Sources say U.S. intelligence agencies knew within 24 hours that al Qaeda was behind the attacks in Libya

September 27, 2012

Sources say intelligence agencies knew within a day that al Qaeda affiliates were behind the attacks in Benghazi, Libya-they even knew where one of the attackers lived. Eli Lake reports.  

Within 24 hours of the 9-11 anniversary attack on the United States consulate in Benghazi, U.S. intelligence agencies had strong indications al Qaeda-affiliated operatives were behind the attack, and had even pinpointed the location of one of those attackers. Three separate U.S. intelligence officials who spoke to The Daily Beast said the early information was enough to show that the attack was planned and the work of al Qaeda affiliates operating in Eastern Libya.
Nonetheless, it took until late last week for the White House and the administration to formally acknowledge that the Benghazi assault was a terrorist attack. On Sunday, Obama adviser Robert Gibbs explained the evolving narrative as a function of new information coming in quickly on the attacks. "We learned more information every single day about what happened," Gibbs said on Fox News. "Nobody wants to get to the bottom of this faster than we do."

The intelligence officials who spoke to The Daily Beast did so anonymously because they weren't authorized to speak to the press. They said U.S. intelligence agencies developed leads on four of the participants of the attacks within 24 hours of the fire fight that took place mainly at an annex near the Benghazi consulate. For one of those individuals, the U.S. agencies were able to find his location after his use of social media. "We had two kinds of intelligence on one guy," this official said. "We believe we had enough to target him."

Another U.S. intelligence official said, "There was very good information on this in the first 24 hours. These guys have a return address. There are camps of people and a wide variety of things we could do." 

A spokesman for the National Security Council declined to comment for the story. But another U.S. intelligence official said, "I can't get into specific numbers but soon after the attack we had a pretty good bead on some individuals involved in the attack." 

It's unclear whether any of these suspected attackers have been targeted or arrested, and intelligence experts caution that these are still early days in a complex investigation.

FINISH

 

 


blog comments powered by Disqus

Sen. Ted Cruz calls immigration reform bill ‘almost utterly toothless' regarding border security

May 21, 2013  08:26 PM

"Yes we can" chant erupts in committee room following passage of immigration reform bill in Senate Judiciary.— Faiz (@fshakir) May 21, 2013 The Gang of Eight’s amnesty bill passed out of committee this evening by a vote of 13–5 after Sen. Patrick Leahy agreed to withdraw his amendment allowing American citizens in long-term same-sex relationships to sponsor their […]

All lies on deck? Sources dispute WH claims about pursuit of Benghazi suspects

May 21, 2013  07:32 PM

Incompetence and lies.

Outrageous: Did Justice Department seize phone records of James Rosen's parents?

May 21, 2013  07:15 PM

The net cast by the Department of Justice into the media pool just keeps getting bigger. The original story of Associated Press phone records being seized alone was enough to qualify as the Obama administration’s third big scandal of the moment, right up there with Benghazi and the IRS’ targeting of conservative groups. Then we […]

New Yorker: Justice Department seized phone records of White House staffer lines

May 21, 2013  06:28 PM

Ryan Lizza of the New Yorker is reporting tonight that the Justice Department’s spying on Fox News reporter James Rosen isn’t the end of the story. Lizza says that the U.S. Attorney prosecuting the case of Stephen Jin-Woo Kim “seized records associated with two phone numbers at the White House, at least five numbers associated with Fox […]

Jackass David Sirota: Sequester partly to blame for havoc wreaked by Okla. tornadoes

May 21, 2013  06:14 PM

They prevent tornados? RT @KatrinaNation David Sirota asks good question: Anyone regret slashing National Weather Service budget now?— Jacob Perry (@jacobperry) May 21, 2013 Sigh. Evidently, David Sirota can’t find a better way to reflect upon yesterday’s devastating tornadoes than to link conservatives and the GOP to the fallout from natural disasters. This morning, he […]

FSM Archives

More in Islam ( 1 OF 25 ARTICLES )