Friday, March 20, 2015

Why Hillary Controlling Custody of Her Emails is a Big Deal!


As hard as democrats try and tamp down the events surrounding the Benghazi tragedy, it is impossible to deny culpability on the part of then Secretary of State Hillary Clinton in the shaping of the failures prior to, likely during and most certainly after that attack occurred.  The question is, to what level of culpability should rest on her shoulders.

No better example as to the importance to recover every single email that ever passed through Hillary Clintons personal email server she used to conduct the people’s business on than what has been revealed in the numerous congressional investigations.  Democrats have attempted time and again to convince “we the people” that these investigations have failed to discovery any wrong doing however, quite the contrary is true, they know it and it scares them to death!

Most of the investigations that transpired as a result of the Benghazi tragedy were aimed at determining the particular role a certain agency played before, during and after the attack.  Of course, conducting oversight on one department whose actions are influence by other departments, there will be some overlap in the oversight process as was very much the case in each of the committees investigating the Benghazi tragedy.  And it was in this overlap where each committee experiences the same fundamental problem, a complete lack of cooperation and in some cases even defiance by the State Department.

While most of the committees were successful in achieve their particular oversight goals, several very important questions were raised in regards to the actions of the State Department in the process.  Answers to these questions were, in most cases, not pursued as they were outside the purview of the particular committee’s scope.  None the less, the troubling issues encountered with the State Department were noted in their final reports.

Following are some of the concerns raised by the various committees.  Read them through then you be the judge as to how important you think the people’s emails that Hillary Clinton is holding hostage are:


From the House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence Report on Benghazi

The House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence (HPSCI) conducted an extensive investigation which concentrated on the intelligence community’s role in the events surrounding the time before, during and after the attack on the US Consulate and CIA Annex in Benghazi.

While the committee firmly stated that they found no fault in the actions of the intelligence community (IC) in the months leading up to, during and after the attacks, the committee was very critical of the failures of the State Department over the entire period.  For example, in response to intelligence of increased threats of attack, appropriate measures were taken to increase the security of the CIA Annex in Benghazi while, provided with the same threat reports, the State Department failed to respond to the increased threats leaving its staff at the US Consulate unable to protect itself from such an attack that was experienced on the evening of September 11, 2012.  Two separate agencies/departments responsible for two separate facilities, both provided with the same intelligence and threat information but only one department failed miserably to protect its assets and people.

Again, while the focus of the HPSIC was on investigating the role the IC played in the events surrounding the Benghazi attacks, through the process they turned up some very troubling actions of the State Department which they included in their final report.

An excerpt from the Executive Summary:

 
Fifth, the Committee finds that the process used to generate the talking points HPSCI asked for – and which were used for Ambassador Rice’s public appearances – was flawed.  HPSCI asked for the talking points solely to aid Member’ ability to communicate publicly using the best available intelligence at the time, and mistake were made in the process of how those talking points were developed.


The talking points have been a major point of contention with the IC as, for lack of better terms, the White House threw them under the bus.  From the backlash that ensued after Susan Rice made her highly misleading Sunday talk show appearances where she made some very inaccurate statements about the cause of the Benghazi attack, in their attempt to appear not to be the ones responsible for spreading the false narrative, the White House stated time and again that the talking points were produced by the IC.

A large part of the committee’s effort went in to understanding how the talking points were develop and how it was first concluded that the attacks spurred from a protest over an internet video. 

On page 24 of their report the committee writes:

Various witnesses and senior military officials serving in the Obama Administration testified to this Committee, the House Armed Services Committee, and the Senate Armed Services Committee that they knew from the moment the attacks began that the attacks were deliberate terrorist acts against U.S. interests.  No witness has reported believing at any point that the attacks were anything but terrorist acts.

 
This follows the early reports made public, that members on the ground reported almost immediately that what was being experienced at the Consulate was an organized attack.  Included in these direct reports was a phone call made directly to Secretary Clinton by Deputy Chief of Mission in Libya Gregory Hicks, who confirmed to the Secretary that unequivocally what was taking place at the Consulate and CIA Annex were terrorist attacks.  It needs to be added that this phone call to the Secretary was made while the attacks were still underway and a full two hours prior to the Secretary’s release of the public brief in which she blamed the attacks on an internet video.  It also must be noted that the public brief was released just moments after ending a short phone conversation with the president, a phone call which was kept from public record until an unfortunate slip of the tongue by Press Secretary Jay Carney months later.

