BREAKING -- US Spy Agencies Heard Benghazi Attackers Using State Dept. Cell Phones to Call Terrorist Leaders
By: Bret Baier & James Rosen
The
terrorists who attacked the U.S. consulate and CIA annex in Benghazi on
September 11, 2012 used cell phones, seized from State Department
personnel during the attacks, and U.S. spy agencies overheard them
contacting more senior terrorist leaders to report on the success of the
operation, multiple sources confirmed to Fox News.The disclosure is important because it adds to the body of evidence establishing that senior U.S. officials in the Obama administration knew early on that Benghazi was a terrorist attack, and not a spontaneous protest over an anti-Islam video that had gone awry, as the administration claimed for several weeks after the attacks.
Eric Stahl, who recently retired as a major in the U.S. Air Force, served as commander and pilot of the C-17 aircraft that was used to transport the corpses of the four casualties from the Benghazi attacks – then-U.S. Ambassador to Libya Chris Stevens, information officer Sean Smith, and former Navy SEALs Glen Doherty and Tyrone Woods – as well as the assault’s survivors from Tripoli to the safety of an American military base in Ramstein, Germany.
In
an exclusive interview on Fox News’ “Special Report,” Stahl said
members of a CIA-trained Global Response Staff who raced to the scene of
the attacks were “confused” by the administration’s repeated
implication of the video as a trigger for the attacks, because “they
knew during the attack…who was doing the attacking.” Asked how, Stahl
told anchor Bret Baier: “Right after they left the consulate in Benghazi
and went to the [CIA] safehouse, they were getting reports that cell
phones, consulate cell phones, were being used to make calls to the
attackers' higher ups.”
A separate U.S. official, one with
intimate details of the bloody events of that night, confirmed the
major’s assertion. The second source, who requested anonymity to discuss
classified data, told Fox News he had personally read the intelligence
reports at the time that contained references to calls by terrorists –
using State Department cell phones captured at the consulate during the
battle – to their terrorist leaders. The second source also confirmed
that the security teams on the ground received this intelligence in real
time.Major Stahl was never interviewed by the Accountability Review Board, the investigative panel convened, pursuant to statute, by then-Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, as the official body reviewing all the circumstances surrounding the attacks and their aftermath. Many lawmakers and independent experts have criticized the thoroughness of the ARB, which also never interviewed Clinton nor the under secretary of State for management, Patrick Kennedy, a key figure in the decisions about security at the consulate in the period preceding the attack there.
In his interview on “Special Report,” Stahl made still other disclosures that add to the vast body of literature on Benghazi – sure to grow in the months ahead, as a select House committee prepares for a comprehensive probe of the affair, complete with subpoena power. Stahl said that when he deposited the traumatized passengers at Ramstein, the first individual to question the CIA security officers was not an FBI officer but by the senior State Department diplomat on the ground.
“They were taken away from the airplane,” Stahl said. “The U.S. ambassador to Germany [Philip D. Murphy] met us when we landed and he took them away because he wanted to debfrief them that night.” Murphy stepped down as ambassador last year. A message left with Sky Blue FC, a private company in New Jersey with which Murphy is listed online as an executive officer, was not immediately returned.
No comments:
Post a Comment