Benghazi Unclassified
Benghazi Unclassified
Benghazi Unclassified
Those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it.
-- George Santayana, Reason in Common Sense (1905)
INTRODUCTION
Four Board members were selected by the Secretary of State and one
member from the intelligence community (IC) was selected by the Director for
National Intelligence. Ambassador Thomas R. Pickering served as Chairman, with
Admiral Michael Mullen as Vice Chairman. Additional members were Catherine
Bertini, Richard Shinnick, and Hugh Turner, who represented the IC.
As called for by the Act, this report examines: whether the attacks were
security related; whether security systems and procedures were adequate and
implemented properly; the impact of intelligence and information availability;
whether any other facts or circumstances in these cases may be relevant to
appropriate security management of U.S. missions worldwide; and, finally,
whether any U.S. government employee or contractor, as defined by the Act,
breached her or his duty.
UNCLASSIFIED
-2-
The Benghazi attacks also took place in a context in which the global
terrorism threat as most often represented by al Qaeda (AQ) is fragmenting and
increasingly devolving to local affiliates and other actors who share many of AQs
aims, including violent anti-Americanism, without necessarily being organized or
operated under direct AQ command and control. This growing, diffuse range of
terrorist and hostile actors poses an additional challenge to American security
officers, diplomats, development professionals and decision-makers seeking to
mitigate risk and remain active in high threat environments without resorting to an
unacceptable total fortress and stay-at-home approach to U.S. diplomacy.
UNCLASSIFIED
UNCLASSIFIED
-3-
For many years the State Department has been engaged in a struggle to
obtain the resources necessary to carry out its work, with varying degrees of
success. This has brought about a deep sense of the importance of husbanding
resources to meet the highest priorities, laudable in the extreme in any government
department. But it has also had the effect of conditioning a few State Department
managers to favor restricting the use of resources as a general orientation. There is
no easy way to cut through this Gordian knot, all the more so as budgetary
austerity looms large ahead. At the same time, it is imperative for the State
Department to be mission-driven, rather than resource-constrained particularly
when being present in increasingly risky areas of the world is integral to U.S.
national security. The recommendations in this report attempt to grapple with
these issues and err on the side of increased attention to prioritization and to fuller
support for people and facilities engaged in working in high risk, high threat areas.
The solution requires a more serious and sustained commitment from Congress to
support State Department needs, which, in total, constitute a small percentage both
of the full national budget and that spent for national security. One overall
conclusion in this report is that Congress must do its part to meet this challenge
and provide necessary resources to the State Department to address security risks
and meet mission imperatives.
Mindful of these considerations, the ARB has examined the terrorist attacks
in Benghazi with an eye towards how we can better advance American interests
and protect our personnel in an increasingly complex and dangerous world. This
Board presents its findings and recommendations with the unanimous conclusion
that while the United States cannot retreat in the face of such challenges, we must
work more rigorously and adeptly to address them, and that American diplomats
and security professionals, like their military colleagues, serve the nation in an
inherently risky profession. Risk mitigation involves two imperatives
engagement and security which require wise leadership, good intelligence and
evaluation, proper defense and strong preparedness and, at times, downsizing,
indirect access and even withdrawal. There is no one paradigm. Experienced
leadership, close coordination and agility, timely informed decision making, and
adequate funding and personnel resources are essential. The selfless courage of the
four Americans who died in the line of duty in Benghazi on September 11-12,
2012, as well as those who were injured and all those who valiantly fought to save
their colleagues, inspires all of us as we seek to draw the right lessons from that
tragic night.
UNCLASSIFIED
UNCLASSIFIED
-4-
EXECUTIVE OVERVIEW
FINDINGS
1. The attacks were security related, involving arson, small arms and machine gun
fire, and the use of RPGs, grenades, and mortars against U.S. personnel at two
separate facilities the SMC and the Annex and en route between them.
Responsibility for the tragic loss of life, injuries, and damage to U.S. facilities
and property rests solely and completely with the terrorists who perpetrated the
attacks. The Board concluded that there was no protest prior to the attacks,
which were unanticipated in their scale and intensity.
UNCLASSIFIED
UNCLASSIFIED
-5-
The insufficient Special Mission security platform was at variance with the
appropriate Overseas Security Policy Board (OSPB) standards with respect to
perimeter and interior security. Benghazi was also severely under-resourced
with regard to certain needed security equipment, although DS funded and
installed in 2012 a number of physical security upgrades. These included
heightening the outer perimeter wall, safety grills on safe area egress windows,
concrete jersey barriers, manual drop-arm vehicle barriers, a steel gate for the
Villa C safe area, some locally manufactured steel doors, sandbag fortifications,
security cameras, some additional security lighting, guard booths, and an
Internal Defense Notification System.
Special Mission Benghazis uncertain future after 2012 and its non-status as a
temporary, residential facility made allocation of resources for security and
personnel more difficult, and left responsibility to meet security standards to the
working-level in the field, with very limited resources.
In the weeks and months leading up to the attacks, the response from post,
Embassy Tripoli, and Washington to a deteriorating security situation was
inadequate. At the same time, the SMCs dependence on the armed but poorly
skilled Libyan February 17 Martyrs Brigade (February 17) militia members
and unarmed, locally contracted Blue Mountain Libya (BML) guards for
security support was misplaced.
UNCLASSIFIED
UNCLASSIFIED
-6-
Post and the Department were well aware of the anniversary of the September
11, 2001 terrorist attacks but at no time were there ever any specific, credible
threats against the mission in Benghazi related to the September 11 anniversary.
Ambassador Stevens and Benghazi-based DS agents had taken the anniversary
into account and decided to hold all meetings on-compound on September 11.