Prior to the phone call slip, it had been reported, by the White House, that during the time of the Benghazi attack, the president and Secretary Clinton had not spoken directly until the following day.  Had the slip by Jay Carney not occurred, we may have never learned of the phone call between the President and the Secretary of State and in turn, the troubling timing between the phone call and the release of the public brief.  But what still remains and unknown is the content of that short phone conversation between the two.

Maintaining their story that the attack on Benghazi was spurred by dissent caused from an internet video, days after the attack occurred, the White House pressed Ambassador Susan Rice to be Secretary Clinton’s surrogate in making the Sunday morning talk show rounds which would entail explaining to the American people what transpired in Benghazi.  A reason for replacing the Secretary with Susan Rice has never been provided, but knowing what we know now, it would have been impossible for the Secretary to recite the talking points that were prepared without incriminating herself.

In a frantic exchange of emails between numerous departments/agencies, the CIA originated talking points were manipulated, scrubbed, cleaned and cleansed to suit the best interest of the State Department and the White House.  To support this, in an email from Deputy National Security Advisor, Ben Rhodes titled “PREP CALL with Susan: Saturday at 4:00 ET” it stated that one of the goals of Administration public statement should be “To underscore that these protests are rooted in an internet video, and not a broader failure of policy.”   

And so that is what she did and on September 15, 2012, despite knowing that the narrative was false, Susan Rice made her rounds on the Sunday talk shows reading from a page of highly flawed talking points.

But what may be more disturbing than what appears to be an attempt to protect the president’s foreign policy are the threat warnings that the committee found were ignored.

On page 13 of their report the committee writes:

These reports and assessments, which were available to senior U.S. policymakers, including those at the State Department and the White House, made it clear that there were serious and credible threats to American interest and facilities in the region and in Benghazi specifically.  This information was also available to U.S. personnel in Libya.  Indeed, CIA’s Chief of Tripoli Station testified that he actually had a long conversation with Ambassador Stevens the Saturday before the Ambassador traveled to Benghazi and reviewed the security situation.

Given the volume of threat information provided by the IC, the Committee concludes that any U.S. official responsible for facilities or personnel in Benghazi had sufficient warning of the deteriorating security situation on Benghazi and the demonstrated intent and capability of anti-U.S. extremists in the region to attack Western and specifically, U.S. targets.

 
In many regards, the members of the State Department’s Accountability Review Board on Benghazi (ARB) routed out many and maybe even all of the departments shortcoming that lead to the failed protection of State Department assets and personnel in Benghazi however, they failed to determine the root cause behind the failure and rightly so.  By design, members of the ARB were not tasked to discover the root cause of failure from within the department, and here lies the problem.

The full HPSCI report on Benghazi can be read HERE:


Senate Select Committee on Intelligence Review of the Terrorist Attacks on U.S. Facilities in Benghazi, Libya, September 11-12, 2012
Similar to the HPSCI, the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence (SSCI) review on the events surrounding the attack on US assets and personnel in Benghazi, Libya focused primarily on the role of the intelligence community however, like the HPSCI, did report troubling actions as well as inactions of other department which were discovered through unavoidable overlaps in their investigation.  Again, much like in the case of the HPSCI investigation, failures of the State Department were abundant and noted in the report.

On page 16 of their report the committee writes:

Despite the clearly deteriorating security situation in Benghazi and requests for additional security resources, few significant improvements were made by the State Department to the security posture of the Temporary Mission Facility.

Although the Mission facility met the minimum personnel requirements ~or Diplomatic Security agents as accepted by the U.S. Embassy in Tripoli at the time of the August 15 EAC meeting (specifically, the three Diplomatic Security agents were assigned to guard the Mission compound), the Committee found no evidence that significant actions were taken by the State Department between August 15, 2012, and September 11, 2012, to increase security at the Mission facility in response to the concerns raised in that meeting. 

 
Although it was not the charter of the committee to identify the shortcomings of the State Department, or any other department for that matter, the committee included certain findings, such as the above in their report.  Different from other oversight investigation however, was the committee’s repeated inclusion of recommendations made by the ARB almost as if to put each of their findings of State Department failure to rest.  Doing so seemed a bit peculiar when the report was first released but now, with a newfound understanding of Secretary Clinton’s emails, it makes perfect sense.  Bear in mind, this committee was chaired by Dianne Feinstein, a staunch defender of the Secretary.

