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Friday, August 16, 2013
Three more officials to testify about Benghazi attacks
Three more officials to testify about Benghazi attacks
In
this Thursday, Sept. 13, 2012, file photo, a Libyan man investigates
the inside of the U.S. Consulate after an attack that killed four
Americans. /AP Photo
As the deputy chief of mission for the
U.S. in Libya, Gregory Hicks was on the ground at the U.S. Embassy in
Tripoli on September 11, 2012, when terrorists launched two attacks on
American compounds in Benghazi.
Gregory Hicks
Hicks and two other government officials have been named as
witnesses for a Congressional hearing Wednesday before the House
Oversight Committee. The others are: Eric Nordstrom, the former lead
security official for the State Department in Libya, and Mark Thompson,
the acting deputy assistant secretary for counterterrorism at the State
Department. Other so-called "whistleblowers" from federal agencies,
including the CIA, have provided information to Congressional
investigators, but are said to be unwilling - so far - to speak publicly
because they aren't authorized by their agencies to do so. Some claim
fear of retaliation.
It's been a remarkably long period
of silence from the dozens of American survivors and eyewitnesses who
were in Libya the night of the attacks. It's not publicly known what
testimony the witnesses will give at this week's hearing, but in a
series of interviews and communications, CBS News has obtained
information about some of areas of knowledge the witnesses can address.
Hicks
was number two to Ambassador Christopher Stevens, who was killed in the
attacks. With Stevens in Benghazi on September 11, Hicks was the top
Foreign Service official at the U.S. Embassy in Tripoli. When the first
U.S. compound in Benghazi fell under attack, Hicks reportedly took the
frantic call.
"Greg, we are under attack," Ambassador Stevens told Hicks on the phone. Those were the last words he heard from Stevens.
According to Rep. Darrell Issa, R-Calif., who appeared Sunday on "Face the Nation,"
Hicks recently testified privately to the House Oversight Committee: "I
never reported a demonstration. I reported an attack on the
consulate...I thought it was a terrorist attack from the get-go. I think
everyone in the mission thought it was a terrorist attack from the
beginning."
Hicks was also on the receiving end of calls
when Stevens went missing. Later, he was on the phone when an
unidentified man called the U.S. Embassy using Stevens' own telephone to
say the ambassador was at Benghazi hospital. Still later, Hicks said he
was there when Stevens' body was turned over to U.S. personnel under
circumstances that still remain mysterious.
Throughout the night, sources say Americans on the ground in Libya at times felt helpless and abandoned.
"We
relied on Washington for dispassionate assessment," one eyewitness told
CBS News. "Instead, they [Washington officials] were asking us what
help we needed. We answered: 'Send reinforcements!' "
But they were told immediate help wasn't available.
Embassy personnel say they repeatedly asked the Defense Attache on site in Tripoli for military assistance.
"Isn't there anything available?" one Embassy official says he asked. "But the answer was 'no.'"
"What
about Aviano?" the official pressed, referencing the NATO air base with
US assets in northeastern Italy. "No," was the answer.
Two of the four Americans killed that night died hours after the first attack began.
Some have complained the Obama Administration has not explained
why there were no military resources available to turbulent North
Africa on the Sept. 11 attacks, even at the large Souda Bay U.S. Naval
base less than an hour's flight from Libya. The State Department's
independent Accountability Review Board said government officials did
everything they could, considering the challenges. The Defense
Department has since reported implementation of improvements to make
military resources more readily available if needed.
Another
witness for Wednesday's hearing, Mark Thompson, is a counterterrorism
expert. He's likely to address another sore spot surrounding the night
of the attacks: the fact that the Obama Administration did not convene
its top interagency counterterrorism resource, the Counterterrorism
Security Group (CSG). According to Rep. Issa, Thompson will testify that
he was locked out of the process "even though he was the individual who
was supposed to react to these kinds of things."
Counterterrorism
sources and internal emails reviewed by CBS News express frustration
that key responders were ready to deploy, but were not called upon to
help in the attack. National Security Council Spokesman Tommy Vietor
told CBS News the CSG was not needed.
"From the moment
the president was briefed on the Benghazi attack, the response effort
was handled by the most senior national security officials in
governments. Members of the CSG were of course involved in these
meetings and discussions to support their bosses," said Vietor.
"The
CSG is the one group that's supposed to know what resources every
agency has. They know of multiple options and have the ability to
coordinate counterterrorism assets across all the agencies," a
high-ranking government official told CBS News. "They were not allowed
to do their job. They were not called upon."
Absent
coordination from Counterterrorism Security Group, a senior U.S.
counterterrorism official says the response to the crisis became more
confused. "The response process was isolated at the most senior level,"
says an official referring to top officials in the executive branch. "My
fellow counterterrorism professionals and I (were) not consulted."
Hicks
and several others whose accounts are at odds with official government
statements about Benghazi have reported feeling marginalized,
intimidated and/or subjected to threats of retaliation.
The top Democrat on the House Intelligence Committee, Dutch Ruppersberger, told Bob Schieffer on Sunday's "Face the Nation:"
"Let's get the facts. This should not be a partisan issue at all. This
should be to get the facts, an open issue, and to hear from everybody.
And when you hear allegations that people are told not to talk, I would
hope those issues would come out and if that's the case we should be
held accountable."
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