The Board found that Ambassador Stevens made the decision to travel to
Benghazi independently of Washington, per standard practice. Timing for his
trip was driven in part by commitments in Tripoli, as well as a staffing gap
between principal officers in Benghazi. Plans for the Ambassadors trip
provided for minimal close protection security support and were not shared
thoroughly with the Embassys country team, who were not fully aware of
planned movements off compound. The Ambassador did not see a direct threat
of an attack of this nature and scale on the U.S. Mission in the overall negative
trendline of security incidents from spring to summer 2012. His status as the
leading U.S. government advocate on Libya policy, and his expertise on
Benghazi in particular, caused Washington to give unusual deference to his
judgments.
The Board found the responses by both the BML guards and February 17 to be
inadequate. The Boards inquiry found little evidence that the armed February
17 guards offered any meaningful defense of the SMC, or succeeded in
summoning a February 17 militia presence to assist expeditiously.
The interagency response was timely and appropriate, but there simply was not
enough time for armed U.S. military assets to have made a difference.
5. The Board found that certain senior State Department officials within two
bureaus demonstrated a lack of proactive leadership and management ability in
their responses to security concerns posed by Special Mission Benghazi, given
the deteriorating threat environment and the lack of reliable host government
protection. However, the Board did not find reasonable cause to determine that
any individual U.S. government employee breached his or her duty.
KEY RECOMMENDATIONS
With the lessons of the past and the challenges of the future in mind, the Board
puts forward recommendations in six core areas: Overarching Security
Considerations; Staffing High Risk, High Threat Posts; Training and Awareness;
Security and Fire Safety Equipment; Intelligence and Threat Analysis; and
Personnel Accountability.
OVERARCHING SECURITY CONSIDERATIONS
UNCLASSIFIED
UNCLASSIFIED
-8-
1. The Department must strengthen security for personnel and platforms beyond
traditional reliance on host government security support in high risk, high
threat 1 posts. The Department should urgently review the proper balance
between acceptable risk and expected outcomes in high risk, high threat areas.
While the answer cannot be to refrain from operating in such environments, the
Department must do so on the basis of having: 1) a defined, attainable, and
prioritized mission; 2) a clear-eyed assessment of the risk and costs involved; 3)
a commitment of sufficient resources to mitigate these costs and risks; 4) an
explicit acceptance of those costs and risks that cannot be mitigated; and 5)
constant attention to changes in the situation, including when to leave and
perform the mission from a distance. The United States must be self-reliant and
enterprising in developing alternate security platforms, profiles, and staffing
footprints to address such realities. Assessments must be made on a case-by-
case basis and repeated as circumstances change.
1
The Board defines high risk, high threat posts as those in countries with high to critical levels of political
violence and terrorism, governments of weak capacity, and security platforms that fall well below established
standards.
UNCLASSIFIED
UNCLASSIFIED
-9-
6. Before opening or re-opening critical threat or high risk, high threat posts, the
Department should establish a multi-bureau support cell, residing in the
regional bureau. The support cell should work to expedite the approval and
funding for establishing and operating the post, implementing physical security
measures, staffing of security and management personnel, and providing
equipment, continuing as conditions at the post require.
7. The Nairobi and Dar es Salaam ARBs report of January 1999 called for
collocation of newly constructed State Department and other government
agencies facilities. All State Department and other government agencies
facilities should be collocated when they are in the same metropolitan area,
unless a waiver has been approved.
8. The Secretary should require an action plan from DS, OBO and other relevant
offices on the use of fire as a weapon against diplomatic facilities, including
immediate steps to deal with urgent issues. The report should also include
reviews of fire safety and crisis management training for all employees and
dependents, safehaven standards and fire safety equipment, and
recommendations to facilitate survival in smoke and fire situations.
9. Tripwires are too often treated only as indicators of threat rather than an
essential trigger mechanism for serious risk management decisions and actions.
The Department should revise its guidance to posts and require key offices to
perform in-depth status checks of post tripwires.
10.Recalling the recommendations of the Nairobi and Dar es Salaam ARBs, the
State Department must work with Congress to restore the Capital Security Cost
Sharing Program at its full capacity, adjusted for inflation to approximately $2.2
billion in fiscal year 2015, including an up to ten-year program addressing that
need, prioritized for construction of new facilities in high risk, high threat areas.
It should also work with Congress to expand utilization of Overseas
UNCLASSIFIED
UNCLASSIFIED
- 10 -
13.The Department should assign key policy, program, and security personnel at
high risk, high threat posts for a minimum of one year. For less critical
personnel, the temporary duty length (TDY) length should be no less than 120
days. The ARB suggests a comprehensive review of human resources
authorities with an eye to using those authorities to promote sending more
experienced officers, including When Actually Employed (WAE) personnel,
to these high risk, high threat locations, particularly in security and management
positions for longer periods of time.
14.The Department needs to review the staffing footprints at high risk, high threat
posts, with particular attention to ensuring adequate Locally Employed Staff
(LES) and management support. High risk, high threat posts must be funded
and the human resources process prioritized to hire LES interpreters and
translators.
15.With increased and more complex diplomatic activities in the Middle East, the
Department should enhance its ongoing efforts to significantly upgrade its
language capacity, especially Arabic, among American employees, including
DS, and receive greater resources to do so.
UNCLASSIFIED
UNCLASSIFIED
- 11 -
16.A panel of Senior Special Agents and Supervisory Special Agents should revisit
DS high-threat training with respect to active internal defense and fire survival
as well as Chief of Mission protective detail training.