If the tie between the failures of the State Department and the inclusion of the ARB recommendation in this report did not turn on that light in your head or you are unfamiliar with the ARB Report, read on and it will all tie together shortly.

The full Senate Select Committee on Intelligence report on Benghazi can be read HERE:


From the House Foreign Affairs Committee Majority Staff Report on Benghazi
The House Foreign Affairs Committee was the one oversight body whose attention was focused specifically on the actions of the State Department.  While the investigation we unable to answer the question as to exactly who made the call for Hillary Clinton to blame the attack on an internet video and why, the investigation made clear as to the reason why these answers could not be obtained.  

The committee’s final report lambasted the State Department, pointing out the systemic failures which were largely responsible for the attack on the US Consulate in Benghazi.  The committee was also highly critical of the State Department’s ARB report on Benghazi, essentially calling it a joke, pointing out that it was void of any accountability or criticism of its senior members.  Maybe now we know why as it would have been pretty difficult for the ARB members scrutinize the actions of the State Departments senior members without any documentation from senior members to review.

Most alarming however was the complete failure in the State Department’s desire to cooperate with the investigation, which again is all making sense now.  The committee was continually stonewalled by the department making it extremely difficult to do their job and ultimately found the State Department so obstructive that the investigation was concluded without answering many key questions.
   
Excerpts from the Executive Summary:
 

Both before and after the attacks in Benghazi, President Obama promoted a flawed and deeply misleading public narrative in which he claimed that al-Qaeda was ―decimated,‖ ―on the run,‖ and ―on the path to defeat.‖ Yet those on the ground in Libya faced a surge in violence and increasing evidence of terrorist activity; they appealed to Washington for added security.


This written in regards to the failure of anyone to have been disciplined from within the State Department after findings proved gross negligence from within the department and the constant return to the highly flawed ARB report as their defense:

Unfortunately, the Benghazi ARB‘s work was seriously deficient in several respects, most notably in its failure to review or comment on the actions of the Department‘s most senior officials.

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the ARB never interviewed her or her deputies

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Committee investigators believe that these omissions could be related to the fact that Secretary Clinton selected four out of the ARB‘s five members

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Indeed, exoneration of an organization‘s senior-most officials along with reassignment and training for others does not constitute sufficient accountability for the failures that led to the woefully inadequate security posture in Benghazi.

 
This report released some very harsh criticisms of the ARB report, pointing out not only its flaws but also pointing a finger as to why those flaws exist and those fingers are pointed directly at the Secretary of State whose orchestration of the ARB clearly and intentionally avoids investigation and oversight that would implicated her of wrong doing or antagonize anyone who might throw her under the bus for singling them out.

The first paragraph from the Introduction of the committee’s report:


Investigative staff of the five House committees have conducted rigorous oversight of the events surrounding the September 11-12, 2012 terrorist attacks on U.S. facilities in Benghazi, Libya. Oversight efforts have included numerous hearings, briefings, witness interviews, and a protracted and contentious document review by the Committees on Foreign Affairs, Armed Services, Intelligence, Judiciary, and Oversight and Government Reform. These Committees have worked together to uncover the facts, hold the Administration accountable for its failures, and advance necessary reforms.

A “protracted and contentious document review” or in other words that State Department was obstructive and drug its feet.  Not really the actions of a department that is trying to be transparent and forthcoming.  And maybe we now know why, they were simply unable to produce any of the requested documents pertaining to Hillary Clintons emails as they did not have them in their custody.  Not wanting to admit so, the State Department simply outlasted the investigation in their having to produce such documents.  The committee eventually threw in the towel in order to move things along.    

And here is a disturbing piece of information that was brought out during the investigation.  During Hillary Clinton’s tenure as Secretary of State, there was no Inspector General (IG) appointed to the State Department Office of the Inspector General (OIG), a critical position in any governing agency to ensure accountability and proper oversight.

during President Obama‘s tenure the State Department‘s OIG has been hampered in its mission. In what constituted the longest vacancy ever for any of the 73 Inspector General positions across the federal government, President Obama failed to nominate a permanent Inspector General for the State Department for an inexcusable 1,989 days – the entirety of Secretary Clinton‘s tenure

How convenient it must have been for Hillary, and the president for that matter, to not have someone looking over her and her department’s shoulder the entire time she served as Secretary of State.

