New York Post

HOW CLINTON AVOIDED BLAME FOR BENGHAZI

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IN the wake of the Benghazi report, let’s spare a few thoughts for President Obama’s national security adviser, Susan Rice. Yes, the headlines all say the House Select Committee on Benghazi couldn’t find any new dirt on Hillary Clinton. But the woman who almost replaced her as secretary of state didn’t come out looking very prepared.

In September 2012, Rice was ambassador to the United Nations and was Obama’s first choice to replace Clinton as secretary of state. But her nomination was scuttled after she appeared on the Sunday news shows to discuss that month’s attacks on a US special mission and CIA annex in Benghazi. Rice stuck to the talking points she’d been given and said the attack evolved out of a protest against an offensive Internet video.

Rice’s appearance­s on the Sunday shows crystalliz­ed an administra­tion narrative about the Benghazi attacks that was false and came back to bite them. More than anything else, it is responsibl­e for a political controvers­y that has spanned Obama’s second term in office. So it’s worth looking at exactly what happened nearly four years ago in the middle of a presidenti­al campaign — a moment when the US government realized Libya was coming undone.

The Obama administra­tion’s primary sin was that it didn’t level with the American people about what happened. The narrative triumphed over the facts.

Much of this was known before. For example, White House messaging guru Ben Rhodes had drafted talking points that urged US officials to emphasize that the attack stemmed from a protest of the video and not a failure in policy. But the final report adds some important details on this.

Let’s start with Rice. According to testimony from Rhodes, she was his third choice to go on the Sunday shows. Initially he tried Clinton, who didn’t respond, and then Tom Donilon, who was Obama’s national security adviser. Rhodes told the committee that neither of them did the Sunday shows often.

Rice wasn’t well-prepared. Not only was she not a participan­t in the senior-level meetings to respond to the attack, she wasn’t even briefed by an intelligen­ce analyst before appearing on the Sunday shows. She told the select committee she was unaware at the time that the CIA maintained an annex at the Benghazi compound. Rhodes and senior Obama adviser David Plouffe briefed Rice instead.

The talking points that informed Rice’s appearance­s after the Benghazi attacks were based on talking points developed initially by the CIA for the House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligen­ce. But as the report shows, those talking points were not produced with much analytic rigor. Indeed, the line about the Internet video protests was based initially on an editing error in an intelligen­ce report from the day after the attack.

The intelligen­ce analysts initially had said the attackers in Benghazi were inspired by protests in Cairo, but a heading in one of the early intelligen­ce reports referenced protests in Benghazi. The top CIA analyst who drafted that report said none of his analysts were “focused on the protests” and that they didn’t believe it was germane to understand­ing the attacks.

This would appear to let Rhodes and Rice off the hook. It was the CIA’s fault in an editing error. But the White House also earns some blame as well. At the very least, they were incurious and seized on a politicall­y convenient analysis. Many other intelligen­ce products produced in the days after the Benghazi attack made no mention of a protest and did discuss the clear links between the attackers and al Qaeda.

The CIA station chief in Libya sent messages back to headquarte­rs along these lines. Mid-level State Department officials e-mailed each other in disbelief about what Rice said on the Sunday shows. Clinton herself talked about the al Qaeda links to the attackers in private conversati­ons with Egyptian and Libyan officials as well as an email to her daughter.

Obama’s defenders might say all of this is how the game’s played. There is some truth to this. In democratic societies, it’s not enough to just present the public with facts. You have to string them together into a story to persuade people to support your policies. Narratives make governing possible.

But narratives are not everything. And this is a lesson that Obama has yet to learn.

The Obama administra­tion’ s primary sin was ’ that it didn’ t level with the American people.

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