17.The Diplomatic Security Training Center and Foreign Service Institute should
collaborate in designing joint courses that integrate high threat training and risk
management decision processes for senior and mid-level DS agents and Foreign
Service Officers and better prepare them for leadership positions in high risk,
high threat posts. They should consult throughout the U.S. government for best
practices and lessons learned. Foreign Affairs Counter Threat training should
be mandatory for high risk, high threat posts, whether an individual is assigned
permanently or in longer-term temporary duty status.
18.The Department should ensure provision of adequate fire safety and security
equipment for safehavens and safe areas in non-Inman/SECCA 2 facilities, as
well as high threat Inman facilities.
20.DS should upgrade surveillance cameras at high risk, high threat posts for
greater resolution, nighttime visibility, and monitoring capability beyond post.
security posture. Key trends must be quickly identified and used to sharpen risk
calculations.
22.The DS Office of Intelligence and Threat Analysis should report directly to the
DS Assistant Secretary and directly supply threat analysis to all DS
components, regional Assistant Secretaries and Chiefs of Mission in order to
get key security-related threat information into the right hands more rapidly.
PERSONNEL ACCOUNTABILITY
23.The Board recognizes that poor performance does not ordinarily constitute a
breach of duty that would serve as a basis for disciplinary action but is instead
addressed through the performance management system. However, the Board
is of the view that findings of unsatisfactory leadership performance by senior
officials in relation to the security incident under review should be a potential
basis for discipline recommendations by future ARBs, and would recommend a
revision of Department regulations or amendment to the relevant statute to this
end.
24. The Board was humbled by the courage and integrity shown by those on the
ground in Benghazi and Tripoli, in particular the DS agents and Annex team
who defended their colleagues; the Tripoli response team which mobilized
without hesitation; those in Benghazi and Tripoli who cared for the wounded;
and the many U.S. government employees who served in Benghazi under
difficult conditions in the months leading up to the September 11-12 attacks.
We trust that the Department and relevant agencies will take the opportunity to
recognize their exceptional valor and performance, which epitomized the
highest ideals of government service.
UNCLASSIFIED
UNCLASSIFIED
- 13 -
Benghazi, the largest city and historical power center in eastern Libya, was
the launching point for the uprising against Qaddafi and a long time nexus of anti-
regime activism. It also served as the rebel-led Transitional National Councils
base of operations. Eastern Libya (Cyrenaica) had long felt neglected and
oppressed by Qaddafi, and there had been historic tensions between it and the rest
of the country. Throughout Qaddafis decades-long rule, eastern Libya
consistently lagged behind Tripoli in terms of infrastructure and standard of living
even as it was responsible for the vast majority of Libyas oil production. Stevens
presence in the city was seen as a significant sign of U.S. support for the TNC and
a recognition of the resurgence of eastern Libyas political influence.
Benghazi was the seat of the Senussi monarchy until 1954, the site of a U.S.
consulate, which was overrun by a mob and burned in 1967, and the place where
Qaddafi began his 1969 revolution against the monarchy. Qaddafis subsequent
combination of oppression and neglect enhanced the citys sense of
marginalization, and its after-effects were felt more widely in the eastern region
where a Salafist jihadist movement took root. Jihadis from Benghazi engaged in
Afghanistan against the Soviets and took up arms against U.S. forces in the post-
2003 Iraq insurgency. Many of them reemerged in 2011 as leaders of anti-Qaddafi
militias in eastern Libya.
UNCLASSIFIED
UNCLASSIFIED
- 14 -
earned the admiration of countless numbers of Libyans, and personified the U.S.
government commitment to a free and democratic Libya.
Benghazi, however, was still very much a conflict zone. On June 1, 2011, a
car bomb exploded outside the Tibesti Hotel, and shortly thereafter a credible
threat against the Special Envoy mission prompted Stevens to move to the Annex.
On June 21, 2011, he and his security contingent moved to what would become the
Special Mission Benghazi compound (SMC). By the end of August 2011, the
walled compound consisted of three sections (Villas A, B, and C) on 13 acres.
(Use of Villa A was discontinued in January 2012, when the SMC footprint was
consolidated into the Villas B and C compounds, some eight-acres total.)
On July 15, 2011, the United States officially recognized the TNC as
Libyas legitimate governing authority although Qaddafi and his forces still
retained control over significant portions of the country, including Tripoli. The
TNC continued attacking the remaining Qaddafi strongholds, and Tripoli fell
earlier than expected at the end of August. The TNC immediately began moving
the government from Benghazi to Tripoli. By early September, 21 members of
State Department Mobile Security Deployment teams were in Tripoli with the
Deputy Chief of Mission (DCM) in preparation for the resumption of operations of
the U.S. Embassy, which Ambassador Gene Cretz officially re-opened on
September 22, 2011. From September 2011 onwards, Embassy Tripoli was open
with a skeleton staff built on temporary duty (TDY) assignments, to include the
DCM and Regional Security Officer (RSO). (The fall of Tripoli took place shortly
after Embassy Tripoli lost its assigned staff and bureaucratically ceased to exist,
pursuant to Department regulations regarding the length of time a post can remain
open in evacuation status.)
Although the TNC declared that Tripoli would continue to be the capital of a
post-Qaddafi Libya, many of the influential players in the TNC remained based in
Benghazi. Stevens continued as Special Envoy to the TNC in Benghazi until he
departed Libya on November 17, 2011, after which the Special Envoy position was
not filled. Stevens was replaced by an experienced Civil Service employee who
served for 73 days in what came to be called the principal officer position in
Benghazi. After November 2011, the principal officer slot became a TDY
assignment for officers with varying levels of experience who served in Benghazi
anywhere from 10 days to over two months, usually without transiting Tripoli. In
December 2011, the Under Secretary for Management approved a one-year
continuation of the U.S. Special Mission in Benghazi, which was never a consulate
UNCLASSIFIED
UNCLASSIFIED
- 15 -
and never formally notified to the Libyan government. Stevens arrived in Tripoli
on May 26, 2012, to replace Cretz as Ambassador.
