WASHINGTON (AP) - The gunfire at the U.S. Consulate in Benghazi,
Libya, had barely ceased when Republican presidential candidate Mitt
Romney seriously mischaracterized what had happened in a statement
accusing President Barack Obama of "disgraceful" handling of violence
there and at the U.S. Embassy in Cairo.
"The Obama
administration's first response was not to condemn attacks on our
diplomatic missions, but to sympathize with those who waged the
attacks," Romney said in a statement first emailed to reporters at 10:09
p.m. Eastern time, under the condition it not be published until
midnight.
In fact, neither a statement by the U.S. Embassy in
Cairo earlier in the day nor a later statement from Secretary of State
Hillary Rodham Clinton offered sympathy for attackers. The statement
from the Cairo Embassy had condemned anti-Muslim religious incitement
before the embassy walls were breached. In her statement, issued minutes
before Romney's, Clinton had offered the administration's first
response to the violence in Libya, explicitly condemning the attack
there and confirming the death of a State Department official.
"I
condemn in the strongest terms the attack on our mission in Benghazi
today," Clinton said in a written statement received by The Associated
Press at 10:08 p.m. "As we work to secure our personnel and facilities,
we have confirmed that one of our State Department officers was killed.
We are heartbroken by this terrible loss."
Then, at 10:24 p.m., a
Romney spokeswoman lifted the release restriction on the Republican's
statement, and it was widely published.
At the time, the Romney
campaign did not know that the U.S. ambassador, Christopher Stevens, had
been killed, nor did the Obama administration. Libyans told American
officials around midnight that the ambassador had died, but Americans
were unable to confirm his identity until hours later.
"I strongly
condemn the outrageous attack on our diplomatic facility in Benghazi,
which took the lives of four Americans, including Ambassador Chris
Stevens," Obama said in his first statement at 7:21 a.m. Wednesday, the
next morning.
A closer look at the day's events and rhetoric:
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Tuesday, Sept. 11, Cairo, Egypt
Early
Tuesday morning, the U.S. Embassy in Cairo got word that demonstrators,
angry about an anti-Islamic film produced in the U.S., were gathering
in the streets. It issued a safety warning to Americans: Stay out of the
streets.
As the situation became increasingly tense- but while
the crowd was still peaceful - the U.S. Embassy in Cairo issued a
statement condemning what it called "religious incitement" as it worked
to calm the tensions.
"The Embassy of the United States in Cairo
condemns the continuing efforts by misguided individuals to hurt the
religious feelings of Muslims - as we condemn efforts to offend
believers of all religions," the embassy said at 6:18 a.m. EDT, shortly
after noon Cairo time.
That's the statement that Romney referred
to as the administration's "first response." By Wednesday morning, the
Republican nominee was at a podium in Jacksonville, Fla., saying that
statement "appeared to be an apology for American principles." It's a
theme Romney has hammered against Obama throughout his presidential
campaign, including in his campaign book, "No Apology."
But the embassy's condemnation of religious incitement hardly amounted to an apology.
Romney
also said Wednesday that the Cairo Embassy "put out a statement after
their grounds had been breached. Protesters were inside the grounds.
They reiterated that statement after the breach."
Not quite.
Almost five hours after the Cairo Embassy issued its statement - at
about 11:15 a.m. EDT - Associated Press images show protesters atop the
Cairo Embassy's walls. At about 11:33 a.m. EDT, the American flag there
had come down.
The embassy did use its Twitter account to say, at
about 8 p.m. EDT, that "this morning's condemnation ... still stands."
The tweet was later deleted.
The Obama administration later backed
away from the embassy's statement entirely. "That statement was not
coordinated with Washington. It was taken down," a senior administration
official said.
__
Tuesday, Sept. 11, Benghazi, Libya
As
the protests in Cairo were winding down, the situation in Benghazi was
getting worse. At about 4:15 p.m. EDT, senior administration officials
said, attackers had entered the compound, firing at officials and
setting the consulate's main building on fire. Three Americans were
trapped inside, including Stevens, the ambassador. They became separated
from each other; one made it out before going back inside to search for
the others.
No one could find Stevens.
They took refuge in a
second, smaller building around 4:45 p.m. EDT. More shooting started at
5 p.m., and two additional U.S. personnel were killed. Two more were
wounded. It wasn't until 8:30 p.m. EDT that Libyan security forces
helped the Americans regain control of the compound. Still, no one knew
where Stevens was.
That was less than two hours before Romney's initial 10:10 p.m. statement.
At midnight, Libyans told American officials that Stevens was dead. But they had to wait until dawn to identify him.
At 10:43 a.m. EDT Wednesday, Obama was standing in the White House's Rose Garden, offering a tribute.
__
Wednesday, Sept. 12, Jacksonville, Fla.
Just
minutes before Obama appeared in the Rose Garden, Romney spoke to
reporters at a hastily arranged news conference at his Jacksonville
campaign office, walking to the podium at about 10:15 a.m. What was
supposed to be a small rally was abruptly turned into a statement of
condolence for the deaths in Libya - and a doubling down on the previous
night's criticism of Obama.
Romney was pressed about whether he
would have made his Tuesday night statement if he'd had complete
information about the situation in Benghazi.
"I'm not going to
take hypotheticals about what would have been known what and so forth,"
Romney said. "I - we responded last night to the events that happened in
Egypt."
But his statement had referenced both countries, referring to "attacks on our diplomatic missions."
In
Washington, Republican foreign policy veterans called Romney's initial
statement premature and rushed, with limited facts and an incomplete
understanding of what was happening in Egypt and Libya. Romney's team
also was unclear about the timeline of when the Obama administration
weighed in.
One Republican official advising Romney's campaign on
foreign policy and national security issues painted a picture of a
Romney campaign more focused on ensuring Romney's evening statement made
it into morning news stories than on waiting for details about what had
happened.
This official, who spoke on the condition of anonymity
to avoid angering Romney's campaign, said that as word of violence
spread, campaign aides late Tuesday watched tweets coming out of the
U.S. Embassy in Cairo that were criticizing the filmmaker rather than
condemning the attackers, and saw an opportunity to criticize Obama.
It
wasn't until Wednesday morning, when the U.S. confirmed the death of
the U.S. ambassador to Libya, that Romney's team recognized the severity
of the situation - and that, the night before, it had opened itself up
to criticism for politicizing a diplomatic crisis.
__
Associated Press writers Steve Negus in Cairo and Philip Elliott and Matthew Lee in Washington contributed to this report.
EDITOR'S NOTE _ An occasional look at political claims that take shortcuts with the facts or don't tell the full story
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