American fatalities and injuries of the 2012 Benghazi attack

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Four Americans died in the 2012 Benghazi attack: Ambassador Stevens, Information Officer Sean Smith,[1] and two CIA operatives,[2] Glen Doherty and Tyrone Woods,[3][4] both former Navy SEALs.[5][6] Stevens is the first U.S. ambassador killed in an attack since Adolph Dubs was killed in 1979.[7] Senior intelligence officials later acknowledged that Woods and Doherty were contracted by the Central Intelligence Agency, not the State Department as previously identified,[8] and were part of a Global Response Staff (GRS), a team that provides security to CIA case officers and countersurveillance and surveillance protection.[9]

Initial reports indicated that ten Libyan guards died; this was later retracted and it was reported that seven Libyans were injured.[10] An early report indicated that three Americans were injured in the attack and treated at an American Military Hospital in Germany.[11]

Since then, reports differ regarding the number of Americans wounded in the attacks. The ARB report released December 20, 2012 stated that two Americans were wounded.[12] In March 2013 it was reported that the State Department said there were four injured Americans.[13] And in August 2013, CNN reported that seven Americans were wounded, some seriously.[14]

Members of U.S. diplomatic mission who died in Benghazi, Libya
J. Christopher Stevens Sean Smith (diplomat) x120px x120px
J. Christopher Stevens,
U.S. Ambassador to Libya
Sean Smith, U.S. Foreign Service
Information Management Officer
Glen Doherty Tyrone S. Woods

J. Christopher Stevens

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Sean Smith

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Glen Doherty

Glen Anthony Doherty (July 10, 1970 – September 12, 2012)[15] of Encinitas,[16] was a native of Winchester, Massachusetts,[17] and a 1988 graduate of Winchester High School.[18] Doherty was the second of three children born to Bernard and Barbara Doherty. He trained as a pilot at Embry–Riddle Aeronautical University before moving to Snowbird, Utah for several winters and then joining the United States Navy. Doherty served as a Navy SEAL, responded to the bombing of the USS Cole, had tours of duty in Iraq and Afghanistan, and left the Navy in 2005 as a petty officer, first class.[19] After leaving the Navy, he worked for a private security company in Afghanistan, Iraq, Israel, Kenya and Libya.[17] In the month prior to the attack, Doherty as a contractor with the State Department told ABC News in an interview that he personally went into the field in Libya to track down MANPADS, shoulder-fired surface-to-air missiles, and destroy them.[20]

Doherty was a member of the advisory board of the Military Religious Freedom Foundation, an organization that opposes proselytizing by religious groups in the United States military.[21] Doherty was co-author of the book The 21st Century Sniper.[21][22]

Doherty's funeral was held at Saint Eulalia's parish in his native Winchester on September 19, 2012.[23] His celebration of life was held in Encinitas, California the weekend of October 12–14, 2012.[24][25]

Tyrone S. Woods

File:TyroneWoodsFuneralByPhilKonstantin.jpg
Funeral services for Tyrone S. Woods at Fort Rosecrans Cemetery in San Diego, California September 20, 2012

Tyrone Snowden Woods (January 15, 1971 – September 12, 2012), of Imperial Beach,[16] was born in Portland, Oregon.[26] Woods graduated from Oregon City High School in 1989,[26] south of Portland, Oregon, and served 20 years of honorable service in the U.S. Navy before joining State Department Diplomatic Security[27] as a U.S. embassy security personnel,[4] ostensibly working under a service contract.[28] Since 2010, Woods had protected American diplomats in posts from Central America to the Middle East.[29] In November 2012, senior U.S. intelligence officials said that Woods and Doherty were actually CIA contractors, not State Department security officers as had been previously reported,[30] and that the two men, together with other CIA security officers, played a pivotal role in defending against the Benghazi embassy attack.[31]

As a Navy SEAL in 2005–06, Woods was awarded the Bronze Star Medal with Combat "V" for valor in Iraq.[27][32] He led 12 direct action raids and 10 reconnaissance missions leading to the capture of 34 enemy insurgents in the volatile Al Anbar province.[27] He served multiple tours in Iraq and Afghanistan, the Middle East and Central America.[33] He retired as a senior chief petty officer in 2010.[34][35]

Woods also served with distinction at the Naval Medical Center San Diego as a registered nurse and certified paramedic.[32] Having settled in Imperial Beach, California, for a year of his retirement he owned The Salty Frog bar there; he is survived by his second wife, Dr. Dorothy Narvaez-Woods, their one child,[36] and two sons from a previous marriage.[35] Woods was buried at Fort Rosecrans National Cemetery.[37]

References

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  12. Pickering, Mullen, et. al, Accountability Review Board report on Benghazi (Unclassified) U.S. Department of State. December 18, 2012.
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  15. Glen Doherty Obituary: Navy SEAL Killed in Libya Daily Beast
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