On the last day of his life, U.S.
Ambassador Chris Stevens retired to his room in the American diplomatic
compound in Benghazi, Libya at about 9 p.m. after a quiet day.
Forty minutes later, security
agents heard gunfire and explosions near the front gate of the compound, which
recently had been reinforced with nine-foot walls and concrete Jersey barriers,
two State Department officials told reporters yesterday.
Their narrative of what happened on
the night of Sept. 11 is the first detailed account of how Stevens died, and it
contradicts the Obama administration’s initial contention that the attack began
as a spontaneous protest over an anti-Islamic video clip. The officials also
offered the first detailed description of the compound’s and Stevens’ security,
which are the focus of a hearing today by the House Oversight and Government
Reform Committee.
U.S. Ambassador to the United
Nations Susan Rice told television news programs on Sept. 16 that intelligence
at that point showed the attack started as “a spontaneous, not premeditated
response” to demonstrations in Egypt over a “very offensive video.” Then it
“seems to have been hijacked, let us say, by some individual clusters of
extremists,” she said.
The officials who described the
attack yesterday, though, said the State Department never concluded that it
began as a protest over the video. There were no protests at or near the
compound that day, they said, speaking on condition of anonymity while the
incident remains under investigation.
Sudden Attack
While the account is certain to add
fuel to the partisan battle over preparations for and response to the attack by
President Barack Obama’s administration, it also is a vivid description of the
final hours of one of the nation’s most highly regarded diplomats and three
other Americans.
The attack came suddenly, the two
officials said. The post’s security cameras showed a large number of armed men
storming the compound, which is about three football fields long and 100 yards
wide, said the officials, who’ve reviewed reports of the assault.
The attackers immediately set fire
to the building known as the barracks, which housed the compound’s Libyan
guards. Then they penetrated the building where Stevens was staying during a
visit to Benghazi from Tripoli, the Libyan capital. It contained a protected
“safe haven” walled off by a metal grill with locks, the officials said.
Safe Haven
The attackers looked through the
grill and saw nothing. They couldn’t break the locks to enter the safe haven,
and though no one got in, a security agent with Stevens was prepared to shoot
anyone who did.
Instead, the attackers poured
diesel fuel in and around the building and set it on fire, according to the two
officials.
Stevens was trapped in the burning
building as it quickly filled with smoke. By the time the intruders left, the
officials said, it was difficult to see or breathe. The ambassador, along with
Sean Smith, a foreign-service information officer, and the security agent moved
to a bathroom with a window in an attempt to get air.
The three men were on the bathroom
floor, desperate for air, when they decided they needed to leave the building.
The security agent later told State Department officials that he wasn’t able to
see three feet in front of him.
With dozens of armed attackers
still at the compound, the agent led Stevens and Smith to a bedroom that had a
window exit as more shooting and explosions could be heard outside and tracer
bullets pierced the night.
Missing Persons
The agent, barely able to breathe,
escaped through the bedroom window, only to discover that Stevens and Smith
were no longer with him.
The agent re-entered the building
several times in an attempt to find the two men. He never did. He finally
staggered up a ladder to the roof, where he radioed other security agents for
help, though he could barely speak, the two officials said.
The other agents, scattered at two
different structures in the compound, drove to the ambassador’s building in an
armored vehicle and made repeated attempts to feel their way through the smoke
and fire to find Stevens and Smith.
When they found Smith, the
information officer was dead. The ambassador was still missing.
Security at the compound consisted
of five diplomatic security special agents and four Libyans who were members of
the Feb. 17 Brigades, a militia assisting the Libyan government, the two
officials said.
Reinforcements Arrive
Then a so-called quick reaction
security team, housed in an annex about 1.2 miles (1.9 kilometers) from the
compound, arrived.
As the additional agents tried to
secure the building’s perimeter, they also made repeated attempts to find
Stevens. One agent took off his shirt, dipped it into the compound’s swimming
pool, and put it back on before heading into the smoke-filled building, the two
officials said.
