PropertyValue
?:author
?:datePublished
  • 2016-10-18 (xsd:date)
?:headline
  • More U.S. Embassy Attacks Under Bush and Reagan than Obama? (en)
?:inLanguage
?:itemReviewed
?:mentions
?:reviewBody
  • The coordinated Islamist militia attacks on the U.S. Embassy and a nearby CIA annex in Benghazi, Libya, in September 2012 left four Americans dead (including U.S. Ambassador J. Christopher Stevens) and cast a lingering shadow over the Obama administration, particularly Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, on whose watch the attacks took place. The issue of who was to blame for security deficiencies that made it possible for the attacks to occur dogged Democratic presidential nominee Clinton all throughout the 2016 presidential campaign. One way in which Clinton's defenders responded to accusations of fault on her part was by circulating statistics about comparable attacks that allegedly occurred during previous administrations. One such list cites incidents from the presidencies of Republicans George W. Bush and Ronald Reagan: The not-so-subtle implication is that Clinton's partisan accusers are hypocritical for heaping condemnation (and investigations) on her, but not on her Republican counterparts. But how valid are the facts and figures? Carefully considered, they're not as straightforward and pat as they might seem at first glance. For starters, what were the criteria used to make the comparisons? Does embassy attack mean one that literally occurs on embassy grounds, near embassy grounds, or includes assaults on U.S. diplomatic personnel regardless of location? Are we only considering attacks that resulted in fatalities? If so, must as least some of those fatalities be Americans? The parameters are adjustable. The statistics vary accordingly. Basing an examination on the somewhat inconsistent information compiled by various sources (see references below), and restricting our criteria to attacks resulting in fatalities, we found around 20 attacks that targeted U.S. embassies and diplomatic personnel over the course of the George W. Bush administration. By narrowing the criteria further to exclude offsite attacks on vehicles, motorcades, and the like, we boiled that number down to 13: At 65, our tally of the deaths resulting from embassy attacks during the Bush administration is one short of that provided in the Internet list (as we mentioned above, the available information on these attacks tends to be slightly inconsistent). Four of those deaths were Americans, three of whom were diplomatic personnel. One can argue that the comparison between these 13 incidents and Benghazi is strained, however, in that four U.S. personnel were killed in the Benghazi attack alone. One might further object that only attacks in which Americans were killed ought to be counted in the first place, in which case the number of pertinent attacks under George W. Bush would total three rather than thirteen. In any case, Congress did not see fit to investigate any of those incidents. We can't figure out how the author of the image came up with 10 embassy attacks under Ronald Reagan (we only count four that involved fatalities). It's clear from the stated number of U.S. citizens killed, however, that at least one of the incidents included under this heading doesn't belong there, and we're guessing it's the 1983 truck bombing of the U.S. Marine barracks in Beirut, Lebanon (not a diplomatic facility), which killed 241 Marines — and, for the record, was the subject of an official investigation. The most notable attack on a diplomatic target that did occur during the Reagan presidency was the truck bombing of the U.S. Embassy in Beirut on 18 April 1983. Some 63 people were killed in that attack, including 17 U.S. citizens, some of whom worked for the CIA. That incident, too, was investigated, according to a report from The New York Times: In the end, it seems to be the Beirut embassy incident that's most fittingly compared to Benghazi. At 17, the number of U.S. citizens killed in that single Beirut attack is greater than that of all the embassy attacks occurring during the Bush and Obama administrations combined. But though it was similarly criticized and investigated — and for similar reasons — its aftermath lacked the partisan zeal brought to bear on Benghazi. (en)
?:reviewRating
rdf:type
?:url