John McCain is a drowning man, grabbing desperately on to anything he thinks can help save him. He’s still bitter he lost in 2008 and now his time as a powerful Senator is waning. He sees Benghazi as a life raft he can cling to as a way to try to hurt Obama and remain relevant.
See, in January he’ll be forced by term limits to leave the Senate Armed Forces Committee, the appointment that has made him one of the most powerful and visible Senators.
In the Benghazi attacks he hoped to find the scandal that would embarras Obama and allow the creation of a new investigative committee with him as its leader, lengthening his time as a top senator. But instead of pursuing reasonable questions about consulate security, he fixated on a conspiracy about a pre-election cover up and attacked Susan Rice as incompetent and unqualified.
Madeleine Albright, former Secretary of State, said of Rice that she’s “one of the smartest people I know on national security.” There are now reports backing up Ambassador Rice’s claims that she merely delivered the message that she received from our vaunted intelligence community when she stated on Sunday talk shows that the attack on the U.S. consulate was a protest and not an act of terrorism.
CBS News reports “The points were not edited to minimize the role of extremists, diminish terrorist affiliations, or play down that this was an attack.”
The intelligence community opted to leave specific reference to al Qaeda and terrorism out of Rice’s presentation because they didn’t want al Qaeda to know that we knew what we knew. This is classic investigative philosophy: don’t let the suspects know you suspect them.








