by exploited » Sun Feb 15, 2015 2:24 pm
Yeah, my point most definitely was not to validate shallow political showmanship.
President Obama made a very serious mistake by deciding to release early intelligence about the attack. From a leadership perspective, that decision was truly disastrous. I firmly believe that on issues of such importance, a leader must remain quiet until the facts are as certain as they can be. He needed to be the calm in the sea of chaos, not the person who folds under media pressure, or ends up releasing erroneous information because they felt the people "deserved to know."
For the same reason, when people criticized Bush's immediate response to 9/11 (finished reading a story to some kids), I was a bit flabbergasted. That was exactly the response that a strong leader should have. It doesn't show weakness to remain calm - it shows that you are in control of yourself, which in times of national crisis, provides an immeasurable and intangible public benefit. In the same way, Obama should have risen above the fray by simply refusing to comment until he knew exactly what happened and why. It was a rookie mistake, to be sure, but ultimately just a mistake, not an intentional conspiracy to influence the elections.
Which brings me back to political showmanship. If Republicans were to put forward a serious attempt to fix the systematic problems that led to this incident (such as reduced Congressional funding for overseas diplomatic security, political appointments instead of merit-based appointments, problems with America's overarching foreign policy, etc) and then criticize Obama for not displaying proper leadership, that would be acceptable. I could understand that, because what Obama did was pretty damned foolish. But that isn't their goal, nor are their criticisms reasonable. In fact, the majority of the shit you hear from Republicans regarding Benghazi is little more than absurd conspiracy theories, which are really quite embarrassing.
And that is ultimately my point, which unfortunately I've had to reiterate: there are valuable lessons about leadership, security, foreign policy, etc. to learn here, but they are being overshadowed by retarded political showmanship, solely for the purpose of making the President look bad, instead of making sure stuff like this never happens again. It is disgraceful and shameful given the fact that a true American hero died in the process.