Will AG Bondi Squeeze this American-Killing Terrorist for Intel on Obama and Hillary Clinton, Who Let Him Off?
By The Blog Source
The arrest of one of the masterminds of the 2012 Benghazi terrorist attack marks a long-awaited but significant milestone in one of the most agonizing national security disasters in contemporary American history.
Zubayr Al-Bakoush was flown to the United States overnight and will be charged with arson, murder, and terrorism on Friday, according to Attorney General Pam Bondi, for his suspected involvement in the attack that claimed the lives of four Americans.
Bondi informed Justice Department reporters that Al-Bakoush arrived at Andrews Air Force Base before 3 a.m. and was taken into custody right away, where FBI Director Kash Patel and U.S. Attorney Jeanine Pirro received him. According to Bondi, prosecutors plan to pursue the case vigorously. The message is clear: culpability is not erased by time, she stated, adding that "we will prosecute this alleged terrorist to the fullest extent of the law."
Pirro reiterated a similar caution, highlighting that the case remains unfinished even after years have passed. For Americans, the Benghazi story was a terrible one. “We've all been affected by it," she remarked. Furthermore, there are more of them out there, to be clear. Pirro promised that investigators will keep looking for individuals who are still at large and said she and Patel have kept in touch with the families of the four Americans who were killed. "No matter how long it takes, time won't stop us from pursuing these predators," she declared. "The families who endured terrible suffering at the hands of these violent terrorists deserve that."
State Department staffer Sean Smith, CIA contractors Glen Doherty and Tyrone Woods, and Ambassador Chris Stevens were killed in the Sept. 11, 2012, attack on the U.S. diplomatic facility in Benghazi, the second-largest city in Libya. In a concerted attack, Islamic militants took control of the base, burned it, and fired mortars at a nearby CIA annex. Doherty and Woods were murdered later while defending the annex, while Stevens and Smith perished after being trapped within the flaming facility.
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Following the incident, Obama administration officials openly stated that the violence was a spontaneous response to an anti-Muslim internet film. Later, that narrative crumbled. While the White House relied on protest and video explanations for the attack, a House select committee came to the conclusion years later that no embassy security personnel in Benghazi did so.
The repercussions turned into a pivotal political dispute. When Ron Johnson questioned then-Secretary of State Hillary Clinton about the attack's shortcomings during a 2013 Senate hearing, she made the now-famous response, "What difference, at this point, does it make?" Bondi spoke directly to that line on Friday. It has an impact on Donald Trump. For those families, “it makes a difference," she stated. "And it has an impact on law enforcement fourteen years later."
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Bondi presented the arrest as a component of a larger Trump administration message. "President Trump's Justice Department will track you down if you commit a crime against the American people anywhere in the world," she declared. "It may not occur right away, but it will. You can't hide, but you can run.”
The arrest, according to Patel, who claimed to have worked on the Benghazi case early in his prosecutorial career, brought the tragedy "full circle." He informed reporters that he was at the airstrip when Al-Bakoush was taken into American custody and that the Justice Department and Pirro's office would "execute justice for the fallen."
Pirro concluded by drawing a stark comparison to the actual night of the attack. She asserted that “the attack had brutally killed a State Department employee, a top military official, and an American ambassador. The American cavalry did not arrive. They waited for aid for thirteen hours, but it never arrived. The cavalry did this time,” she added.
The case comes after Mustafa al-Imam was apprehended by U.S. special forces in Libya in October 2017. After being found guilty on federal terrorist charges, he received a sentence of almost 20 years in jail. The Justice Department is indicating that Benghazi is not a closed chapter and that accountability, while belated, is still on the horizon with Al-Bakoush now in U.S. custody.
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