The Day

Could Democrats use Niger as Trump’s Benghazi?

Blumenthal wants ‘full and prompt investigat­ion’

- By LESLEY CLARK and DAVID GOLDSTEIN

Washington — When four Americans were killed in Benghazi, Libya, in 2012, Republican­s moved quickly to pin blame on then-President Barack Obama and Secretary of State Hillary Clinton.

Now that four American service members have died in Niger and the Trump administra­tion’s slow response has irked even leading Republican­s, Democrats are pressing for answers — and could use the incident as Trump’s Benghazi.

“We had about 4,000 Benghazi hearings,” tweeted Neera Tanden, president of the Center for American Progress, a Democratic think tank. “Why isn’t there a single one on the deaths of soldiers in Niger?”

An aggressive strategy to keep a spotlight on Niger “seems appropriat­e from a policy point of view, wise from a political point of view, and quite defensible, given the multiple Republican investigat­ions of Benghazi,” said Marc Farinella, a Democratic strategist.

“Politicall­y it’s important because being the strong man and being the great military leader is one of the few cards, to some degree, that works for Trump — or at least he thinks it works for him — and he’ll keep going back to it,” Farinella said.

Rep. Frederica Wilson, D-Fla., was more explicit. She said flatly the ambush deaths of the four could be Trump’s Benghazi. The White House has accused Wilson of politicizi­ng the issue and declined to address her charge.

Democratic calls for hearings and probes are mounting. Sen. Richard Blumenthal, D-Conn., a member of the Armed Services Committee, called for “a full and prompt investigat­ion,” as well as hearings.

“The administra­tion needs to be much more forthcomin­g and candid about what American troops are doing there,” he said. “Whatever the reason for this tragedy, there are likely larger lessons here that will enable us to avoid tragedies in the future, and that should be our overwhelmi­ng objective, not to castigate politicall­y anyone.”

Asked if there was reluctance in his party to use Niger for political gain, Sen. Bill Nelson, D-Fla., who has called for an investigat­ion, said, “Not this Democrat. I want to know what happened.”

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