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Hearings on deadly Benghazi attack will address CIA role

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(MCT) — WASHINGTON — The scandal that forced spy chief David H. Petraeus to resign has diverted attention from another problem for the CIA: why the agency failed to anticipate or repel the Sept. 11 attack in Benghazi, Libya, that killed two CIA contractors, as well as the U.S. ambassador and another American.

Four House and Senate committees are holding closed hearings this week to examine security arrangements during the assault by armed militants. They will also look at the Obama administration’s public response.

“The American people need to know, why was the security at the consulate so inadequate?” Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., said on the Senate floor Wednesday.

Sen. Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif., who chairs the Senate Intelligence Committee, said Petraeus has agreed to testify even though he stepped down last Friday as CIA director after admitting an extramarital affair.

“He is very willing and interested in talking to the committee,” Feinstein told reporters.

A House Intelligence Committee announcement said Petraeus is scheduled to testify Friday.

On Thursday, the House and Senate intelligence committees will hear from acting CIA Director Michael J. Morell, who replaced Petraeus, as well as Director of National Intelligence James R. Clapper and other officials.

Officials confirmed last week that the U.S. consulate in Benghazi was essentially a front for a much larger CIA base about a mile away. Most of the 30 Americans evacuated after the attack were CIA employees or contractors, not diplomats.

The State Department believed guards at the two compounds would help each other in case of emergency. “If one compound came under attack, security personnel would flow from one to the other or vice versa,” Patrick Kennedy, undersecretary of State for management, said during a hearing last month.

Critics want to know why it took six CIA security officers and a Libyan military force 50 minutes to reach the consulate from the annex after the attack began. They also want to know why the team was armed only with automatic rifles.

“There is no doubt the annex was not properly defended, and the men assigned there did not have the arms and equipment needed to defend it,” said a former CIA case officer with long experience in the Middle East. “There are plans and procedures in place to secure yourself in the field that appear to have been ignored in Benghazi.”

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