Payback time in the hen house
By Wes Pruden
PrudenPolitics.com
The
noise in the hen house this morning is the flutter
and cackle of the chickens from Benghazi, scuttling
home to roost. The House committee opening hearings
Wednesday on what happened there is likely to serve
up chicken surprise.
The
four whistleblowing witnesses scheduled to testify
to the House Oversight and Government Reform
Committee are said to be eager to tell a story far
different from the various accounts, all confused
and all contradictory, peddled by the Obama
administration. Someone at the White House should
have remembered that old Washington chestnut, as
true now as ever, that “it’s not the crime, it’s the
cover-up.” Smarter men than even Barack Obama, wiser
women than even Hillary Clinton, have paid dearly
for lapses of convenient memory. (The crime was bad,
too.)
Mark
Thompson, the ex-Marine who is now the deputy
co-ordinator for operations in the State
Department’s counterterrorism bureau, is expected to
testify that Mrs. Clinton tried to cut the bureau
out of the loop when Ambassador Chris Stevens was
pleading for help from Benghazi. The administration
was preoccupied in the midst of a presidential
re-election campaign and cries for help at a
consulate surrounded by radical Islamic killers was
not something the White House thought was fit to
hear. The war on terror was over.
Mr.
Thompson’s lawyer, the pugnacious Joe diGenova, says
his client has been subjected to threats and
intimidation from his superiors at the State
Department, but they all deny that and insist that
everything everybody else says are fibs, stretchers
and “full growed lies.” That’s what superiors always
say (and once in a while they’re right). Mrs.
Clinton convened an internal review board to look
into such allegations and several coats of whitewash
were duly applied, but the facts are still showing
through. “You should have seen what [Mrs. Clinton]
tried to do to us that night,” a second official in
the State Department’s counterterrorism bureau told
his colleagues in October.
Emails and documents from the State Department, the
CIA and the National Security Administration,
published in the current edition of the Weekly
Standard magazine, reveal that officials of those
agencies tried to delete all references to the
involvement of al Qaeda in the talking points, and
identify Victoria Nuland, spokeswoman for the State
Department, as complaining that the revisions did
not go far enough to satisfy “my building’s
leadership.” The leadership of the “building,” and
no doubt the people in it, wanted all evidence of al
Qaeda involvement, not only in the attack on
Americans in Benghazi, but in attacks on other
Western target, removed from the “talking points.”
Rep.
Darrell Issa of California, the Republican who will
chair this week’s hearings, told “Face the Nation”
interviewers Sunday that both the CIA and Gregory
Hicks, the deputy chief of mission in Libya when the
ambassador and three colleagues were slain, knew at
once that the Americans were under attack, not under
protest.
Mr.
Hicks watched the Sunday talk shows after the
attacks on the consulate in September and was
astonished by the claims of Susan Rice, the
ambassador to the U.N., in five appearances,
contradicting the emphatic assertion of the
president of Libya that he had “no doubt” that the
attacks were the work of terrorists, not mere
community activists. “The net impact of what has
transpired is that the spokeswoman of the most
powerful country in the world has basically said the
president of Libya is either a liar or doesn’t know
what he’s talking about. My jaw hit the floor as I
watched this,” he told investigators for the House
committee. “I’ve never been as embarrassed in my
life, in my career, [as I was] on that day.” He is
expected to repeat that to the committee this week.
All
politicians are interested most in what happens to
them. It’s the bipartisan reality of how things
work. But the Obama White House, perhaps unique in
our times, plays partisan politics 24/7. Bubba, for
all his sins, frequently interrupted politics for a
roll in the White House hay and gave us a little
comic relief. If Hillary isn’t paying attention to
the politics of 2016 she isn’t the player we all
think she is.
Hillary Clinton
It
was easy for her to take the long view when Chris
Stevens was pleading for his life, but she may pay
yet for forgetting the Bard’s warning in Hamlet (Act
2, Scene 2) that “murder, though it have no tongue,
will speak with most miraculous organ.”
Wesley Pruden is editor emeritus of The Washington
Times.