The rescue of Capt Phillips vs. the lack of response in Benghazi

Betsy McCaughey:
In 2009 Somali pirates hijacked the Maersk Alabama, a cargo ship flying the American flag, and took the ship's captain, Richard Phillips, for ransom.

The United States Navy dispatched three warships, two helicopters and a surveillance drone and parachuted in the famous Navy SEAL Team 6 to rescue Phillips in a six-day feat portrayed in the newly released movie "Captain Phillips."

Anyone watching this real-life thriller will ask: Why wasn't a similar rescue mounted at Benghazi, Libya, where Ambassador Christopher Stevens and other Americans were attacked on Sept. 11, 2012?

On day six of Phillips' captivity at sea, Navy SEAL marksmen positioned on the fantail of the USS Bainbridge were given the go-ahead to shoot the three pirates holding Phillips, because one of them had a AK-47 pointed at Phillips' back. That authorization came from President Obama.

But where was the president on the night of Sept. 11, 2012? According to congressional testimony from administration officials, Obama stayed uninvolved. He was told about the attack at 5:15 p.m. during a routine meeting with Defense Secretary Leon Panetta.

But the president left it up to others to decide what to do, and never once in the ensuing hours asked for an update of the fate of the besieged Americans. That's either a lie or a dereliction of duty.

Stevens made two calls for help, as the firefight began. Former Navy SEALs Tyrone Woods and Glen Doherty also called for military assistance. But no military response of any sort was attempted.

Panetta later explained to Congress that there wasn't time to get forces to Benghazi. How did he know there wasn't time? No one could have known at 5 p.m. how long the fighting would last.

At a hearing earlier this year, Congressman Adam Kinsginger, a former Air Force pilot and member of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, suggested F-16 planes could have been dispatched from Aviano Air Base in Italy (a three-hour flight) to buzz the consulate and disperse the attacking jihadists.

The most damning testimony, which backed up Kinsginger's view, came from Gregory Hicks, who was deputy chief of mission in Libya. On May 8, 2013, Hicks told Congress that if the U.S. had sent fighter jets after the first incident in what turned out to be an eight-hour deadly ordeal, it would have prevented the mortar attacks on the CIA annex that killed Americans.

Instead, CNN got to Benghazi before military backup.
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The movie is yet another reminder of how Obama failed those under attack in Benghazi and is yet to give a rational explanation for his lack of action to help the Americans.  We will probably never get one, because his conduct that night is inexplicable for an American Commander in Chief.  It shoudl forever haunt his Presidency.

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