Who Will Testify?… 15 Benghazi Witnesses KILLED!… Can’t Testify

christopher-stevens-benghazi-white-house

With Congress officially in recess, Americans are anticipating the
return of the House to Washington and the resumption of Congressman Trey
Gowdy’s committee hearings on the September 11, 2012 terror attacks
against a U.S. diplomatic mission and nearby CIA annex in Benghazi,
Libya that killed four Americans, including Ambassador Christopher Stevens.

A number of previous investigations have taken place, but failed to uncover all of the relevant facts that Americans want and deserve to know. Gowdy has promised to uncover the truth surrounding the attacks and their immediate aftermath, and the number and fame of some of the witnesses he may call to do so could be remarkable.

Unfortunately, however, there are 15 witnesses that he might like to
call but cannot. All 15 of them have been killed in the two years since
the attacks under investigation.

Talking Points Memo cites a delayed Senate report
as saying that 15 “cooperating Libyan sources” are no longer available
to assist in the investigation because they are now dead.

The report also says that it’s “unclear” whether those killings have
anything to do with the ongoing investigation by the United States.

See… President Obama Allowing the Benghazi Murderers Off the Hook

Blaming “inadequate cooperation and a lack of capacity by foreign
governments,” the report says the FBI investigation is “slow and
insufficient” to bring the murderers to justice.

Perhaps more importantly, the report also concludes that the
terrorist attacks were “preventable,” and blames both the State
Department and America’s intelligence community for failing to
adequately protect U.S. personnel on the ground in Libya.

It’s unclear how much the 15 dead witnesses knew about the attacks,
whether Gowdy planned to call them, or what their unavailability means
for his investigation, but it certainly seems unlikely that their
absence will assist the committee’s efforts to uncover all the facts.

Also unclear is how many Libyan witnesses remain alive and available
to testify. If 15 witnesses out of, say, 300 have been killed over two
years in a nation wracked by civil war, that is sad, but not terribly
surprising.

On the other hand, if the original total was more like 30, that’s quite a different story.

 

Reposted August 16, 2014 – KnowTheLies.com

 

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