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Analysis: House Benghazi Committee report was drowned by politics

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The Republicans of the House Committee on Benghazi released their findings Tuesday. Wochit



House Select Committee on Benghazi Chairman Trey Gowdy speaks beside fellow Republican panel members Jim Jordan, Mike Pompeo and Lynn Westmoreland at a news conference held to discuss the committee's release of its report on June 28, 2016.(Photo: Michael Reynolds, European Pressphoto Agency)


"Fifty-six days," Rep. Mike Pompeo, R-Kan., intoned at a press conference Tuesday to unveil the House Benghazi Committee report. There is no way to understand the government's immediate response to the Sept. 12, 2012, attack, Pompeo said, "without understanding<span style="color: Red;">*</span>this took place 56 days before a contested political election for president."
The same can be said of the report that Pompeo and other Republicans were releasing. It can only be understood in the context of being released 132 days before the 2016 presidential election.
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Everything about the Select Committee on Benghazi's<span style="color: Red;">*</span>two-year investigation has been political. Former House speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio, resisted creating such a committee until May 2014, when a conservative watchdog group uncovered a White House memo suggesting officials should stick to the story that the attack grew out of an organic protest, not a pre-planned terror attack. Boehner said the fact that the administration had not provided that memo to congressional investigators proved that a new committee was needed.
Seven Democrats voted in favor of creating the Benghazi Committee, perhaps the last shred of bipartisanship the process would see.
By the time the Benghazi committee was up and running, there had already been seven congressional investigations, some of which had been both bipartisan and critical of the administration.
The Senate Intelligence Committee issued a bipartisan report in January 2014 that concluded the attacks were preventable, security at the facility was insufficient, and intelligence reports gave too much weight to theory that the attacks were part of an organic protest.
The Senate Homeland<span style="color: Red;">*</span>Security Committee had issued a bipartisan report two years earlier concluding the State Department had failed to provide adequate security for the facility<span style="color: Red;">*</span>and intelligence agencies completely misunderstood threats on the ground.
But this was not those reports. Democrats and Republicans feuded throughout about who could call witnesses, who would be included in witness interviews, and what documents or people should be subpoenaed. Majority Leader Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif., famously said during a television interview that the Benghazi committee had helped drag down Hillary Clinton's poll numbers.
636027226500149927-AP-Congress-Benghazi.jpg
Hillary Clinton testifies on Capitol Hill on Oct. 22, 2015, before the House Benghazi Committee<span style="color: Red;">*</span>(Photo: Carolyn Kaster, AP)

In the end, the two sides issued competing reports 24 hours apart, neither<span style="color: Red;">*</span>having shown their version to the other. The Republican version of the report had a few new details about the events<span style="color: Red;">*</span>and had rafts of blame for why there were not more details. Clinton and the Obama administration stonewalled, the Republicans said, delaying the report by months. Committee members Pompeo and Jim Jordan, R-Ohio issued a proposed addition to the committee report accusing the administration of<span style="color: Red;">*</span>actively trying to undercut the investigation, because the White House<span style="color: Red;">*</span>did not want to admit that it knew all along the Benghazi attack was a planned<span style="color: Red;">*</span>attack by radical Islamic extremists.
The Republican report alleges that Clinton and other in the administration slowed the military response to the attack and initially blamed it on an incendiary anti-Muslim video instead of on terrorism because they were trying to maintain a campaign message that al-Qaeda was in decline. But the report still has no proof that the four Americans could have been saved.
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Politics is not only on the Republican side. The Democratic report released Monday somehow got in 23 references<span style="color: Red;">*</span>to Donald Trump, the presumptive Republican presidential nominee. This is largely because the Democratic report was not about the events surrounding the Benghazi attack<span style="color: Red;">*</span>but the events surrounding the committee investigating the Benghazi attack.
As a result of all this, there is plenty of material for two political parties<span style="color: Red;">*</span>to get what they want: new talking points they can carry into the election season bashing the opposing party for putting propaganda<span style="color: Red;">*</span>over truth.
But there is a truth here, and Pompeo and Jordan included it in their "additional views."
"There is a time for politics and a time to set politics aside. A national tragedy is one of those times when as a nation we should join together to find the truth. That did not happen here."
Clearly.
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