Throughout Libya, the security vacuum left by Qaddafis departure, the
continued presence of pro-Qaddafi supporters, the prevalence of and easy access to
weapons, the inability of the interim government to reestablish a strong security
apparatus, and the resulting weakness of those security forces that remained led to
a volatile situation in which militias previously united in opposition to Qaddafi
were now jockeying for position in the new Libya. Frequent clashes, including
assassinations, took place between contesting militias. Fundamentalist influence
with Salafi and al Qaeda connections was also growing, including notably in the
eastern region. Public attitudes in Benghazi continued to be positive toward
Americans, and it was generally seen as safer for Americans given U.S support of
the TNC during the war. However, 2012 saw an overall deterioration of the
security environment in Benghazi, as highlighted by a series of security incidents
involving the Special Mission, international organizations, non-governmental
organizations (NGOs), and third-country nationals and diplomats:
March 18, 2012 Armed robbery occurs at the British School in Benghazi.
March 22, 2012 Members of a militia searching for a suspect fire their
weapons near the SMC and attempt to enter.
April 2, 2012 A UK armored diplomatic vehicle is attacked after driving
into a local protest. The vehicle was damaged but occupants uninjured.
April 6, 2012 A gelatina bomb (traditional homemade explosive device
used for fishing) is thrown over the SMC north wall.
April 10, 2012 An IED (gelatina or dynamite stick) is thrown at the
motorcade of the UN Special Envoy to Libya in Benghazi.
April 26, 2012 Special Mission Benghazi principal officer is evacuated
from International Medical University (IMU) after a fistfight escalated to
gunfire between Tripoli-based trade delegation security personnel and IMU
security.
April 27, 2012 Two South African nationals in Libya as part of U.S.-
funded weapons abatement, unexploded ordnance removal and demining
project are detained at gunpoint by militia, questioned and released.
May 22, 2012 Benghazi International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC)
building struck by rocket propelled grenades (RPGs).
May 28, 2012 A previously unknown organization, Omar Abdurrahman
group, claims responsibility for the ICRC attack and issues a threat against
the United States on social media sites.
UNCLASSIFIED
UNCLASSIFIED
- 16 -
June 6, 2012 IED attack on the SMC. The IED detonates with no injuries
but blows a large hole in the compounds exterior wall. Omar Abdurrahman
group makes an unsubstantiated claim of responsibility.
June 8, 2012 Two hand grenades target a parked UK diplomatic vehicle in
Sabha (800 km south of Benghazi).
June 11, 2012 While in Benghazi, the British Ambassadors convoy is
attacked with an RPG and possible AK-47s. Two UK security officers are
injured; the UK closes its mission in Benghazi the following day.
June 12, 2012 An RPG attack is made on the ICRC compound in Misrata
(400 km west of Benghazi).
June 18, 2012 Protestors storm the Tunisian consulate in Benghazi.
July 29, 2012 An IED is found on grounds of the Tibesti Hotel.
July 30, 2012 Sudanese Consul in Benghazi is carjacked and driver beaten.
July 31, 2012 Seven Iranian-citizen ICRC workers abducted in Benghazi.
August 5, 2012 ICRC Misrata office is attacked with RPGs. ICRC
withdraws its representatives from Misrata and Benghazi.
August 9, 2012 A Spanish-American dual national NGO worker is
abducted from the Islamic Cultural Center in Benghazi and released the
same day.
August 20, 2012 A small bomb is thrown at an Egyptian diplomats
vehicle parked outside of the Egyptian consulate in Benghazi.
It is worth noting that the events above took place against a general
backdrop of political violence, assassinations targeting former regime officials,
lawlessness, and an overarching absence of central government authority in eastern
Libya. While the June 6 IED at the SMC and the May ICRC attack were claimed
by the same group, none of the remaining attacks were viewed in Tripoli and
Benghazi as linked or having common perpetrators, which were not viewed as
linked or having common perpetrators. This also tempered reactions in
Washington. Furthermore, the Board believes that the longer a post is exposed to
continuing high levels of violence the more it comes to consider security incidents
which might otherwise provoke a reaction as normal, thus raising the threshold for
an incident to cause a reassessment of risk and mission continuation. This was true
for both people on the ground serving in Libya and in Washington.
While the June IED attack and the RPG attack targeting the UK convoy in
Benghazi prompted the Special Mission to reduce movements off compound and
have a one-week pause between principal officers, the successful nature of Libyas
UNCLASSIFIED
UNCLASSIFIED
- 17 -
UNCLASSIFIED
UNCLASSIFIED
- 18 -
I was at the foot of the wide marble staircase when the breakthrough occurred.
Fanatical knife-carrying intruders, bleeding from cuts received as they were
pushed through broken windows, ran down the hall. Putting on gas masks and
dropping tear gas grenades, we engaged them on the stairs with rifle butts. In
seconds tear gas saturated the area. We then moved into the vault, securing the
steel combination door, locking in ten persons. My greatest fear, which I kept
to myself, was that gasoline for the generator would be found, sloshed under the
vault door and ignited. When after minutes this did not happen, our hearts sank,
nonetheless, as outside smoke wafted in and we knew the building had been set
afire.