The first line in the “Conclusion” of the committee’s report reads:

Systemic failures at the State Department during Secretary Clinton‘s tenure resulted in a grossly inadequate security posture in Benghazi.

No different than any of the other committees investigating various aspects of the Benghazi tragedy, The House Foreign Affairs Committee has come upon one road block after another in their attempts to obtain documents from the State Department.  The list of correspondence on this matter goes on and on but are probably best summarized in a letter sent by the Chairman of the committee to Secretary of State John Kerry back in May of last year.

This letter addressed the chairman’s concerns as to why after 19 months of unsuccessful  attempts to obtain certain records and documents from the State Department, they were released to a non-government group through a Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) request and at about the same time, some of the same documents were in fact provided to the committee, mixed amongst a large number of other requested documents however, the documents received by the committee contained a higher number of redactions than those provided to the non-government organization through the FOIA request.  You can read the full letter HERE.

The “talking points” were an obvious point of contention and clearly re-written for political protection rather than to relay facts.  The email exchanges between the many players involved in the crafting of the talking points were numerous and no player was more involved and outspoken as to the content and exact language to be projected in the talking points than the State Department.  But it took a letter to the president, signed by the chairpersons from all 5 investigating committees to finally gain access to the string of emails.  The letter was delivered to the president’s desk on April 23, 2013.  You can read the letter HERE.

Finally some results and in a letter dated May 20, 2013, from Thomas Gibson of the State Department, the 103 pages of emails relating to the crafting of the Sunday show talking points were provided to the committees.  Though a bit difficult to wade through, with a little time and effort you can sort your way through the string if emails traded amongst the various parties and in doing so it will become grossly apparent as to the role the Stated Department played in the “cleaning” (their word not mine) of the talking points.  The letter and entire string of emails can be viewed HERE.

This is quite a bit of bad light being shed upon Hillary Clinton’s State Department and numerous questions remain unanswered due to the inability to obtain requested documents from the State Department which were undoubtedly part of or related to documents that were not in their possession but instead in the possession of Hillary Clinton, on her private email server.

The full House Foreign Affairs Committee Majority Staff report on Benghazi can be read HERE:


The Accountability Review Board Report on Benghazi

The Accountability Review Board (ARB) report came under tremendous criticism as many claimed it failed to dig deep enough nor did it hold anyone accountable.  But the reality is that the members of the ARB conducted its investigation precisely as devised and directed by Secretary of State Clinton, and here lies the problem.

The primary objective of the ARB was to review internal procedures and practices of the State Department as they related to Benghazi, ferret out any shortcomings and make recommendations on fixes to prevent any future missteps. 

Democrats praised the actions of the ARB and where quick to accept the findings of the ARB as closure to the State Department involvement in what they had deemed a witch hunt by Republicans.  Republicans on the other hand stood in dismay as they reviewed the ARB report finding it completely void of any accountability at any senior level and at closer review realized that senior players inside the State Department were given a free pass, their actions never scrutinized nor where they ever interviewed. 

Those who received a free passes pass included Secretary Clinton who played the most significant role in Benghazi of anyone in the State Department.  But again, the ARB followed the guidelines put forth to them by the Secretary and therefore the members that made up the ARB, as well as the report should not be held at fault.  The same cannot be said for Secretary Clinton who intentionally excluded herself from her department’s accountability process and maybe now we understand why. 

Having included herself in the accountability process would have forced the State Department to produce documents that, up until August of last year, Secretary Clinton has been able to keep away from those conducting congressional oversight as well as the American people.

The question still remains as to why Hillary Clinton has taken such extreme measures to make her emails private and keep it so from the people she served.  But what we do know is that whatever the reason may be, the Obama Administration is on-board with her doing so as to date, they have made zero effort, on the part of the administration to push the State Department into comply with congressional oversight requests, FOIA requests and subpoenas issued to the department.  Obviously, the White House has a vested interest in keeping Hillary’s emails under wraps just as she does.

So is it clear now as to why Hillary controlling custody of her emails is such a big deal?

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