Congress to probe security flaws for Libya diplomats
October 05, 2012
by CBNews.com
Updated 10:43 PM ET
(CBS
News) WASHINGTON - CBS News has learned that congressional
investigators have issued a subpoena to a former top security official
at the US mission in Libya. The official is Lt. Col. Andy Wood, a Utah
National Guard Army Green Beret who headed up a Special Forces "Site
Security Team" in Libya.
Lt. Col. Andy Wood led a 16-member Special Forces site security team responsible for protecting U.S. personnel in Libya.
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CBS News/Andy Woods The subpoena compels Lt. Col. Wood to appear at a
House Oversight Committee hearing next week that will examine security
decisions leading up to the Sept. 11 Muslim extremist terror assault on
the U.S. compound at Benghazi. U.S. Ambassador Christopher Stevens and
three of his colleagues were killed in the attack.
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Lt.
Col. Wood has told CBS News and congressional investigators that his
16-member team and a six-member State Department elite force called a
Mobile Security Deployment team left Libya in August, just one month
before the Benghazi assault. Wood says that's despite the fact that US
officials in Libya wanted security increased, not decreased.
Wood
says he met daily with Stevens and that security was a constant
challenge. There were 13 threats or attacks on western diplomats and
officials in Libya in the six months leading up to the September 11
attack.
A senior State Department official told CBS News that
half of the 13 incidents before September 11 were fairly minor or
routine in nature, and that the Benghazi attack was so lethal and
overwhelming, that a diplomatic post would not be able to repel it.
Wood,
whose team arrived in February, says he and fellow security officials
were very worried about the chaos on the ground. He says they tried to
communicate the danger to State Department officials in Washington,
D.C., but that the officials denied requests to enhance security.
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"We
tried to illustrate...to show them how dangerous and how volatile and
just unpredictable that whole environment was over there. So to decrease
security in the face of that really is... it's just unbelievable," Wood
said.
The State Department official says there was a "constant
conversation" between security details in Libya and officials in
Washington D.C.
Sources critical of what they view as a security
drawdown say three Mobile Security Deployment teams left Libya between
February and August in addition to the 16-member Site Security Team on
loan from the military. That's 34 highly-trained security personnel
moved out over a six month period.
One State Department source told CBS News the security teams weren't "pulled," that their mission was simply over.
Also
scheduled to appear at next week's hearing are Libya's former U.S.
Regional Security Officer Eric Nordstrom and State Department official
Charlene Lamb.
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