UNCLASSIFIED
UNCLASSIFIED
- 19 -
In consultation with the TDY RSO and mindful of the threat environment
and the September 11 anniversary, Ambassador Stevens did not leave the SMC on
September 11, but rather held meetings there. At approximately 0645 local that
morning, a BML contract guard saw an unknown individual in a Libyan Supreme
Security Council (SSC) police uniform apparently taking photos of the compound
villas with a cell phone from the second floor of a building under construction
across the street to the north of the SMC. The individual was reportedly stopped
by BML guards, denied any wrongdoing, and departed in a police car with two
others. This was reported to ARSOs 1 and 2. Later that morning they inspected
the area where the individual was seen standing and informed the Annex of the
incident. There had not been any related threat reporting. The local February 17
militia headquarters was informed of the incident and reportedly complained to the
local SSC on the Special Missions behalf. The Ambassador reviewed a Special
Mission-drafted complaint to local authorities on the surveillance incident;
however, it was not submitted due to the typically early closure of Libyan
government offices. Later on September 11, the Ambassador was informed by his
Deputy Chief of Mission (DCM) in Tripoli of the breach of the Embassy Cairo
UNCLASSIFIED
UNCLASSIFIED
- 20 -
compound that had occurred that day and briefly discussed the news with ARSO 3.
The TDY RSO was also informed of the Cairo compound breach by his Regional
Security Officer counterpart in Tripoli and shared the information with colleagues
at the Annex.
Ambassador Stevens and IMO Sean Smith retired for the night to Villa C at
about 2100 local, while ARSO 4 watched a video in the Villa C common space.
ARSOs 1, 2, and 3 were sitting together outside and behind Villa C; the TDY RSO
was working in the workspace building referred to as the Office or TOC
(Tactical Operations Center), near the Villa B compound, which was connected to
the Villa C compound by an alleyway. From the TOC, the TDY RSO could
monitor a series of security cameras placed in and around the perimeter of the
SMC. The ARSOs were each armed with their standard issue sidearm pistol; their
kits, generally consisting of body armor, radio and an M4 rifle, were in their
bedroom/sleeping areas, in accord with Special Mission practice.
An SSC police vehicle, which had arrived at the main compound gate (C1)
at 2102 local, departed at 2142. The Special Mission had requested that a marked
SSC police car be posted outside of the compound 24/7, but in practice a car was
there only intermittently. The Special Mission had requested this presence again,
specifically for the duration of the Ambassadors visit. A subsequent local press
report quotes an SSC official as saying that he ordered the removal of the car to
prevent civilian casualties.
Around the same time, the TDY RSO working in the TOC heard shots and
an explosion. He then saw via security camera dozens of individuals, many armed,
begin to enter the compound through the main entrance at the C1 gate. He hit the
UNCLASSIFIED
UNCLASSIFIED
- 21 -
duck and cover alarm and yelled a warning over the radio, and recalled no such
warning from the February 17 or BML guards, who had already begun to flee to
points south and east in the compound, towards the Villa B area. ARSOs 1 and 2
heard an attack warning from the BML guards passed on over the radio. The TDY
RSO also alerted the Annex and Embassy Tripoli by cell phone.
The other three ARSOs behind Villa C also heard gunfire and explosions, as
well as chanting, and responded immediately along with ARSO 4, who was inside
Villa C. Following the SMCs emergency plan, ARSO 1 entered Villa C to secure
the Ambassador and IMO in the safe area and to retrieve his kit; ARSOs 2, 3, and 4
moved to retrieve their kits, which were located in Villa B and the TOC. ARSO 1
in Villa C swiftly located the Ambassador and IMO Smith, asked them to don body
armor, and led them into the safe area in Villa C, which ARSO 1 secured. He then
reported their whereabouts by radio to the TDY RSO in the TOC. ARSO 1, armed
with an M4 rifle, shotgun and pistol, took up a defensive position inside the Villa C
safe area, with line of sight to the safe area gate and out of view of potential
intruders. ARSO 1 gave his cell phone to the Ambassador, who began making
calls to local contacts and Embassy Tripoli requesting assistance.
From Villa C, ARSO 4 ran to his sleeping quarters in Villa B to retrieve his
kit, while ARSOs 2 and 3 ran to the TOC, where ARSO 3 had last seen the
Ambassador, and where ARSO 2s kit was located. (ARSO 2s sleeping quarters
were in the TOC, making him the designated TOC Officer in their emergency
react plan.) ARSO 3, upon not finding the Ambassador in the TOC, ran to Villa B
to get his kit; ARSO 2 remained in the TOC with the TDY RSO and shared
notification and communication duties with him. At Villa B, ARSO 3 encountered
ARSO 4, who was also arming and equipping himself, and the two then attempted
to return to Villa C. They turned back, however, after seeing many armed
intruders blocking the alley between Villas B and C. ARSOs 3 and 4,
outnumbered and outgunned by the armed intruders in the alley, returned to Villa
B and barricaded themselves in a back room, along with one LGF member whom
they had encountered outside Villa B.
Sometime between 2145 and 2200 local, armed intruders appear to have
used filled fuel cans that were stored next to new, uninstalled generators at the
February 17 living quarters near the C1 entrance to burn that building. The crowd
UNCLASSIFIED
UNCLASSIFIED
- 22 -
also lit on fire vehicles that were parked nearby. Members of the crowd then
moved to Villa C.
