Guest columnist
The recent release of 41 documents related to the White
House’s handling of the terror attack on the U.S. consulate in Benghazi,
Libya and murder of four brave public servants should open everyone’s
eyes to the fact that the families of the victims and the public have
waited too long for answers.
For most of the 603 days since the Sept. 11, 2012 attack, the White House has been trying to make questions about Benghazi and the U.S. response to the attack go away by spinning the media and stonewalling Congress.
Even though Congress has issued subpoena after subpoena for
information about the White House’s response to the attack, it took a
Freedom of Information Act request filed last summer by Judicial Watch
to pry critical documents loose from this Administration.
Among the 41 documents released in late April was an email exchange
between the President’s national security team, senior White House
advisors and Obama campaign operatives that makes it clear the White
House deliberately misled the public about the reason al-Qaida
affiliates targeted our consulate.
Specifically, an email from Deputy National Security Advisor Ben
Rhodes that was shared with White House Press Secretary Jay Carney,
Communications Director Dan Pfeiffer and Obama’s 2008 campaign manager
David Plouffe showed the White House was most concerned about protecting
the President’s re-election chances.
In the email, Rhodes advised U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations
Susan Rice to make it clear that the attack resulted from protests
“rooted in an Internet video, and not a broader failure of policy.”
That’s exactly what Ambassador Rice did some 36 hours later when she hit the Sunday talk show circuit, unleashing a vigorous defense of the Administration and tamping down any notion that the attack contradicted the President’s campaign boasts that al-Qaida was “on the run.”
As The Weekly Standard noted, the Administration was adamant that
Ambassador Rice’s talking points and public response were based solely
on information available at that time and assessments provided by the
intelligence community. We know now that’s not true.
But here’s the bigger problem. We don’t know if there’s more information that was given to the American people that wasn’t true.
The fact that it took a Freedom of Information Act request from a
private organization and a subsequent court order to unearth emails
revealing the political motives behind the Administration’s
misinformation campaign speaks volumes about the White House’s refusal
to level with the public more than 600 days after four Americans were
killed in an pre-meditated assault on the 11th anniversary of the
September 11, 2001 terror attacks.
The release of these 41 documents also demonstrates that the House
needs to get serious about its responsibility to exercise thorough and
effective oversight on matters as important as this.
If an American diplomat and the three Marines in his security detail had been murdered in Washington instead of Benghazi, you can bet there would have been a national blue ribbon panel commissioned the next day to get to the bottom of the attack.
For more than a year, I have been among a group of House members
calling for a Select House Committee that can focus exclusively on
getting answers the public deserves.
Now that we know the White House has sidestepped subpoenas from the
House Government Oversight Committee, the need for a Select Committee is
greater than ever.
So I applaud House Speaker John Boehner for announcing that he will
form a Select Committee to try and get to the bottom of the Benghazi
attack.
The time for political theater and schemes to divert public attention from this grave issue is over.
The families of the victims of the Benghazi attack, the public and
Congress have put up with that for 603 days, and that’s downright
shameful.
Congressman Jim Gerlach is a Republican who represents Pennsylvania’s 6th District, which includes parts of Berks, Chester, Lebanon and Montgomery counties, and is a member of the House Ways & Means Committee.
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