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Report: Obama Admin. Made Deadly Mistakes in Benghazi Attack

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A new report claims the Obama administration was responsible for a series of mistakes before, during, and after the 2012 terror attacks in Benghazi, Libya. 

The greatly anticipated report, released Tuesday by the House Benghazi Select Committee, said top administration leaders constructed a public response while military resources waited hours to move into position.

The attacks resulted in the deaths of U.S. Ambassador Chris Stevens, Foreign Service Officer Sean Smith, and former Navy SEALs Ty Woods and Glen Doherty.

According to the report, top officials in the U.S. State Department, including then-Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and Under Secretary Patrick Kennedy, should have known before the attack that the diplomatic consulate and CIA annex in Benghazi were not secure.

The report held a "rusty bureaucratic process" responsible for the delayed response the night of Sept. 11, 2012. It said President Barack Obama and then-Defense Secretary Leon Panetta ordered a deployment, but that mobilization did not happen until more than 13 hours after the terror attack began.

In addition, the report stated a U.S. military unit deployed after the attack, known as the FAST unit, changed four different times in and out of their uniforms and civilian clothing. According to one witness, the unit even discussed if they should bring along personal weapons.

In the end, "it would take nearly 18 hours" for that unit to move, the report concluded.

Democrats opposed the report, saying Republican members wanted to hurt Democratic presidential candidate Clinton politically. 

But Republicans want Americans to make up their own minds. Chairman Trey Gowdy, R-S.C., urged them to "read this report for themselves... and reach their own conclusions."

Gowdy and other Republican leaders expressed regret that no military forces were ordered to Benghazi.

"Nothing was ever coming to Benghazi," Gowdy said.

The report exposed how leaders, including Clinton, during a meeting of high-level officials the night of the terror attack, pinned blame instead on an anti-Muslim video posted on YouTube.

"Benghazi, Libya, was a terrorist haven and so those folks who were involved in not protecting these Americans certainly should be held accountable," Rep. Mike Pompeo, R-Kan., told ABC News. "The folks who told a wolf tale, a lie in the aftermath of the attacks, who told the American people a political tale about a YouTube video ought also (to) be accountable."

Pompeo and Jim Jordan, R-Ohio, wrote an appendix to the committee's report, which said Clinton and top administration officials knowingly misled the public about what happened in Benghazi prior to the 2012 presidential election.

"We cannot say whether the military could have saved lives in Benghazi," the appendix said. "We can say with certainty that our nation's leaders did not move heaven and earth to send military help with the urgency that those Americans deserved. We will never know if a more vigorous, comprehensive and urgent response could have saved lives." 

Nine eyewitnesses never interviewed before are a part of the 80 new witness accounts included in the final Benghazi congressional report. Altogether, more than 16,000 pages of transcripts were logged by the committee.

The report is not without critics from the conservative side. Media Research Center President Brent Bozell blasted Gowdy for not holding the administration responsible for its deception and failures.

"Trey Gowdy's continued admonition that it's up to the American people to reach their own conclusions about Benghazi is an obfuscation. It was up to him to get to the truth, and he punted," Bozell said. "Who denied the multiple requests for additional security for the compound? No answer. Who is being held responsible for the deaths of these men? No answer. Why did this administration deliberately lie about the video? No answer."

"Should the Commander-in-Chief be held responsible for the multiple failures of the military? Should the Secretary of State be held responsible for the disastrous consequences of State Department decisions? Not according to this report," he continued. "They wouldn't even state that Hillary Clinton lied about the video though her own emails, read by committee members, prove she had! But they did blame a 'rusty bureaucratic process.'"

"It doesn't get more Washington than that," he said. "Everyone involved in this charade disgraced himself."

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About The Author

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John
Jessup

John Jessup serves as the main news anchor for CBN, based at the network's news bureau in Washington, D.C. He joined CBN News in September 2003, starting as a national correspondent and then covering the Pentagon and Capitol Hill. His work in broadcast news has earned him several awards in reporting, producing, and coordinating election coverage. While at CBN, John has reported from several places, including Moore, Oklahoma, after the historic EF5 tornado and parts of Louisiana, Mississippi, and Texas devastated by Hurricane Katrina. He also traveled to Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, during the height