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Obama wants to capture, not kill, Libya killers

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Coffin procession of dead from Benghazi attack

President Barack Obama told a radio interviewer Oct. 26  that his top priority is capturing — not killing — the “folks” who attacked and  killed four Americans in Libya on Sept. 11.

“My most important job as president is keeping the American  people safe… and we are going to make sure, most importantly, that those who  carried it out, that they are captured,” he told liberal radio host Michael  Smerconish.

But the president also acknowledged links between the  Libyan attackers and al-Qaida, by saying that U.S. must guard against “groups  throughout the Middle East and North Africa that aspire to do jihad and  terrorist attacks.”

Libya is in North Africa — not the Middle East.

Obama’s statement was made the same day the father of one  of the dead Americans charged the administration with “murder” for not providing  immediate aid to the compound while it was under attack.

Obama defended his handling of the Benghazi crisis, which  exploded Sept. 11 when jihadis attack the lightly fortified and poorly guarded  U.S. diplomatic compound in Benghazi, Libya. The initial attack killed the  ambassador and an aide.

Shortly after, the jihadis attacked a CIA compound, dubbed  the “annex,” that was located one mile away. That attack killed two CIA  guards.

U.S. officials were in contact with the beleaguered  Americans during the attacks, and watched them via a drone. However, no aid was  sent from nearby airbases in Italy. A convoy of U.S. guards and Libyan soldiers  reached the annex seven hours after the attack began.

Some media reports say U.S. military support was withheld  to avoid antagonizing or weakening Libya’s elected government, which is divided  by tribal rivalries and is currently being pressured by Islamist political  parties and their allied jihadi groups. After the attack, for example, the  government didn’t provide visas to the FBI’s investigative team for several  weeks.

Libya’s previous government, run by dictator Moammar  Gadhafi, was overthrown in 2011 by local rebels after Obama provided  high-tech  airpower.

Since the attack, Obama has repeatedly suggested it was  caused by a mob of Muslims’ angry about an anti-Islamic YouTube produced in  California

“The future must not belong to those who slander the  prophet of Islam,” he announced at the Sept. 25 General Assembly of the United  Nations.

However, there was no angry mob, and numerous intelligence  reports have pinned the blame on a local jihad group — Ansar al-Sharia — that  had previously been identified as an affiliate of al-Qaida’s decentralized  network.

Obama refuted GOP claims that the administration  highlighted the video to distract attention from the compound’s lack of  protection from the increasing jihadi activity in the region.

“The intelligence was coming in and evolving as more  information came up,” Obama said.

“This is something the American people can take to the  bank: My administration plays this stuff straight — we don’t play politics when  it comes to American national security,” he insisted.

But he also downplayed military responses and emphasized  law-enforcement solutions: “My biggest priority right now is bringing those  folks to justice… that’s a commitment I always keep,” he said.

The one mention of “jihad” — or Islamic religious war — was  overshadowed by repeated references to generic attackers, “folks” and “terrorists.”

In contrast, Gov. Mitt Romney used the Oct. 22 presidential  debate to depict the attackers as “jihadists” rooted in Islam.

“The right course for us is to make sure that we go after  the, the people who are leaders of these various anti-American groups and these,  these jihadists, but also help the Muslim world,” Romney said.

“We’re going to have to put in place a very comprehensive  and robust strategy to help the, the world of Islam and other parts of the  world, reject this radical violent extremism,” Romney said, highlighting the  link between Islam and terrorism.

Obama also cited and praised the extensive U.S. use of  drones to kill jihadis in Pakistan and Yemen, despite opposition from some  progressives and libertarians.

“We have been able to take out 20 of the 23 top al-Qaida  leadership,” he said.

“What we have done is cripple their capacity to carry out  homeland attacks here in the United States… we’ve an infrastructure now where we  can keep putting pressure on them and that is something I’m very proud of.”

Read more:  http://dailycaller.com/2012/10/26/obama-wants-to-capture-not-kill-libya-killers/#ixzz2AdOXOySJ

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