Events
in the eastern Libyan city of Benghazi on 11 September gave rise to a host of
questions which still hang in the air nearly two months later. They
are being held in suspension by the processes of the American presidential
election. The Obama administration is not talking and the American
media, by and large, is not asking (and that is reflected in New Zealand
media).
On
that day, the American ambassador and three others were killed in a
well-organised and well-armed attack by al-Qaeda terrorists. This
would not have been a surprise to local staff, or officials in the various
diplomatic and security agencies. The consulate building had been
attacked in a smaller way on two occasions before and the Ambassador had asked
for more protection. The nearby British diplomatic post had also
been attacked (Britain subsequently closed it and withdrew its ambassador), as
had been the local International Committee of the Red Cross
facility. More generally, there was a notable build-up of Islamic
activist groups in the region and plenty of unsecured lethal weaponry left over
from the Libyan civil war.
So
why was the US consulate building in Benghazi left virtually unprotected, why
were requests for augmented security (a marine detachment) denied, and who took
these decisions and why? What is the connection between this neglect
and the protracted campaign of misinformation by the Obama Administration which
followed? In this, various members of the Administration vigorously
promoted the entirely spurious notion that it was not a terrorist attack at all
(despite the use of mortars and other heavy weapons) but just a spontaneous
protest about an anti-Muslim video, which got out of hand.
Of
course, there are political (as opposed to security)
explanations for these things. These have to do with a re-election
campaign based in part on the President’s successes in foreign policy,
exemplified by his elimination of the al-Qaeda leadership in Pakistan and
elsewhere. To beef up the consulate defences in Benghazi and thereby
acknowledge that the fundamentalist threat was far from disposed of, would cut
across this narrative, as would having to send in the ‘heavy brigade’, after
the assault had begun. This is why the Obama administration
continued to deny that the attack was anything other than a protest which
turned violent.
There
is one question about which the reasoning seems a little clearer because an
official statement was made (albeit much later). Once the attack had
begun why was no help sent? US authorities in Washington and
elsewhere (both military and civil) knew what was happening at the consulate
building and the annex in real-time (they had a surveillance drone above) and
the assault continued for many hours. There were apparently ground
attack aircraft available and special forces two hours away in Italy and possibly
other assets in Libya that might have been used (indeed, there are reports that
the intervention of a small former Navy Seal group was contrary to
orders). All this was explained at a recent press conference
by US Defence Secretary Leon Panetta. The problem was uncertainty
about the state of affairs on the ground (the ‘fog of war’ and all
that). They (he was flanked by senior military officers) did not
want to “deploy forces into harm’s way without knowing what was going
on”. It reminded me of an episode from an earlier time.
In
his memoire, Tales from the South Pacific, James Mitchener (then a
serving US officer) describes an episode from 1943, in which an American
aircraft attacking a Japanese naval base (Munda) on an occupied island in the New
Georgian group, is shot down just off-shore. The Japanese defenders
send out a boat to capture him. This is attacked and sunk by other
attacking aircraft. A succession of Allied aircraft then drops rescue
equipment, including a life-raft, whilst keeping up fire on Japanese
shore-batteries. The operation is adopted at the highest level
(Admiral Kessler, ‘Get that man out of there!’). Eventually a New
Zealand seaplane lands to pick him up but, before it can get away, it is
disabled. There are now nine persons in the harbour at
Munda! A continuing presence of allied aircraft prevents the
Japanese from capturing them until two PT boats are diverted from another
operation and complete the rescue. A senior US officer comments, ‘We
lost a P40 (the fighter) and a PBY (the float plane), as well as obstructing
another operation …. it cost $600,000 to save one man’.
There
may be questions here about proportion. About whether it was a
misuse of military assets and about ‘putting people in harm’s way’, but surely
there is no question, from a public servant’s point of view, about what kind of
military one would like to serve in (and it is ‘Admiral Kessler’s
military’). On the other hand, it might be that Panetta and his
bosses were concerned about the possibility of harming innocent civilians and
the political ramifications of that. Of course, we don’t know
because nobody is answering questions on this. And, of course, if
President Obama is re-elected, nobody will. And this applies to a
greater or lesser extent to all the other questions I hinted about in the
earlier sections. To adapt a slogan from an earlier US presidential
election (Clinton, 1992), ‘it’s the politics, stupid!’
2 comments:
This action by the Obama administration is typical of today’s Politics, but one has to say that similar decisions in past history come to mind thick and fast. Especially in the “Gordon” incident during the latter part of the 19th century. Ostensibly Prime Minister Gladstone had sent out General “Chinese” Gordon to the Sudan (a religious mystic) with clear orders to evacuate Khartoum in the Sudan due to the rise of the Mahdi Islamic forces.
Gordon however had other ideas, he remained to defend the indefensible and paid the price with his life, and in the public’s mind became a sort of “Boys Own Saint”; the liberal Gladstone Government also paid a price at the next election. Which shows if anything, the inherent dangers of martyrdom are dangerous at both a military and political level!
Dr Smith on James Mitchener’s book Tales from the South Pacific notes how no matter what the cost the military look after their own, anyone being in the military would know the old maxim “That we look after each other” is an unwritten rule. Hence the SAS never leaving fallen comrades behind.
This is a concept far removed from the Political Corridors of Power, the place that dog eats dog, and friends now become enemies a minute later, and the word military assumes a possible election threat.
One can but wonder at the naive concept that seemingly besets Western Governments over the rise and continuing threat of Islam, is it all to do with OIL? Or perhaps it is the theory that peace or rather appeasement at any price during their term in office will ensure a lifetime after politics?
Who knows? They maybe so dominated by the United Nations and to such an extent, that independence has become a mirage of the past, never again to be emulated in this “new” world; and therefore must follow the pathway of peace as dictated by the United Nations. Another theory which one has to say has caused more deaths, is that of failing to use the ultimate weapons available to win in such conflicts as Vietnam and now Afghanistan. That being the case the West should have followed General “Bobsy” Roberts assessment of Afghanistan “It is not worth annexing, more trouble than it is worth” and “Ring it off from the Empire”. Sound advice...ask the Russians!
The failure of the Obama administration to protect adequately its own Ambassador and staff shows a lack of intestinal fortitude and political cowardice of the highest order. A Roosevelt, Truman or Reagan would have never flinched at their duty to protect and defend.
Brian
Muslims around the world violently protesting the controversial movie, The Innocence of Muslims, either don’t know their own religion, or are lying to themselves about the deficiencies of its founder as recorded in their own holy books.
Islamic scripture (the Koran and accompanying Hadith narratives) records that in the last 10 years of his life, Muhammad led 73 unprovoked terrorist raids against his neighbours to spread Islam by force while indulging his love of murder, rapine and piracy.
As clumsily depicted in The Innocence of Muslims, the menfolk of those attacked on these raids were killed, their women forced into concubinage by Muhammad and his followers, and their children sold as slaves.
The movie also correctly identifies Muhammad as a child molester. Aged 53, Muhammad married a child of six named Aisha. According to the Hadith of Tabari 7: 62:64 “Narrated Aisha, ‘the Messenger [Muhammad] married me when I was six; my marriage was consummated when I was nine.’”
Islamic doctrine holds that every word in the Koran (as placed in chronological order by the Hadiths) is divine revelation set in concrete, so it’s not hard to understand why using it to point out Muhammad’s true nature and character triggers the defence mechanism of Muslim anger.
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