As smoke engulfed the Villa C safe area, ARSO 1 led Ambassador Stevens
and IMO Smith into a bathroom with an exterior window. All three crawled into
the bathroom, while the thick, black smoke made breathing difficult and reduced
visibility to zero. ARSO 1 tried to seal the door with towels and provide some
ventilation by opening the window. Instead, opening the window worsened
conditions and drew more smoke into the bathroom, making it even more difficult
to breathe. ARSO 1 determined that they could no longer stay in the safe area and
yelled to the others, whom he could no longer see, to follow him to an adjacent
bedroom, where there was an egress window. ARSO 1 crawled on his hands and
knees through a hallway to the bedroom, unable to see, while yelling and banging
on the floor to guide the Ambassador and IMO Smith to safety. ARSO 1 opened
the window grill and exited the building, collapsing onto a small, partly enclosed
patio, at which point he believed he was being fired upon. Immediately following
his exit, ARSO 1 realized the Ambassador and IMO had not followed him out the
window. He then re-entered Villa C through the egress window several times to
search for his colleagues while under fire by the intruders outside. He was unable
to locate the Ambassador or IMO Smith, and severe heat and smoke forced him to
exit the building to recover between each attempt. After several attempts, he
climbed a ladder to the roof where he radioed the TOC for assistance and
attempted unsuccessfully to ventilate the building by breaking a skylight. Due to
severe smoke inhalation, however, ARSO 1 was almost unintelligible, but the TDY
RSO and ARSO 2 in the TOC finally understood him to be saying that he did not
have the Ambassador or IMO Smith with him.
UNCLASSIFIED
UNCLASSIFIED
- 23 -
While Villa C was under attack, armed individuals looted Villa Bs interior
and attempted to enter the area where ARSOs 3 and 4 were barricaded. The
intruders carried jerry cans and were seen on security cameras trying to dump them
on vehicles outside the TOC, but they were apparently empty. A group of
intruders also attempted unsuccessfully to break down the TOC entrance.
Just prior to receiving the TDY RSOs distress call shortly after 2142 local,
the head of Annex security heard multiple explosions coming from the north in the
direction of the SMC. The Annex security head immediately began to organize his
teams departure and notified his superiors, who began to contact local security
elements to request support. The Annex response team departed its compound in
two vehicles at approximately 2205 local. The departure of the Annex team was
not delayed by orders from superiors; the team leader decided on his own to depart
the Annex compound once it was apparent, despite a brief delay to permit their
continuing efforts, that rapid support from local security elements was not
forthcoming.
While the TDY RSO continued to man the TOC and communicate with
Tripoli, the Annex, and Washington, ARSO 2 used a smoke grenade to obscure his
movements from the TOC to Villa B, where he joined ARSOs 3 and 4 who were
barricaded inside. By this point, the first group of attackers appeared to have
receded. The three ARSOs then drove an armored vehicle parked outside of the
TOC to Villa C, where they assisted ARSO 1, who was in distress on the roof,
vomiting from severe smoke inhalation and losing consciousness. ARSOs 2, 3,
and 4 repeatedly entered Villa C through the egress window, at times crawling on
their hands and knees through the safe area due to heavy smoke and the lack of air
and visibility.
Near the SMC, the Annex team hoped to bring along friendly forces from
militia compounds located along their route. The Annex team stopped at the
intersection to the west of the C1 entrance and attempted to convince militia
members there to assist. There was periodic, ineffective small arms fire in the
teams location from the direction of the Special Mission.
Unable to secure additional assistance, the team moved on to the SMC. The
February 17 living quarters and adjacent vehicles were burned, and heavy smoke
UNCLASSIFIED
UNCLASSIFIED
- 24 -
was pouring out of the still smoldering Villa C. The Annex team made contact
with the four ARSOs at Villa C. Some Annex team members went to retrieve the
TDY RSO from the TOC, while other Annex team members joined the ARSOs in
their search for the Ambassador.
During their searches of the Villa C safe area, the ARSOs found and
removed the body of IMO Smith with Annex security team assistance. The team
checked for vital signs and verified that IMO Smith was already deceased,
apparently due to smoke inhalation. Other Annex security team members and the
TDY RSO joined up with the ARSOs again to enter Villa C via the egress window
but were unable to locate Ambassador Stevens despite multiple attempts. Heat and
smoke continued to be limiting factors in their ability to move farther into the safe
area. When the TDY RSO attempted to enter Villa C through the front door, the
ceiling collapsed. During these rescue attempts, an ARSO received a severe
laceration to his arm.
At the urging of the Annex security team and friendly militia members, who
warned that the compound was at risk of being overrun, the TDY RSO and four
ARSOs departed for the Annex without having found Ambassador Stevens. As the
Annex team provided cover fire, the five DS agents fully armored vehicle
departed and took hostile fire as they left the SMC and turned right out of the C1
entrance. The driver, ARSO 1, reversed direction to avoid a crowd farther down
the street, then reverted back to the original easterly route towards the crowd after
a man whom the DS agents believed to be with February 17 signaled them to do
so. Farther ahead, another man in a small group of individuals then motioned to
them to enter a neighboring compound, some 300 meters to the east of the C1
entrance of the Special Mission compound. The DS agents suspected a trap,
ignored this signal, and continued past. The group along the route then opened fire
at the vehicles side, shattering and almost penetrating the armored glass and
blowing out two tires. While the identities of the individuals who fired upon the
DS agents is unknown, they may have been part of the initial wave of attackers
who swarmed the SMC earlier that night. A roadblock was present outside this
compound and groups of attackers were seen entering it at about the time this
vehicle movement was taking place.
