It has appointed a review board to investigate the controversy

More than three weeks after a deadly assault on a U.S. Consulate in Libya killed four Americans, FBI investigators spent Thursday examining the destroyed complex in the port city of Benghazi, CBS News reports.

CBS News correspondent Bob Orr reports a team of forensic specialists were escorted by a small U.S. military contingent that provided security, according to a U.S. official. The investigators spent several hours at the consulate and annex sites, the official estimated.

CBS News senior correspondent John Miller reports the team collected whatever evidence they could from the site, given the amount of damage the area sustained in the attack, according to a U.S. official.

The official wouldn’t tell Orr what was recovered from the scenes, describing the work as a general effort to collect and document potential evidence.

More in U.S. compound attack in Benghazi

U.S. Ambassador to Libya Christopher Stevens and three other Americans were killed in the assault, which the White House has referred to as a terrorist attack.

Meanwhile, CBS News investigative correspondent Sharyl Attkisson reports that, according to a House committee, a State Department officer told panel members there were 13 threats made against the consulate during the six months before the attack on the facility on the 11th anniversary of the Sept. 11 terror attacks.

The officer told committee members that the U.S. mission had made repeated requests for increased security.

A spokesman for the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee, which is holding a hearing on the controversy next week, said its source is Regional Security Officer Eric Nordstrom, who was stationed in Libya from September 2011 to June 2012.

According to the panel, Nordstrom has already given a private briefing to members. The State Department confirmed he will appear at a committee hearing Wednesday with the deputy assistant secretary for international programs, Charlene Lamb, who is involved in reviewing security requests, Attkisson reports.

Separately, The Washington Post reports one of its reporters found “sensitive documents” that were “only loosely secured” in the burned-out remains of the consulate Wednesday. The newspaper says the discovery “further complicates efforts by the Obama administration to respond to what has rapidly become a major foreign-policy issue just weeks before the election.”

Republicans have accused the Obama administration of being unprepared for the terrorist attack by Muslim extremists on the consulate, then allegedly issuing misinformation about it.

Initially, U.S. Ambassador to the U.N. Susan Rice suggested the attack was spontaneous, sparked by an anti-Islam video on the Web.

Secretary of State Hillary Clinton has said she’s committed to finding out exactly what happened leading up to the assault and whether security requests were made but denied.

“No one wants the answers more than we do here at the (State) Department,” Clinton said. It has appointed a review board to investigate the controversy.

A letter to Clinton from the committee chairman, Darrell Issa, R-Calif., and panel member Rep. Jason Chaffetz, cod 카지노 R-Utah, had said the information came from “individuals with direct knowledge of events in Libya.”

Related Posts

there’s a strike at the station” “Those stories weren’t being written, and they certainly weren’t being published in poetry or mainstream publications,” said photographer Lyle Owerko. “So what better way than to communicate a message through sound, which has been done, you know, through the history of music? “The boombox as an image represents community,” he said. “It represents defiance. It represents an outgoing nature. It represents I need to be seen, paid attention to, and defined.” Owerko has his own collection of boomboxes. Their images and stories are documented in his new book, “The Boombox Project.” “You hear stories of back in the day, like on the beach, or people sitting on the subway, going to the beach, and they’re all listening to their own boomboxes, and they all tune them in together, and get that same song going,” Owerko said, “so that it’s like a whole democracy of sound.” Of course, not everyone wanted to join this sonic community … The boombox had its detractors, a sentiment popularized in the 1986 film “Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home,” when Spock used the Vulcan grip to paralyze a boombox-wielding punk. But it was too late – the boombox was everywhere. And it wasn’t just an inner-city thing, says Owerko: “The boombox is borderless. “You know, it extended around the globe, you know, and it was wherever people wanted to listen to music – whether it was a beach cafe, in a mechanic’s shop, in an artist’s studio.” Today the boombox is regarded as a symbol of rebellious spirit and remains a pop culture icon. And though it’s still seen, it’s no longer heard. Looks like the big bad boombox got drowned out . . . by the little bitty Walkman. The boombox was on the wrong side of history, getting bigger as people were plugging into smaller and smaller devices – so small that nowadays, they fit in the palm of your hand. “So this ability to be in your own little bubble and hear music, you know, still get great sonics but just right into your ear as opposed to everybody else’s, it was good for some people and bad for others,” said Fab5Freddy. And though it might be gone, it’s always important to once in a while hit pause. Then rewind. And pay respect. For more info: •  “The Boombox Project: The Machines, the Music, and the Urban Underground” by Lyle Owerko (Abrams)
It’s similar to the current requirement for drug companies to spell out a drug’s side effects in TV ads
He claims there was a rally or protest organized by al Qaeda supporters in June 2012 in the city, which is about 400 miles east of Tripoli

No comments

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *