Hillary Clinton takes the responsibility for security lapse in Libya

Jamil M. Shawwa
Jamil Shawwa is an American citizen from the United States of America. He lives in the Washington DC Metro area. He was born in Beirut Lebanon and originally from Gaza. He graduated from Cairo University Law School and got his Master of Laws degree from the University of Iowa, College of law. Jamil has been a blogger and an activist on political issues for over seven years.

Hillary Clinton takes responsibility of Libya attack

After Vice President Joe Biden, it’s now the turn of the Secretary of State Hillary Clinton to save the president under attack from his Republican challenger Mitt Romney over the attack on the US consulate in Benghazi, Libya.

The bucks stops with her when it comes to who is blame for a deadly assault on the US mission on the anniversary of the 9/11 terrorist attacks, she said in a series of interviews ahead of the second presidential debate in New York.

Hillary Clinton’s statement which was a confession more than an answer to a question about the circumstances surrounding the attack and the murder of the US ambassador to Libya, Chris Stevens, showed a rise in the seriousness and the tension of the debate going on in the US now about how the US failed to provide any serious protection to a place that everyone who knows anything about Libya and Benghazi knew it was so unpredictable.

Hillary Clinton in an interview today while visiting Peru took full responsibility for the attack, she said that she is the top person at the State Department and takes responsibility  for what happened to the ambassador.

Hillary’s confession came 24 hours before the second debate between president Obama and the Republican challenger, Mitt Romney, which will take place today. The ambassador’s murder has been touted among Republicans and the Republican nominees and was expected that Mitt Romney would bring it up in the debate today although there were pleaded from the murdered ambassador’s father to the candidates not to make the murder of his son a campaign issue.

The interview, one of a series given to US television networks Monday night, were the first she has given about the attack on the US consulate in Benghazi. The attack killed Chris Stevens, the US ambassador to Libya, and three other Americans at the consulate.

The Obama administration has been heavily criticized after Biden said during last week’s vice presidential debate that the White House did not know of requests to enhance security at Benghazi, contradicting testimony by State Department employees that requests had been made and rejected.

Following the debate, the White House said the vice president did not know of the requests because they were handled, as is the practice, by the State Department.

Clinton also sought to downplay the criticism that administration officials continued to say the attack was a spontaneous product of a protest over an anti-Muslim film, a theory that has since been discarded.

In the wake of an attack, there is always “confusion,” Clinton said. But the information has since changed.

Clinton said her mission now is to make sure such an attack will never happen again – but also that diplomacy, even in dangerous areas like Benghazi, is not stopped.

“We can’t not engage,” she said. “We cannot retreat.”

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