Fearing for their safety, the
agents decided they had to evacuate the compound and get to the annex. They
piled into the armored vehicle with Smith’s corpse and made their way out the
main gate, the two officials said.
With traffic clogging the road, the
vehicle was going about 15 miles an hour when a group of men met them and
signaled for them to turn. The armored vehicle then was attacked with AK-47
rifle fire and hand grenades. The vehicle kept rolling with two flat tires.
Firing Positions
It eventually reached the annex,
where agents took up firing positions on the roof. The annex then took
intermittent fire from AK-47s and rocket-propelled grenades for several hours,
the officials said.
Reinforcements from Tripoli, some
400 miles away, who had been called when the attack began, then arrived and
made their way to the annex.
At about 4 a.m., the two officials
said, the annex took mortar fire. Some rounds landed on the roof, killing two
agents and severely wounding another. Tyrone S. Woods and Glen A. Doherty, two
former Navy SEALs working as security personnel, were the other Americans
killed in Benghazi.
The remaining agents then decided
to evacuate the annex and made their way to the Benghazi airport, where they
were evacuated on two flights.
The two officials said yesterday
they still don’t know how Stevens, 52, made it to the Benghazi Medical Center,
where he was pronounced dead. He was brought to the city’s largest hospital in
a private car driven by unknown Libyan civilians some time after 1 a.m. on
Sept. 12, hospital director Dr. Fathi al Jehani said in an interview with
Bloomberg.
Dialed Phone
Hospital staff members informed the
embassy of his death after they picked his mobile phone out of his pocket and
dialed numbers on it, the two State Department officials said.
The House committee, led by
Republican Representative Darrell Issa of California, will examine the State
Department’s account of the attack today. In an Oct. 2 letter to Secretary of
State Hillary Clinton, he said “the U.S. mission in Libya made repeated
requests for increased security in Benghazi” and “were denied these resources
by officials in Washington.”
The committee staff yesterday
released a redacted e-mail message from Eric Nordstrom, a regional security
officer who was based in Libya, who objected to what he described as a
reduction in security personnel at the consulate.
In the e-mail, Nordstrom said the
security situation in Libya was “not an environment where post should be
directed to ‘normalize’ operations and reduce security resources in accordance
with an artificial time table.”
‘Clear Disconnect’
The State Department, in an earlier
statement, said it had “maintained a constant level of security capability” at
the consulate.
“There was a clear disconnect between what security officials on the
ground felt they needed and what officials in Washington would approve,” Issa
said in a statement yesterday.
The State Department officials
suggested yesterday that no amount of security typically provided for a
consulate would have prevented the Benghazi attack, which they described as
unprecedented in recent diplomatic history.
The administration has retreated
from Rice’s initial description of the attack as a product of a demonstration
against the anti-Muslim video clip, which was seconded by White House press
secretary Jay Carney and State Department spokeswoman Victoria Nuland.
On Sept. 19, Matthew Olsen,
Director of the National Counterterrorism Center, called the assault “a
terrorist attack,” and two days later Clinton and Carney said the same thing.
‘Organized Attack’
Finally, in an e-mailed statement
on Sept. 28, Shawn Turner, director of public affairs for the Director of
National Intelligence, said: “As we learned more about the attack, we revised
our initial assessment to reflect new information indicating that it was a
deliberate and organized terrorist attack carried out by extremists.”
The attack is being investigated by
the Federal Bureau of Investigation and a separate State Department panel.
Speaking yesterday at Geoint, an
annual conference of intelligence officials in Orlando, Florida, sponsored by
the National Geospatial Intelligence Foundation, Director of National
Intelligence James Clapper said the U.S. had no specific tactical warning of
the attack. American eavesdropping and reconnaissance agencies didn’t overhear
or observe the attackers discussing their plans, he said.
The Libya attack and the shifting
accounts of it have become fodder in the presidential campaign. Republican
presidential nominee Mitt Romney said in a foreign policy address on Oct. 8
that the incident “cannot be blamed on a reprehensible video insulting Islam,
despite the administration’s attempts to convince us of that for so long.”
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