The Mercury News

Rice defends statements on Benghazi

- By Michael Memoli Los Angeles Times

WASHINGTON — National Security Adviser Susan Rice on Sunday defended statements she made during a round of 2012 TV appearance­s about the attack on a U. S. mission in Benghazi, saying there was never an attempt to mislead the public.

Her appearance on NBC’s “Meet the Press” was Rice’s first appearance on a network Sunday show since September 2012, days after the attack in Libya that killed Ambassador Chris Stevens and three other Americans.

Her adherence to administra­tion talking points at the time — that the attack appeared to be a “spontaneou­s” response to protests in Egypt over an offensive YouTube video — were later cast into doubt and continue to be a source of debate. Some accused the administra­tion of attempting downplay the terrorist involvemen­t in the attack.

At the time, President Barack Obama and other administra­tion offi cials defended Rice, who was then the U. S. ambassador to the United Nations. But blowback from her appearance­s probably cost her an appointmen­t as secretary of state in Obama’s second term.

Rice on Sunday defended her remarks, saying she shared “the best informatio­n that we had at the time.”

“The informatio­n I provided— which I explained to you was what we had at the moment, it could change, I commented that this was based on what we knew on that morning — was provided to me and my colleagues and indeed to Congress by the intelligen­ce community,” she said.

“That’s been well- validated in many different ways since. And that informatio­n turned out in some respects not to be 100% correct. But the notion that somehow I or anybody else in the administra­tion misled the American people is patently false, and I think that’s been amply demonstrat­ed.”

Sen. John McCain, RAriz., one of the leading critics of the administra­tion’s handling of Benghazi, laughed when shown Rice’s comments during his appearance on CBS’ “Face The Nation.”

“I’m almost speechless,” he said. “The informatio­n was totally misleading, totally false. And for Susan Rice to say such a thing, I think, is a little embarrassi­ng to tell you the truth.”

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