congress, Clinton said "our diplomats cannot work in bunkers and do their jobs."
"When
America is absent, especially from dangerous places, there are
consequences," she said. "Extremism takes root, our interests suffer,
and our security at home is threatened. We must accept a level of risk
to protect this country we love and to advance our interests and values
around the world."
The American Foreign Service Association, the
union that represents U.S. diplomats, said it agreed. It welcomed the
findings and accepted the board's 29 recommendations for improving
embassy security, particularly at high-threat posts.
"There is
inherent risk in the practice of active and effective diplomacy, and our
diplomatic personnel will always be exposed to a degree of harm in the
line of duty," the association said in a statement. "It is our
responsibility to do all we can to minimize the risk and balance it with
the importance of the mission and to ensure that the missions we
undertake have the personnel and financial resources to achieve policy
goals."
At the State Department, retired Adm. Mike Mullen,
co-chairman of the review board, said the mission's security fell
through bureaucratic cracks caused in part because buildings were
categorized as temporary. Budget constraints also led some officials to
be more concerned with saving scarce money than in security, the report
said.
The other co-chairman, retired ambassador Thomas Pickering,
said personnel on the ground in Benghazi had reacted to the attack with
bravery and professionalism. But he said the security precautions were
"grossly inadequate" and the contingent was overwhelmed by the heavily
armed militants.
"They did the best they possibly could with what they had but what they had wasn't enough," Pickering said.
Pickering and Mullen spoke shortly after briefing members of Congress in private.
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