Einstein wrote:Chris X(
No more revolutionary talk online! The NSA is watching!
Every State department before Hillary would start sending troops and seek permission while they are flying...
Key for class idiot.
No, you can't do it like that, because all it takes is a single leak, for the foreign country to go berzerk, knowing that combat troops are on the way to their country. Even a small strike team would cause an international uproar. They had to get permission first, before sending the plane. The only thing they could do is, have the troops, security team on the tarmac, prepared to load on the plane, or already on the plane, but the plane would not be allowed to take off without final authorization. The state department would have to get that authorization from the foreign country, and then congress would still need to hold an emergency session for troop deployment on foreign soil.
It's just one of those diplomatic gaffes, that nobody in politics wants to deal with. And a lot of americans don't understand the run-around, or the red tape in these incidents. On that regard, I think the Tea Party just don't have enough political knowledge of how our government ties it's own hands behind it's executive branches. However the State Department is not the Armed Forces. Even if the plane was in the air, with troops, and they didn't get permission...they would have to have the fuel to divert to another airfield...and then they would have to explain to the other foreign governments why a military plane with a fully armed combat team was onboard. And then it still would go public.
Politics is a bitch.
Your still hanging one man's death, on one woman. There's a lot more going on in the background, behind governmental offices and black curtains.
1. Security incident.
2. Calls for reinforcement.
3. Options are balley'd back and forth.
4. Decision is made
5. Permission is sought.
6. Permission granted/denied/unable to contact (unable to contact is still a Denied)
7. Armed forces are contacted to send immediate troop reinforcements, if permission is granted by foreign country.
This process unfortunately takes more than 5 minutes. Even the State Department had a hard pressed time to get the facts of what was really going on. And the state department was given three different story's from the same foreign government. One story said they had not heard of an attack. Then it turned into there was an attack, but everything was under control. Then the story AGAIN changed to there was a full on attack on the embassy in question, and the embassy had yet to be secured.
One question you should be asking is, why did the foreign country not send in immediate reinforcements in order to secure the embassy and lend support to the besieged consulate?
How long...did it take for foreign army troop/police support in order to help secure the embassy and repel the attackers?
=^o.o^= When I'm cute I can be cute. And when I'm mean, I can be very very mean. I'm a cat. Expect me to be fickle.