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GOP lawmakers grill Clinton on Benghazi attack

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(MCT) — WASHINGTON — Republican lawmakers failed to open new lines of inquiry into the deadly Sept. 11 attack on the U.S. mission in Libya despite back-to-back grillings Wednesday of Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton for a fuller explanation of the administration’s response to the much-debated terrorist assault.

Testifying weeks before she is expected to leave office, Clinton emphasized in consecutive sessions before the House and Senate foreign policy committees that there was a “rapidly changing threat environment” in North Africa, citing the recent terrorist attack in Algeria and growing instability in Mali, Nigeria and elsewhere.

“We now face a spreading jihadist threat,” she told the Senate panel. She said the flow of weapons and fighters from Libya since the overthrow of the late leader Moammar Gadhafi “is the source of one of our biggest threats.”

“We have to recognize this is a global movement,” she said of groups aligned with al-Qaida. “We can kill leaders, but until we help establish strong democratic institutions ... we’re going to be faced with this level of instability.”

In sometimes testy exchanges, Republicans lawmakers pushed Clinton on whether top administration officials missed warning signs of the terrorist attack that killed U.S. Ambassador J. Christopher Stevens and three other Americans in the Libyan city of Benghazi.

Clinton said she never saw any specific requests for additional security in Benghazi, saying such requests went to lower-level security professionals at the State Department.

“They didn’t come to me,” she said. “I didn’t approve them. I didn’t deny them.”

While most GOP members treated the outgoing secretary with deference, Sen. Rand Paul of Kentucky said bluntly that had he been president, he would have fired her for failing to read diplomatic cables from Benghazi.

“With your leaving, you accept culpability for the worst tragedy since 9/11,” Paul said. “I would have relieved you of your post. I think it’s inexcusable.”

Clinton said she accepted all 29 recommendations of an independent investigative board, adding that 85 percent were “on track” for completion in March.

“As I have said many times, I take responsibility,” she said. “Nobody is more committed to getting this right.”

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