ARSO 1 accelerated past the armed crowd and navigated around another
crowd and roadblock near the end of the road, driving down the center median and
UNCLASSIFIED
UNCLASSIFIED
- 25 -
into the oncoming lane at one point to bypass stopped traffic. Two cars followed,
with one turning off and the other following them with its lights off until it turned
into a warehouse area not far from the Annex. The DS vehicle then proceeded to
the Annex, arriving around 2330 local. There the ARSOs joined Annex personnel
and took up defensive positions, to await the Annex security and Tripoli response
team. The situation was relatively quiet. Wounded personnel received medical
support.
Back at the SMC, the Annex security team at Villa C used small arms fire
and took defensive positions to respond to an apparent second phase attack, which
lasted about 15 minutes and included small arms fire and at least three rocket-
propelled grenades (RPGs) launched from outside the C3 gate. With their many
and repeated attempts to retrieve the Ambassador having proven fruitless and
militia members warning them the SMC could not be held much longer, the Annex
team departed the SMC, carrying with them the body of IMO Smith. They arrived
back at the Annex and moved to take up additional defensive positions.
Upon notification of the attack from the TDY RSO around 2145 local,
Embassy Tripoli set up a command center and notified Washington. About 2150
local, the DCM was able to reach Ambassador Stevens, who briefly reported that
the SMC was under attack before the call cut off. The Embassy notified Benina
Airbase in Benghazi of a potential need for logistic support and aircraft for
extraction and received full cooperation. The DCM contacted the Libyan President
and Prime Ministers offices to urge them to mobilize a rescue effort, and kept
Washington apprised of posts efforts. The Embassy also reached out to Libyan
Air Force and Armed Forces contacts, February 17 leadership, and UN and third
country embassies, among others. Within hours, Embassy Tripoli chartered a
private airplane and deployed a seven-person security team, which included two
U.S. military personnel, to Benghazi.
UNCLASSIFIED
UNCLASSIFIED
- 26 -
Just before midnight, shortly after the DS and Annex security teams arrived
from the SMC, the Annex began to be targeted by gunfire and RPGs, which
continued intermittently for an hour. Annex security personnel engaged from their
defensive positions, which were reinforced by DS agents. Other personnel
remained in contact with Embassy Tripoli from the Annex.
UNCLASSIFIED
UNCLASSIFIED
- 27 -
Embassy Tripoli worked with the Libyan government to have a Libyan Air
Force C-130 take the remaining U.S. government personnel from Benghazi to
Tripoli. Two American citizen State Department contractors traveled to the airport
and linked up with the remaining U.S. government personnel. While awaiting
transport, the TDY RSO and Annex personnel continued to reach out to Libyan
contacts to coordinate the transport of the presumed remains of Ambassador
Stevens to the airport. The body was brought to the airport in what appeared to be
a local ambulance at 0825 local, and the TDY RSO verified Ambassador Stevens
identity.
At 1130 local, September 12, 2012, the Libyan government-provided C-130
evacuation flight landed in Tripoli with the last U.S. government personnel from
Benghazi and the remains of the four Americans killed, who were transported to a
local hospital.
those wounded in the attacks departed Tripoli on the C-17 aircraft, with military
doctors and nurses aboard providing en route medical care to the injured. The
aircraft arrived at Ramstein Air Force Base at approximately 2230 (Tripoli time)
on September 12, just over 24 hours after the attacks in Benghazi had commenced.
UNCLASSIFIED
UNCLASSIFIED
- 29 -
Through the course of its inquiry, the Board interviewed over 100
individuals, reviewed thousands of pages of documents, and viewed hours of video
footage. On the basis of its comprehensive review of this information, the Board
remains fully convinced that responsibility for the tragic loss of life, injuries, and
damage to U.S. facilities and property rests solely and completely with the
terrorists who perpetrated the attack.
Overriding Factors
UNCLASSIFIED
UNCLASSIFIED
- 30 -
floating TDY platform with successive principal officers often confined to the
SMC due to threats and inadequate resources, and RSOs resorting to field-
expedient solutions to correct security shortfalls.
Another key driver behind the weak security platform in Benghazi was the
decision to treat Benghazi as a temporary, residential facility, not officially notified
to the host government, even though it was also a full time office facility. This
resulted in the Special Mission compound being excepted from office facility
standards and accountability under the Secure Embassy Construction and
Counterterrorism Act of 1999 (SECCA) and the Overseas Security Policy Board
(OSPB). Benghazis initial platform in November 2011 was far short of OSPB
UNCLASSIFIED
UNCLASSIFIED
- 31 -
Personnel
UNCLASSIFIED
UNCLASSIFIED
- 32 -
part of post about asking for more. The TDY DS agents resorted to doing the best
they could with the limited resources provided.
Furthermore, DSs reliance on volunteers for TDY positions meant that the
ARSOs in Benghazi often had relatively little or no prior DS program management
or overseas experience. For a time, more experienced RSOs were sent out on
longer term TDYs, but even that appeared to diminish after June 2012, exactly at
the time the security environment in Benghazi was deteriorating further. It bears
emphasizing, however, that the Board found the work done by these often junior
DS agents to be exemplary. But given the threat environment and with very little
operational oversight from more experienced, senior colleagues, combined with an
under-resourced security platform, these agents were not well served by their
leadership in Washington. The lack of Arabic-language skills among most
American personnel assigned to Benghazi and the lack of a dedicated LES
interpreter and sufficient local staff also served as a barrier to effective
communication and situational awareness at the Special Mission.
