Evidence is mounting that the deadly attack on the U.S. Consulate in Libya was planned by terrorists, and not solely a result of mob violence, as first suspected.
“The idea that this was just a protest gone wrong, that this was a grassroots angry mob that overran this facility—that seems less and less likely,” msnbc’s Rachel Maddow reported on Thursday.
Initially, officials believed that an anti-Muslim film made by a California man had inspired the rioting in Benghazi, Libya. But it now seems that, though the riot was real, terrorists used the riot as cover to launch their own attack on the U.S. Consulate.
On Thursday’s The Rachel Maddow Show, Maddow outlined some of the evidence suggesting that some of the bloodshed was planned by extremists, with outrage over the film serving only as a pretext.
For example, all the way back in 2008, U.S. Ambassador to Libya Christopher Stevens—who was killed Tuesday—warned about growing jihadist sentiment in Derna, which is near Benghazi. Derna, he said, was becoming a new hub for terrorist training.
Furthermore, on May 22 of this year, a rocket-propelled grenade hit the offices of the International Committee of the Red Cross in Benghazi. The attackers filmed the entire assault, and repeatedly referred to Al-Qaeda. A group demanding the release of Omar Abdul Rahman, currently jailed in North Carolina in connection with the 1993 World Trade Center bombing, claimed responsibility for the attack. Stevens was also killed by a rocket in the attack on the consulate—not the sort of artillery any random rioter is likely to be carrying.








