The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

Trump vows justice as U.S. captures key Benghazi militant

- By Lolita C. Baldor, Josh Lederman and Matthew Lee

WASHINGTON » U.S. special operations forces captured a militant in Libya accused of playing an instrument­al role in the Benghazi attacks, officials said Monday, in a highstakes operation designed to bring the perpetrato­rs to justice five years after the deadly violence.

President Donald Trump identified the militant as Mustafa al-Imam and said his capture signified that the four Americans who died “will never be forgotten.” Justice Department officials were escorting al-Imam by military plane to the United States, where he’s expected to be tried in federal court.

“Our memory is deep and our reach is long, and we will not rest in our efforts to find and bring the perpetrato­rs of the heinous attacks in Benghazi to justice,” Trump said.

The Navy SEAL-led raid marked the first publicly known operation since Trump took office to target those accused of involvemen­t in Benghazi, which mushroomed into a multiyear political fracas centered on Republican allegation­s of a bungled Obama administra­tion response. Those critiques shadowed Hillary Clinton, who was secretary of state at the time of the attacks, through her presidenti­al campaign.

U.S. forces captured alImam just before midnight local time Sunday in Misrata, on Libya’s north coast, U.S. officials said. He was taken to a U.S. Navy ship at the Misrata port for transport by military plane to Washington, where he’s expected to arrive within the next two days, one of the officials said.

Once on American soil, alImam will face trial in U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia as the FBI continues to investigat­e, the Justice Department said. He faces three criminal charges that were filed in May 2015 but only recently unsealed: killing or conspiring to kill someone during an attack on a federal facility, providing support for terrorists, and using a firearm in connection with a violent crime.

It wasn’t immediatel­y clear how al-Imam was involved in the Sept. 11, 2012, violence. The U.S. attorney’s office said he is a Libyan national and about 46 years old.

Trump said he’d ordered the raid, and thanked the U.S. military, intelligen­ce agencies and prosecutor­s for tracking al-Imam and enabling his capture. The U.S. officials said the operation was coordinate­d with Libya’s internatio­nally recognized government. They weren’t authorized to speak publicly on the matter and demanded anonymity.

Secretary of State Rex Tillerson said he’d spoken with the relatives of some of the Americans who died in Benghazi: U.S. Ambassador Chris Stevens, State Department informatio­n management officer Sean Patrick Smith, and contract security officers Tyrone Woods and Glen Doherty. Tillerson said the U.S. would “spare no effort” to ensure al-Imam is held accountabl­e.

Al-Imam will face court proceeding­s in U.S. District Court, officials said, in an apparent departure from Trump’s previously expressed desire to send militants to the U.S. detention center at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba.

In an interview last March with conservati­ve radio host Hugh Hewitt, Attorney General Jeff Sessions called Guantanamo “a very fine place for holding these kind of dangerous criminals.”

The commando raid also came amid an ongoing debate about the use of U.S. forces to pursue insurgents in Africa and other locations outside of warzones like Iraq and Afghanista­n. Four U.S. soldiers were killed in an ambush in Niger earlier this month under circumstan­ces that have remained hazy and prompted Democrats and Republican­s in Congress to express concerns.

Earlier this month, another man accused in the Benghazi attack, Abu Khattala, went on trial in federal court in Washington. Khattala, captured during President Barack Obama’s tenure, has pleaded not guilty to the 18 charges against him, including murder of an internatio­nally protected person, providing material support to terrorists and destroying U.S. property while causing death.

The Benghazi assault started in the evening when armed attackers scaled the wall of the diplomatic post and moved through the front gate. Stevens was rushed to a fortified “safe room” along with Smith, but were then siphoned off from security officers when attackers set the building and its furniture on fire. Libyan civilians found Stevens hours later in the wreckage, and he died of smoke inhalation in a hospital, becoming the first U.S. ambassador killed in the line of duty in more than three decades.

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