The Board determined that reliance on February 17 for security in the event
of an attack was misplaced, even though February 17 had been considered to have
responded satisfactorily to previous, albeit less threatening, incidents. The four
assigned February 17 guards were insufficient and did not have the requisite skills
and reliability to provide a reasonable level of security on a 24/7 basis for an eight-
acre compound with an extended perimeter wall. In the days prior to the attack
and on September 11, 2012, one was absent. Over the course of its inquiry, the
Board also learned of troubling indicators of February 17s loyalties and its
readiness to assist U.S. personnel. In the weeks preceding the Ambassadors
arrival, February 17 had complained about salaries and the lack of a contract for its
personnel. At the time of the attacks, February 17 had ceased accompanying
Special Mission vehicle movements in protest. The Blue Mountain Libya (BML)
UNCLASSIFIED
UNCLASSIFIED
- 33 -
unarmed guards, whose primary responsibilities were to provide early warning and
control access to the SMC, were also poorly skilled.
Physical Security
UNCLASSIFIED
UNCLASSIFIED
- 34 -
Security Planning
Post and the Department were well aware of the anniversary of the
September 11, 2001, terrorist attacks, although DS did not issue a worldwide
caution cable to posts related to the anniversary. Ambassador Stevens and his DS
agents had taken the anniversary into account by deciding to hold all meetings at
the SMC that day rather than making any moves outside.
and no sign of them on surveillance cameras outside the C1 gate until the attack
was underway. The Board learned that, as of the time of the attacks, the Special
Mission compound had received additional surveillance cameras, which remained
in boxes uninstalled, as technical support to install them had not yet visited post.
In addition, the camera monitor in the local guard force booth next to the C1 gate
was inoperable on the day of the attacks, a repair which also awaited the arrival of
a technical team.
The Boards inquiry found little evidence that the armed February 17 guards
alerted Americans at the SMC to the attack or summoned a February 17 militia
presence to assist expeditiously once the attack was in progress despite the fact
that February 17 members were paid to provide interior security and a quick
reaction force for the SMC and the fact that February 17 barracks were in the close
vicinity, less than 2 km away from the SMC. A small number of February 17
militia members arrived at Villa C nearly an hour after the attack began. Although
some February 17 members assisted in efforts to search for Ambassador Stevens in
the smoke-filled Villa C building, the Board found little evidence that February 17
UNCLASSIFIED
UNCLASSIFIED
- 36 -
The Board found that the lack of non-lethal crowd control options also
precluded a more vigorous defense of the SMC. The Board also determined that
the lack of fire safety equipment severely impacted the Ambassadors and Sean
Smiths ability to escape the deadly smoke conditions. On the other hand, the DS
agents tactical driving training, as well as their fully-armored vehicle, saved their
lives when they were attacked by weapons fire en route from the SMC to the
Annex. In addition, the DS emergency medical training and the DS-issued
personal medical kit saved an ARSOs life after he was severely injured by a
mortar attack at the Annex.
The interagency response was timely and appropriate, but there simply was
not enough time given the speed of the attacks for armed U.S. military assets to
have made a difference. Senior-level interagency discussions were underway soon
after Washington received initial word of the attacks and continued through the
night. The Board found no evidence of any undue delays in decision making or
denial of support from Washington or from the military combatant commanders.
Quite the contrary: the safe evacuation of all U.S. government personnel from
Benghazi twelve hours after the initial attack and subsequently to Ramstein Air
Force Base was the result of exceptional U.S. government coordination and
military response and helped save the lives of two severely wounded Americans. In
addition, at the State Departments request, the Department of Defense also
provided a Marine FAST (Fleet Antiterrorism Security Team) as additional
security support for Embassy Tripoli on September 12.
communications between the Annex and the SMC also worked well, thanks to
prior coordination between the two.
Terrorist networks are difficult to monitor, and the Board emphasizes the
conclusion of previous accountability review boards that vulnerable missions
cannot rely on receiving specific warning intelligence. Similarly, the lack of
specific threat intelligence does not imply a lessening of probability of a terrorist
attack. The Board found that there was a tendency on the part of policy, security
and other U.S. government officials to rely heavily on the probability of warning
intelligence and on the absence of specific threat information. The result was
possibly to overlook the usefulness of taking a hard look at accumulated,
sometimes circumstantial information, and instead to fail to appreciate threats and
understand trends, particularly based on increased violence and the targeting of
foreign diplomats and international organizations in Benghazi. The latter
information failed to come into clear relief against a backdrop of the lack of
effective governance, widespread and growing political violence and instability
and the ready availability of weapons in eastern Libya. There were U.S.
assessments that provided situational awareness on the persistent, general threat to
U.S. and Western interests in eastern Libya, including Benghazi. Board members,
however, were struck by the lack of discussion focused specifically on Benghazi.
which there had been some trepidation regarding the security situation, passed with
less violence than expected and were followed by Ramadan, when incidents are
usually lower. Before September 11, a patchwork of militias in Benghazi had
assumed many, if not all, of the security functions normally associated with central
government organs, as the government had little authority or reach in Benghazi.
There seemed to be no attempt, however, to link formally the many anti-Western
incidents in Benghazi, the general declarations of threat in U.S. assessments and a
proliferation of violence-prone and little understood militias, the lack of any
central authority and a general perception of a deteriorating security environment
to any more specific and timely analysis of the threat to U.S. government facilities.
ACCOUNTABILITY OF PERSONNEL
5. The Board found that certain senior State Department officials within two
bureaus in critical positions of authority and responsibility in Washington
demonstrated a lack of proactive leadership and management ability
appropriate for the State Departments senior ranks in their responses to
security concerns posed by Special Mission Benghazi, given the deteriorating
threat environment and the lack of reliable host government protection.
However, the Board did not find that any individual U.S. Government
employee engaged in misconduct or willfully ignored his or her responsibilities,
and, therefore did not find reasonable cause to believe that an individual
breached his or her duty so as to be the subject of a recommendation for
disciplinary action.
UNCLASSIFIED