A bulldog speaks

The sound of silence

Just for today, I'll aim my thoughts nationally.

South Carolina GOP U.S. Rep. Congressman Trey Gowdy made the news after being named to lead the newly enacted select committee to investigate the unresolved questions surrounding the slaughter by terrorists of U.S. Ambassador Chris Stevens and three other Americans in Benghazi, Libya, on Sept. 11, 2012.

Gowdy's been called a bulldog of a former prosecutor with a penchant for uncovering truth and seeing justice emerge from the manufactured fog of politics and calculated misdirection.

Someone asked the other day how I feel about the multitude of Benghazi diversions and questionable official versions. I said I find it hard to believe many relevant truths about that shameful night have yet to be dragged from hidey holes into the light of public exposure. And truth being what it is, I don't care which political party roots it out for all of us. Do you?

I said I don't feel my colleagues in the so-called mainstream national press have done anywhere near their job in disclosing the pertinent facts behind that disgraceful slaughter of American citizens. I recall wondering how I'd feel about the media's flagrant lack of watchdogging had the Benghazi dead included a member of my own family or a friend.

So when I watched Gowdy deliver a press conference to a roomful of elitist media types from the nation's biggest news organizations, I felt like cheering such refreshing candor expressed in the court of public opinion.

He posed pertinent questions to reporters, asking what they knew about circumstances of Benghazi, other than the pasteurized "official versions." No one responded to a question, or his valid points.

I've included the transcript below so you can form your own opinion about the validity of Gowdy's questions that the media present either couldn't (my bet), or wouldn't answer. By the way, valued readers, the First Amendment wasn't included in our Constitution to provide cover and protection for the elected government we expect to lead us honorably. It was approved for just the opposite reason.

Gowdy: "'We will not waiver in our commitment to see that justice is done for this terrible act in Benghazi. And make no mistake, justice will be done.' That was the president of the United States over a year ago.

"'We're investigating exactly what happened, but my biggest priority now is bringing those folks to justice.' That was the president of the United States over a year ago. No one has been arrested, no one has been prosecuted, no one has been brought to justice and we don't have access to the witnesses.

"You in the media were good enough for my 16 years as a prosecutor not to tell me how to do my job. And so far in Congress you've been good enough not to tell me how to do my job. I'm not telling you how to do your job. But I'm going to ask you some questions and if you can't answer these questions, then I'll leave you to draw whatever conclusion you want to draw about whether or not the media has provided sufficient oversight.

"Can you tell me why Chris Stevens was in Benghazi the night that he was killed? Do you know? Does it bother you whether or not you know why Chris Stevens was in Benghazi?"

Silence.

"Do you know why we were the last flag flying in Benghazi after the British had left and the Red Cross had been bombed?"

Silence.

"Do you know why requests for additional security were denied?"

Silence.

"Do you know why an ambassador asking for more security days and weeks before he was murdered and those requests went unheeded?"

Silence.

"Do you know the answer to why those requests went unheeded?"

Silence.

"Do you know why no assets were deployed during the siege? And I've heard the explanation, that defies logic, frankly, that we couldn't have gotten there in time. But you know, they didn't know when it was going to end, so how can you possibly cite that as an excuse?"

Silence.

"Do you know whether the president called any of our allies and said, 'Can you help, we have been under attack?' Can you answer that?"

Silence.

"Do any of you know why Susan Rice was picked? The secretary of state did not go. She says she doesn't like Sunday talk shows, but that's the only media venue she does not like, if that's true. Why was Susan Rice on the five Sunday talk shows? Do you know the origin of this mythology that it was spawned as a spontaneous reaction to a video? Do you know where that started? Do you know how we got from no evidence of that to that being the official position of the administration?"

Silence.

"In conclusion, Congress is supposed to provide oversight. The voters are supposed to provide oversight. And you [the press] are supposed to provide oversight. That's why you have special liberties and that's why you have special protections.

"I am not surprised that the president of the United States called this a phony scandal. I am not surprised that Secretary Clinton asked 'what difference does it make?' I'm not even surprised that Jay Carney said Benghazi happened a long time ago.

"I am just surprised at how many people bought it."

Silence, as Gowdy turned and left the podium.

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Mike Masterson's column appears regularly in the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette. Email him at [email protected]. Read his blog at mikemastersonsmessenger.com.

Editorial on 05/13/2014

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