The team dropped what it was
doing and prepared to move to the Sigonella naval air station in Sicily, a short
flight from Benghazi and other hot spots in the region. By the time the unit
arrived at the base, however, the surviving Americans at the Benghazi mission
had been evacuated to Tripoli, and Ambassador J. Christopher Stevens and three
other Americans were dead.
The assault, on the anniversary of the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks on the United
States, has already exposed shortcomings in the Obama administration’s ability
to secure diplomatic missions and act on intelligence warnings. But this
previously undisclosed episode, described by several American officials, points
to a limitation in the capabilities of the American military command responsible
for a large swath of countries swept up in the Arab Spring.
At the heart of the issue is the Africa Command, established in 2007, well
before the Arab Spring uprisings and before an affiliate of Al Qaeda became a
major regional threat. It did not have on hand what every other regional
combatant command has: its own force able to respond rapidly to emergencies — a
Commanders’ In-Extremis Force, or C.I.F.
To respond to the Benghazi attack, the Africa Command had to borrow the C.I.F.
that belongs to the European Command, because its own force is still in
training. It also had no AC-130 gunships or armed drones readily available.
As officials in the White House and Pentagon scrambled to respond to the torrent
of reports pouring out from Libya — with Mr. Stevens missing and officials
worried that he might have been taken hostage — they took the extraordinary step
of sending elite Delta Force commandos, with their own helicopters and ground
vehicles, from their base at Fort Bragg, N.C., to Sicily. Those troops also
arrived too late.
“The fact of the matter is these forces were not in place until after the
attacks were over,” a Pentagon spokesman, George Little, said on Friday,
referring to a range of special operations soldiers and other personnel. “We did
respond. The secretary ordered forces to move. They simply were not able to
arrive in time.”
An examination of these tumultuous events undercuts the criticism leveled by
some Republicans that the Obama administration did not try to respond militarily
to the crisis. The attack was not a running eight-hour firefight as some critics
have contended, questioning how an adequate response could not be mustered in
that time, but rather two relatively short, intense assaults separated by a lull
of four hours. But the administration’s response also shows that the forces in
the region had not been adequately reconfigured.
The Africa Command was spun off from the European Command. At the time it was
set up, the Pentagon thought it would be devoted mostly to training African
troops and building military ties with African nations. Because of African
sensitivities about an overt American military presence in the region, the
command’s headquarters was established in Stuttgart, Germany.
While the other regional commands, including the Pacific Command and the Central
Command, responsible for the Middle East and South Asia, have their own
specialized quick-reaction forces, the Africa Command has had an arrangement to
borrow the European Command’s force when needed. The Africa Command has been
building its own team from scratch, and its nascent strike force was in the
process of being formed in the United States on Sept. 11, a senior military
official said.
“The conversation about getting them closer to Africa has new energy,” the
military official said.
Some Pentagon officials said that it was unrealistic to think a quick-reaction
force could have been sent in time even if the African Command had one ready to
act on the base in Sicily when the attack unfolded, and asserted that such a
small force might not have even been effective or the best means to protect an
embassy. But critics say there has been a gap in the command’s quick-reaction
capability, which the force would have helped fill.
The Africa Command is led by Gen. Carter F. Ham, an infantryman who commanded a
brigade in Mosul during the Iraq war and took charge of the headquarters last
year, just before American, British and French air power helped topple Col.
Muammar el-Qaddafi in Libya.
A spokesman for the command declined to comment on how its capabilities might be
improved.
On the day of the attacks on the mission and a nearby annex in Benghazi, General
Ham and other commanders were in Washington for a series of long-planned
meetings. The Pentagon’s national military command center distributed a report
around 4:30 p.m., 50 minutes after the assault started, that there had been
violence in Benghazi and that the ambassador could not be located.
President Obama was informed about the attack at 5 p.m. by his national security
adviser, Thomas E. Donilon, at the start of a meeting at the White House with
Defense Secretary Leon E. Panetta and Gen. Martin E. Dempsey, chairman of the
Joint Chiefs of Staff. Libya was not the only worry. There were also protests at
the United States’ embassies in Tunisia, Egypt and Yemen.
In the meeting, Mr. Obama ordered the Pentagon to begin “mobilizing all
available military assets to respond to a range of contingencies in Libya and
other countries in the region,” said Tommy Vietor, a spokesman for the National
Security Council.
But the administration was not well positioned to respond quickly. On the night
of the attack, the Pentagon was able to divert an unarmed Predator drone
operating 90 miles away to Benghazi, and the C.I.A. later used it to help plan
an escape route for the surviving Americans.
Two military officers working at the embassy in Tripoli volunteered to join
C.I.A. reinforcements who arrived in Benghazi early the next morning, just
before a series of deadly mortar rounds struck the agency’s annex in Benghazi
and killed two C.I.A. security contractors.
But other military forces were too far away or could not be mobilized in time.
The closest AC-130 gunship, a devastating and accurate weapon against insurgents
in urban areas, was in Afghanistan, a senior official said.
There are no armed drones within range of Libya. The closest fly out of
Djibouti, in the Horn of Africa, and were not in range of Benghazi. There was no
Marine expeditionary unit — a large seaborne force with its own helicopters — in
the Mediterranean Sea. American F-16 fighters in Europe were not on alert, and
General Ham concluded they would not have been useful in a confused fight in a
major Arab city.
Acting on Mr. Obama’s order, the staff of the Joint Chiefs presented the
options. Around 6:30 p.m., oral instructions were given for the units to get
ready to deploy and formal deployment orders were issued after 8:30 p.m. The
early reports in Washington noted that Ambassador Stevens was missing, and a
major worry was that a hostage-rescue mission might be needed.
The Pentagon sent the Delta Force commandos to the Sigonella base in Sicily, to
put them in position to deploy to Libya. Two 50-strong platoons of specially
trained Marines, from Rota, Spain, were ordered to get ready to deploy, too.
Another option approved was to send the European Command’s quick-reaction force,
which consists of about four dozen Special Forces soldiers and other
specialists. But it was in the middle of a mission in Croatia. Elements of the
team began leaving for Sigonella by 9 p.m., and the unit completed its
deployment to Sicily shortly after noon the next day, a Pentagon official said.
By then the 30 or so surviving Americans, and the bodies of their four
colleagues, were in Tripoli.
With the region still in turmoil, the European Command’s quick-reaction team was
sent on to Tunis. One of the Marine platoons was sent to Tripoli to protect the
United States Embassy there. The Delta Force commandos, having arrived too late
to help, flew back home, Pentagon officials said.
Now, the administration has quietly begun a major interdepartmental review of
security requirements in North Africa and the Middle East, said officials, who
like others spoke on the condition of anonymity because of continuing
investigations.
Independent military experts say that the fledgling Africa Command’s
capabilities need to be strengthened, particularly in light of the array of new
threats, from a Qaeda franchise that has seized control of northern Mali to
Islamist groups gaining strength in nations like Libya and Tunisia.
“There will have to be a reassessment of the priorities and resources for
Africom, given the responsibilities it has in one of the most volatile regions
of the world,” said Jack Keane, the retired general who served as the Army vice
chief of staff. “And certainly a quick response force, with air and ground
capabilities, has to be an important part of those resources.”
Source : www.nytimes.com
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