One email confirmed officials removed information about CIA warnings regarding an al Qaeda threat before the attacks in Benghazi, Libya in September 2012 from talking points the U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations presented to the public. The administration released the emails in an effort to seem more transparent.?
EnlargeThe?White House?on Wednesday sought to defuse controversy over its handling of last year's killing of four Americans in Benghazi, releasing emails that show how?Obama administration?officials presented a scrubbed-down version of the attacks to the public.
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The documents gave a glimpse into the administration's message control as officials carefully debated via email which details U.S. Ambassador to the?United Nations?Susan Rice should highlight when she went on talk shows five days later to discuss the Sept. 11 assault on the?U.S. mission?in Benghazi,?Libya.
There was little in the roughly 100 pages of emails about Rice's "talking points" that had not been leaked previously.
They included an email confirming perhaps the most damaging charge that administration officials removed mention from Rice's talking points that the CIA had warned of an al Qaeda threat in the area of the eastern Libyan city before the attacks.
The exchange between?White House, State Department and intelligence officials showed the talking points went through a series of revisions that scrubbed them of references to terror warnings before Ambassador?Chris Stevens?and three other Americans were killed.
While awkward for the?White House, releasing the emails was an effort to counter complaints from Republicans and the media that President?Barack Obama's administration?is secretive.
It came as the government was battling criticism on several fronts, including a scandal over the?Internal Revenue Service's targeting of conservative groups for special scrutiny.
In the Benghazi?emails, then-State Department spokeswoman?Victoria Nuland?raised concerns about references to intelligence about the threat from militants in?eastern Libya.
Nuland wrote that she had "serious concerns" that the talking points would provide members of?Congress?with material to "beat the State Department for not paying attention to (Central Intelligence) Agency warnings" about threats in the region.
Those references were deleted from the final talking points that Rice used on the Sunday morning talk shows on Sept. 16.
Nuland noted in one of her emails that changes during the draft process "don't resolve all my issues or those of my building leadership," suggesting officials above her at the State Department were also concerned.
Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/u3g2j3qnw_U/Benghazi-emails-What-do-they-reveal
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