By Mona Charen
Friday, May 02, 2014
The Ben Rhodes memo revealing the duplicity of this
administration on the subject of Benghazi reminds us about the character of
those involved. That President Barack Obama could lie so evenly and so
passionately (remember the second presidential debate?) is not perhaps
surprising at this stage. But let's not forget what it took for Hillary Clinton
to lie to the grieving father of an American hero.
First, a refresher on the facts (as they were certainly
known to the principals):
A convoy of well-armed terrorists rolled into the complex
housing the American consulate in Benghazi on Sept. 11, 2012. The attackers
sealed off streets leading to the consulate with trucks and then commenced the
attack on the building using rocket-propelled grenades, AK-47s, mortars and
artillery mounted on trucks. Ambassador Chris Stevens called Deputy Chief of
Mission Gregory Hicks for help, saying, "Greg, we're under attack."
Hicks, who was in Tripoli, conveyed this up the line, but no help arrived.
The terrorists killed Stevens and another American and
set the building ablaze. (Two more Americans would die later attempting to
protect the annex.) As soon as the next morning, Congressman Mike Rogers,
chairman of the House Intelligence Committee, described the attack as a "commando-style
event" with "coordinated fire, direct fire, (and) indirect
fire." A few days later the Libyan president said that it was a planned
terrorist attack. He also said that the idea it was a "spontaneous protest
that just spun out of control is completely unfounded and preposterous."
Yet a well-orchestrated disinformation campaign by the Obama administration
managed to put the press off the story and mislead the American people.
The brazenness and scope of the disinformation would make
any KGB colonel sigh with admiration. At 10:32 on the night of the attack,
Clinton issued a statement deploring violence in response to "inflammatory
material posted on the Internet." In the days that followed, the president
and his spokesman repeatedly invoked the supposedly offensive video as the
cause of the attack. The president and secretary of state even filmed
commercials to play in Muslim countries denouncing the video while also
upholding America's tradition of religious and political freedom. "We
reject all efforts to denigrate the religious beliefs of others," said the
president. "But there is absolutely no justification to this type of
senseless violence."
But as the State Department finally disclosed a month
after the attack (and as had been widely reported before then), there was no
protest outside the American consulate in Benghazi. Nothing. Not a peep.
As the Rhodes memo makes clear, the president sent his
U.N. ambassador to the Sunday shows to lie. Susan Rice was "to underscore
that these protests are rooted in an Internet video, and not a broader failure
of policy." Rice did as she was told. The election was less than two
months away. A foreign policy failure would not be politically convenient, so
it would be made to go away. It's one of the minor injustices of this sorry
story that Rice has received more condemnations than the president or secretary
of state, who pulled the strings.
Clinton began to peddle the "Internet video"
story from the first moments after the guns went silent in Benghazi. When the
Libyan ambassador to the U.S. apologized to her on Sept. 13, 2012, for the
"terror attack," she ignored this and burbled on about "the
innocence of Muslims."
The president, vice president and Clinton welcomed the
bodies of Stevens, Tyrone Woods, Sean Smith and Glen Doherty to Andrews Air
Force Base in Maryland on Sept. 14. According to Woods' father, the vice
president used remarkably offensive locker room talk about the deceased Navy
SEAL, but Clinton stayed on message. She greeted the man whose son had bravely
attempted to fight off far more numerous and better-armed terrorists on the
roof of the CIA annex and who gave his life. Did she praise the courage and
self-sacrifice of the decorated Navy SEAL? Did she express regret that he had
been left nearly alone to fight off the Islamist terrorists? No. Not even the
flag-draped coffins spread before Clinton could shake her iron determination to
stick with the script. She told Woods they would catch the guy who made the
Internet film and make sure he was punished.
Most politicians are capable of stretching the truth on
occasion. But this question, this setting and this egregious a lie suggest that
Clinton's conscience -- if she ever had one -- is growing flaccid from disuse.
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