Deadly Attack in Libya Was Major Blow to C.I.A. Efforts
WASHINGTON — The attack in Benghazi, Libya, that killed Ambassador J. Christopher Stevens and three other Americans has dealt the Central Intelligence Agency a major setback in its intelligence-gathering efforts at a time of increasing instability in the North African nation.
Among the more than two dozen American
personnel evacuated from the city after the assault on the American
mission and a nearby annex were about a dozen C.I.A. operatives and
contractors, who played a crucial role in conducting surveillance and
collecting information on an array of armed militant groups in and
around the city.
“It’s a catastrophic intelligence loss,” said
one American official who has served in Libya and who spoke on the
condition of anonymity because the F.B.I. is still investigating the
attack. “We got our eyes poked out.”
The C.I.A.’s surveillance targets in Benghazi
and eastern Libya include Ansar al-Sharia, a militia that some have
blamed for the attack, as well as suspected members of Al Qaeda’s
affiliate in North Africa, known as Al Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb.
Eastern Libya is also being buffeted by strong
crosscurrents that intelligence operatives are trying to monitor
closely. The killing of Mr. Stevens has ignited public anger against the
militias, underscored on Friday when thousands of Libyans took to the streets
of Benghazi to demand that the groups be disarmed. The makeup of
militias varies widely; some are moderate, while others are
ultraconservative Islamists known as Salafis.
“The region’s deeply entrenched Salafi
community is undergoing significant upheaval, with debate raging between
a current that is amenable to political integration and a more militant
strand that opposes democracy,” Frederic Wehrey, a senior policy
analyst with the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace who closely
follows Libya and visited there recently, wrote in a paper this month, “The Struggle for Security in Eastern Libya.”
American intelligence operatives also assisted
State Department contractors and Libyan officials in tracking
shoulder-fired missiles taken from the former arsenals of the former
Libyan Col. Muammar el-Qaddafi’s forces; they aided in efforts to secure
Libya’s chemical weapons stockpiles; and they helped train Libya’s new
intelligence service, officials said.
Senior American officials acknowledged the
intelligence setback, but insisted that information was still being
collected using a variety of informants on the ground, systems that
intercept electronic communications like cellphone conversations and
satellite imagery. “The U.S. isn’t close to being blind in Benghazi and
eastern Libya,” said an American official.
Spokesmen for the C.I.A., the State Department and the White House declined to comment on the matter on Sunday.
Within months of the start of Libyan
revolution in February 2011, the C.I.A. began building a meaningful but
covert presence in Benghazi, a locus of the rebel efforts to oust the
government of Colonel Qaddafi.
Though the agency has been cooperating with
the new post-Qaddafi Libyan intelligence service, the size of the
C.I.A.’s presence in Benghazi apparently surprised some Libyan leaders.
The deputy prime minister, Mustafa Abushagour, was quoted in The Wall Street Journal last week
saying that he learned about some of the delicate American operations
in Benghazi only after the attack on the mission, in large part because a
surprisingly large number of Americans showed up at the Benghazi
airport to be evacuated.
“We have no problem with intelligence sharing or gathering, but our sovereignty is also key,” said Mr. Abushagour.
The attack has raised questions about the
adequacy of security preparations at the two American compounds in
Benghazi: the American mission, the main diplomatic facility where Mr.
Stevens and another American diplomat died of smoke inhalation after an
initial attack, and an annex a half-mile away that encompassed four
buildings inside a low-walled compound.
From among these buildings, the C.I.A.
personnel carried out their secret missions. The New York Times agreed
to withhold locations and details of these operations at the request of
Obama administration officials, who said that disclosing such
information could jeopardize future sensitive government activities and
put at risk American personnel working in dangerous settings.
In Benghazi, both compounds were temporary
homes in a volatile city teeming with militants, and they were never
intended to become permanent diplomatic missions with appropriate
security features built into them.
Neither was heavily guarded, and the annex was
never intended to be a “safe house,” as initial accounts suggested. Two
of the mission’s guards — Tyrone S. Woods and Glen A. Doherty, former
members of the Navy SEALs — were killed just outside the villa’s front
gate. A mortar round struck the roof of the building where the Americans
had scrambled for cover.
Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton
announced last week the creation of a review board to examine the
attacks. The board is to be led by a veteran diplomat and former
undersecretary of state, Thomas R. Pickering.
The F.B.I. has sent investigators — many from
its New York field office — to Benghazi, but they have been hampered by
the city’s tenuous security environment and the fact that they arrived
more than a day after the attack occurred, according to senior American
officials.
Complicating the investigation, the officials
said, is that many of the Americans who were evacuated from Benghazi
after the attack are now scattered across Europe and the United States.
It is also unclear, one of the officials said, whether there was much
forensic evidence that could be extracted from the scene of the attacks.
Investigators and intelligence officials are
now focusing on the possibility that the attackers were members of Al
Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb, or at least were in communication with the
group during the four hours that elapsed between the initial attack at
the mission and the second one at the mission’s annex.
Representative Mike Rogers, a Michigan
Republican who heads the House Intelligence Committee, said on CNN’s
“State of the Union” program on Sunday that there was “a high degree of
probability that it is an Al Qaeda or Al Qaeda-affiliated group that had
a very specific target in mind, and that was to attack the consulate
and cause as much harm, chaos and death as possible.”
Foreign diplomats say that under security
circumstances like those now in Libya, it is generally standard
procedure to have a “safe house” in the vicinity of a main diplomatic
facility that can be easily defended and evacuated.
“Normally, you try to keep the location of
such a safe house secret, but in Benghazi right now, I think this was
next to impossible,” Col. Wolfgang Pusztai, who until early August was
Austria’s defense attaché to Libya and visited the country every month,
wrote in an e-mail. “There are not too many foreigners hanging around,
and it is quite easy to track them.”
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