A series of missteps by Republican nominee Mitt Romney in criticizing President Obama’s account of the Sept. 11 attack on the U.S. consulate in Benghazi, Libya, may make it far harder for him to continue using the incident as the heart of his wider complaint about the incumbent’s foreign policy record.
Romney has seized on the coordinated attack, which killed Ambassador J. Christopher Stevens and three other Americans, to back his contention that Obama has weakened the U.S. presence in the world and overseen an intentional diminishment of American influence abroad.
Video
President Obama defends his administration’s response to the attack on the U.S. consulate in Benghazi, while Governor Romney attacks the Obama’s administration policy on the Middle East.
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In an election likely to be decided on economic issues, Romney’s move into foreign policy has stirred tensions within his campaign. But it has also put in play an issue — management of foreign policy — on which Obama once held a commanding lead.
The presidential debate Tuesday, however, again showed the perils that Romney faces in using the Libya attack to go after the president’s leadership abroad.
He mistakenly said Obama took weeks to call the Benghazi assault “an act of terror,” even though, as moderator Candy Crowley pointed out, the president used those words in a statement he made from the Rose Garden a day after the attack.
“No acts of terror will ever shake the resolve of this great nation, alter that character, or eclipse the light of the values that we stand for,” Obama said at the time. At another point in the remarks, he called the attack “outrageous and shocking,” though refrained from using the term terrorism to describe it directly.
The Romney campaign contended immediately after the Tuesday debate that Obama continues to offer confusing accounts of what happened in Benghazi, and it is true that the angry exchange over Libya on Tuesday provided no new facts to clarify how and why the attack took place.
The Obama administration has offered shifting explanations for how Stevens and the three other Americans were killed, attributing it variously to an attack that emerged from demonstrations over a YouTube video disparaging the prophet Muhammad to a well-coordinated assault carried out by the al Qaeda affiliate in North Africa.
In arguing for his national security record, Obama has said his use of drones, intelligence and special forces against al Qaeda’s leadership has left the group a shadow of its former self. The most obvious achievement was the May 2011 mission that killed Osama bin Laden in Pakistan.
But an al Qaeda attack against a U.S. mission in Libya undermines that claim to a degree. And Republicans, in particular, have called the administration’s sometimes confusing account a way to cover up what steps Obama and his advisers declined to take to better protect Stevens and the others.
At the time of Obama’s Sept. 12 statement, neither the State Department nor intelligence agencies had publicly concluded that the Benghazi assault was an organized act of terrorism.
But intelligence briefing papers prepared for Cabinet-level officials that day said it could have been terrorism, an assessment that shifted over the following week.
Romney has seized on the coordinated attack, which killed Ambassador J. Christopher Stevens and three other Americans, to back his contention that Obama has weakened the U.S. presence in the world and overseen an intentional diminishment of American influence abroad.
Video
President Obama defends his administration’s response to the attack on the U.S. consulate in Benghazi, while Governor Romney attacks the Obama’s administration policy on the Middle East.
More from PostPolitics
Chris Cillizza THE FIX | The second presidential debate is history. Who did the best? Who did the worst?
Glenn Kessler FACT CHECKER | We heard some oldies but goodies in Tuesday night’s feisty debate between Obama and Romney.
Aaron Blake THE FIX | In an otherwise close debate, he may have jeopardized a key line of attack on Obama.
Suzi Parker SHE THE PEOPLE | Romney creates an internet sensation, but fails to address women's issues.
In an election likely to be decided on economic issues, Romney’s move into foreign policy has stirred tensions within his campaign. But it has also put in play an issue — management of foreign policy — on which Obama once held a commanding lead.
The presidential debate Tuesday, however, again showed the perils that Romney faces in using the Libya attack to go after the president’s leadership abroad.
He mistakenly said Obama took weeks to call the Benghazi assault “an act of terror,” even though, as moderator Candy Crowley pointed out, the president used those words in a statement he made from the Rose Garden a day after the attack.
“No acts of terror will ever shake the resolve of this great nation, alter that character, or eclipse the light of the values that we stand for,” Obama said at the time. At another point in the remarks, he called the attack “outrageous and shocking,” though refrained from using the term terrorism to describe it directly.
The Romney campaign contended immediately after the Tuesday debate that Obama continues to offer confusing accounts of what happened in Benghazi, and it is true that the angry exchange over Libya on Tuesday provided no new facts to clarify how and why the attack took place.
The Obama administration has offered shifting explanations for how Stevens and the three other Americans were killed, attributing it variously to an attack that emerged from demonstrations over a YouTube video disparaging the prophet Muhammad to a well-coordinated assault carried out by the al Qaeda affiliate in North Africa.
In arguing for his national security record, Obama has said his use of drones, intelligence and special forces against al Qaeda’s leadership has left the group a shadow of its former self. The most obvious achievement was the May 2011 mission that killed Osama bin Laden in Pakistan.
But an al Qaeda attack against a U.S. mission in Libya undermines that claim to a degree. And Republicans, in particular, have called the administration’s sometimes confusing account a way to cover up what steps Obama and his advisers declined to take to better protect Stevens and the others.
At the time of Obama’s Sept. 12 statement, neither the State Department nor intelligence agencies had publicly concluded that the Benghazi assault was an organized act of terrorism.
But intelligence briefing papers prepared for Cabinet-level officials that day said it could have been terrorism, an assessment that shifted over the following week.