US mission may return to Libya 6 years after Benghazi attack

TRIPOLI : Six years after a deadly attack on the US consulate in Libya’s Benghazi, conditions on the ground may prompt the return of a US diplomatic mission to the North African country, according to Colonel Adam Chalkley, commander of Special Purpose Marine Air-Ground Task Force-Crisis Response. “There were indications that… recent improvements in the landscape and the operating environment of Libya were suggestive that a reintroduction of a diplomatic mission was on the near horizon,” Chalkley was quoted by Military.com as saying. He explained that his task force’s goal is to prevent a repeat of “another event” like the 2012 Benghazi attack – “a flashpoint that is going to result in the loss of US diplomatic blue chips or loss of life.” Chalkley also touted his task force’s cooperation with Special Operations Command Forward (SOF) and their support of the “Department of State efforts to reintroduce a diplomatic mission into Libya”, which he stressed “really dominated the entirety of our time.” “There is obviously a large desire to return to a US diplomatic presence. […] But there is still engagement; there are still things happening on a diplomatic front and building diplomatic ties,” Chalkley emphasised.

Referring to the Benghazi attack, he expressed confidence that the US “is not going to have another [threat] that would go unnoticed. “Now that said, the reason those things aren’t happening is because people know that we are there and ready to come in. There is an absolute recognition that operations and forces postured on the periphery, able to respond is a great deterrent for people behaving badly,” he concluded.

 

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