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State Department delayed seeking protection for FBI agents in Libya

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The senior U.S. official and the person familiar with the matter spoke on the condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the issue and the frictions that it has created between the State and Defense departments.

About 120 assailants firing assault rifles and rocket-propelled grenades stormed the consulate on the evening of Sept. 1,1 and then attacked a consulate annex where 25 to 30 U.S. personnel had taken refuge. U.S. Ambassador Christopher Stevens and Sean Smith, a State Department computer specialist, died from smoke inhalation in the consulate’s main building, which the attackers had set on fire. Two U.S. security contractors, former Navy SEALs Glen Doherty and Tyrone Woods, were shot and killed when the annex, where the local office of the CIA was based, came under attack.

Stevens’ death was the first slaying of a U.S. ambassador since 1979.

FBI agents assigned to investigate the killings were under “temporary duty mission,” meaning that they are under the authority of the U.S. Embassy in Tripoli.

State Department spokeswoman Victoria Nuland refused to discuss the FBI investigation on Thursday, though she acknowledged problems, particularly in securing the buildings. Reporters for various news agencies have been able to visit the abandoned mission, where they have examined sensitive, though not classified, documents that remain strewn throughout the buildings.

“We have had some challenges securing the site,” Nuland said. “We are continuing to talk to the Libyan side about that.”

It was unclear how long the FBI agents would remain in Benghazi after their arrival Thursday — 23 days after the attack — or how freely they will be allowed to pursue the investigation.

In the days after the attack, Benghazi residents rose up in anger against suspected Islamist militants thought to have staged the attack, but the city’s respite from their influence was short-lived.

A week ago, a police station near Benghazi’s Al Jalaa hospital was attacked by a mob of supporters of the principal group blamed in the consulate attack, Ansar al Shariah. The attackers threw grenades at the police station and sprayed gunfire at four police vehicles. Two of the gunmen were allegedly wearing suicide bomb vests.

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