The Best Benghazi Explanation Yet Seen From A Retired US Navy Captain
Friday, June 14, 2013 9:00
The following story below just came in to Beforeitsnews via email; we
felt it best to republish in its entirety and unedited. This is from a
retired US Navy Captain.
From a retired Navy Captain who lives in Hawaii: CBA (Cross Border Authority)
The Benghazi debacle boils down to a single key factor – the
granting or withholding of “cross-border authority.” This opinion is
informed by my experience as a Navy SEAL officer who took a NavSpecWar
Detachment to Beirut.
Once the alarm is sent – in this case, from the consulate in
Benghazi – dozens of HQs are notified and are in the planning loop in
real time, including AFRICOM and EUCOM, both located in Germany. Without
waiting for specific orders from Washington, they begin planning and
executing rescue operations, including moving personnel, ships, and
aircraft forward toward the location of the crisis. However, there is
one thing they can’t do without explicit orders from the president:
cross an international border on a hostile mission.
That is the clear “red line” in this type of a crisis situation. No
administration wants to stumble into a war because a jet jockey in hot
pursuit (or a mixed-up SEAL squad in a rubber boat) strays into hostile
territory. Because of this, only the president can give the order for
our military to cross a nation’s border without that nation’s
permission. For the Osama bin Laden mission, President Obama granted CBA
for our forces to enter Pakistani airspace.
On the other side of the CBA coin: in order to prevent a military
rescue in Benghazi, all the President of the United States “(POTUS)” has
to do is not grant cross-border authority. If he does not, the entire
rescue mission (already in progress) must stop in its tracks. Ships can
loiter on station, but airplanes fall out of the sky, so they must be
redirected to an air base (Sigonella, in Sicily) to await the POTUS
decision on granting CBA. If the decision to grant CBA never comes, the
besieged diplomatic outpost in Benghazi can rely only on assets already
“in country” in Libya – such as the Tripoli quick reaction force and the
Predator drones. These assets can be put into action on the independent
authority of the acting ambassador or CIA station chief in Tripoli.
They are already “in country,” so CBA rules do not apply to them.
How might this process have played out in the White House? If, at
the 5:00 p.m. Oval Office meeting with Defense Secretary Panetta and
Vice President Biden, President Obama said about Benghazi: “I think we
should not go the military action route,” meaning that no CBA will be
granted, then that is it. Case closed.
Another possibility is that the president might have said: “We
should do what we can to help them . but no military intervention from
outside of Libya.” Those words then constitute “standing orders” all the
way down the chain of command, via Panetta and General Dempsey to
General Ham and the subordinate commanders who are already gearing up to
rescue the besieged outpost. When that meeting took place, it may have
seemed as if the consulate attack was over, so President Obama might
have thought the situation would stabilize on its own from that point
forward. If he then goes upstairs to the family quarters, or otherwise
makes himself “unavailable,” then his last standing orders will continue
to stand until he changes them, even if he goes to sleep until the
morning of September 12.
Nobody in the chain of command below President Obama can countermand
his “standing orders” not to send outside military forces into Libyan
air space. Nobody. Not Leon Panetta, not Hillary Clinton, not General
Dempsey, and not General Ham in Stuttgart, Germany, who is in charge of
the forces staging in Sigonella.
Perhaps the president left “no outside military intervention, no
cross-border authority” standing orders, and then made himself scarce to
those below him seeking further guidance, clarification, or modified
orders. Or perhaps he was in the Situation Room watching the Predator
videos in live time for all seven hours. We don’t yet know where the
president was hour by hour.
But this is 100 percent sure: Panetta and Dempsey would have
executed a rescue mission order if the president had given those orders.
And like the former SEALs in Benghazi, General Ham and all of the
troops under him would have been straining forward in their harnesses,
ready to go into battle to save American lives.
The execute orders would be given verbally to General Ham at AFRICOM
in Stuttgart, but they would immediately be backed up in official
message traffic for the official record. That is why cross-border
authority is the King Arthur’s Sword for understanding Benghazi. The
POTUS and only the POTUS can pull out that sword.
We can be 100% certain that cross-border authority was never given.
How do I know this? Because if CBA was granted and the rescue mission
execute orders were handed down, irrefutable records exist today in at
least a dozen involved component commands, and probably many more. No
general or admiral will risk being hung out to dry for undertaking a
mission-gone-wrong that the POTUS later disavows ordering, and instead
blames on “loose cannons” or “rogue officers” exceeding their authority.
No general or admiral will order U.S. armed forces to cross an
international border on a hostile mission unless and until he is certain
that the National Command Authority, in the person of the POTUS and his
chain of command, has clearly and explicitly given that order: verbally
at the outset, but thereafter in written orders and official messages.
If they exist, they could be produced today.
When it comes to granting cross-border authority, there are no
presidential mumblings or musings to paraphrase or decipher. If you hear
confusion over parsed statements given as an excuse for Benghazi, then
you are hearing lies. I am sure that hundreds of active-duty military
officers know all about the Benghazi execute orders (or the lack
thereof), and I am impatiently waiting for one of them to come forward
to risk his career and pension as a whistleblower.
Leon Panetta is falling on his sword for President Obama with his
absurd-on-its-face, “the U.S. military doesn’t do risky things”-defense
of his shameful no-rescue policy. Panetta is utterly destroying his
reputation.
General Dempsey joins Panetta on the same sword with his tacit
agreement by silence. But why? How far does loyalty extend when it comes
to covering up gross dereliction of duty by the president?
General Petraeus, however, has indirectly blown the whistle. He was
probably “used” in some way early in the cover-up with the purported CIA
intel link to the Mohammed video, and now he feels burned. So he
conclusively said via his public affairs officer that the stand-down
order did not come from the CIA.
Well – what outranks the CIA? Only the national security team at the White House.
That means President Obama, and nobody else. Petraeus is naming
Obama without naming him. If that is not quite as courageous as blowing a
whistle, it is far better than the disgraceful behavior of Panetta and
Dempsey.
We do not know the facts for certain, but we do know that the rescue
mission stand-down issue revolves around the granting or withholding of
cross-border authority, which belongs only to President Obama.
More than one hundred gung-ho Force Recon Marines were waiting on
the tarmac in Sigonella, just two hours away for the launch order that
never came.
It all comes back to you Obama. It all comes back to you.
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