Jumat, 19 Oktober 2012

Frappe-Sipping Libyan Militant Laughs at U.S. Manhunt for Benghazi Killers

No one from the FBI has interviewed him. Libyan security forces haven't brought him in for questioning. But one of the leading suspects behind last month's bloody assault on the U.S. consulate in Benghazi just gave a boastful interview to the New York Times, all while comfortably sipping a strawberry frappe and trying to convert the reporter to Islam.

Ahmed Abu Khattala is not living the life of a wanted man. Eyewitnesses to the attack interviewed by the Times placed him at the scene, and he's connected to the militant group Ansar al-Shariah that the U.S. believes played at least some role in the assault. There is supposed to be a search for the attackers underway. President Obama has vowed revenge for Benghazi.

Yet Abu Khattala met with the Times' David Kirkpatrick at a 'luxury hotel' in eastern Libyan city for 'two leisurely hours,' and did everything but laugh openly at Obama's pledge. Abu Khattala doesn't plan to go into hiding. The reconstituted Libyan army is a 'national chicken,' he said, and poses no threat to him. And he's not sorry for the assault that killed Amb. Christopher Stevens and three other Americans; indeed, he equivocates on what his precise role in it was. 'No authority has even questioned him about the attack,' he told Kirkpatrick.

Abu Khattala basically trolled the U.S. in the pages of its leading newspaper. 'Why is [the U.S.] always trying to use force to implement its agendas?' queried a man who may have helped a mob kill four Americans. Complicating the current consensus narrative of the Benghazi assault, Abu Khattala says the attack on the consulate had 'had grown out of a peaceful protest against a video' insulting the Prophet Muhammed ' a peaceful protest the State Department now says never took place. Most of all, he gave the interview on an patio of a crowded luxury hotel, drinking a strawberry frappe, musing about the incompatibility of Islam and democracy and inviting Kirkpatrick to convert.

Abu Khattala is obviously not feeling pressure from the manhunt that Obama administration officials have portrayed as under way. There are supposed to be U.S. surveillance drone orbits over Libya, which never stopped after last year's war. Below them is supposed to be an FBI team investigating the attack. (The team was delayed.) And the Washington Post reports that the Libya attack has helped fuel a CIA push to expand its armed drone fleet.

On October 4, Pentagon spokesman George Little portrayed the U.S. was 'aggressively' hunting Stevens' killers. 'We've not been sitting around waiting, you know, for information to come to us,' Little told reporters. 'We've been actively chasing leads in various ways. The intelligence community, the State Department, FBI, the full range of capabilities of this government have been used to try to determine what happened in this tragic incident.'

At the second presidential debate, Obama reiterated a vow to avenge the Benghazi attack, and tied it to the successful manhunt that killed Osama bin Laden. 'We are going to find out who did this and we're going to hunt them down,' Obama said on Tuesday, 'because one of the things that I've said throughout my presidency is when folks mess with Americans, we go after them.'

At least one person wanted in connection with that attack does not believe Obama.



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