Book Review: ’13 Hours in Benghazi’ by Mitchell Zuckoff with the Annex Security Team
The CIA contractors describe arming for battle, only to be told to ‘wait’ by their base chief as Americans were under assault half a mile away.
In a polarized time, in a polarized country, very little has been more polarizing than the national debate over the attacks on the U.S. diplomatic compound and CIA annex in Benghazi, Libya, on Sept. 11, 2012.
For critics of Barack Obama’s handling of national security, Benghazi is representative of his many failings. The administration failed to heed dire warnings before the attacks, failed to respond adequately as they unfolded and lied to cover up its mistakes afterward. For defenders of the White House, Benghazi has come to represent the excesses of Mr. Obama’s critics. Mitt Romney hastily condemned the president’s handling of Benghazi just hours after the attacks, before the facts were known. Republicans have been doing the same ever since. Or so the argument goes.
What’s most remarkable about the millions of words spoken and written during three years of debate is that none of them have come from the small group of American officials who were there. This finally changes with the publication of “13 Hours: The Inside Account of What Really Happened in Benghazi,” written by Mitchell Zuckoff with five members of the team of six CIA contractors who fought in Libya that night. (One of them, Tyrone Woods, died during the attack on the CIA annex.) “13 Hours” is a crisply written, gripping narrative of the events of the battle in Benghazi that adds considerable detail to the public record of what happened there.
The authors acknowledge the rancorous debate upfront and announce that they don’t intend to join it. Their account “is not about what officials in the United States government knew, said or did after the attack, or about the ongoing controversy over talking points, electoral politics, and alleged conspiracies and cover-ups.”
Instead, it is about what happened that terrible night. The contractors—three ex-Marines, a former Army Ranger and two former Navy SEALs—were in Libya to provide protection for CIA case officers, and they sought to defend U.S. facilities and diplomats during the attacks. What the five survivors have to say is at once compelling and enthralling, infuriating and heartbreaking.