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
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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- ↑ Pickering, Mullen, et. al, Accountability Review Board report on Benghazi (Unclassified) U.S. Department of State. December 18, 2012.
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- ↑ Glen Doherty Obituary: Navy SEAL Killed in Libya Daily Beast
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- ↑ Funeral service for Doherty, necn.com. September 19, 2012.
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