Believe it or not, you actually have to confirm information before you go running your mouth if you're POTUS, and if you can't you have to go with what is known most about. The White House may have had some information suggesting Ansar al-Sharia could have been involved, but not immediately saying so is not malicious lying, it is smart.
Confirm information, huh? Confirm information like "it was caused spontaneously by a video"? Oh, wait, no need to confirm
that whopper in advance!
He knew within 24 hours that there were no protestors and that it had nothing to do with the video. "May" has nothing to do with it. Either he was getting his intel briefs or he was neglecting them. There's no "may" in there. He could have said that his initial understanding was that it was a planned terrorist attack. There's no harm in telling that truth, no reason to hold it back... Oh... except it makes him look bad in an election.
That it took a few days to fully verify and announce through the President is not indicative of some crazy conspiracy by Obama. You're pulling that out of thin air.
A few days? A few days? Weeks, bro. Here's Obama after two weeks talking up the false "video" narrative at... the United Nations of all places. He went to the United Nations after two weeks, when everyone inside the White House definitely had to know the real cause, and he imputed it to the video. Not a few days.
http://www.nytimes.com/video/2012/09/25/world/100000001806072/obama-to-warn-iran-on-nuclear-program.htmlTurn to about 10:30 to skip the eulogy of Chris Stevens and hear the video remarks. Two weeks later. What have you got to say next?
Show me one example of the white house spreading the false narrative.
The White House isn't the sole source of all knowledge, the media was reporting on the film to protests link well before the white house chimed in.
I've told you two times already. The White House had the right information. You're failing the reading comprehension test if you think I said the White House was the sole sources of news. Nobody thinks that. You're picking a ridiculous strawman. But what I am really saying, and which is known for a fact, is that the White House had the correct story. It chose to spread the scapegoat theory because it didn't reflect as badly upon them.
You think every news service in the world only uses "The White House" as their source?
Having fun debating yourself on that point. I'm sure you'll manage to beat yourself eventually.
Meanwhile,
I'm saying that the White House encouraged a false narrative and participated in spreading it. Never said it was the sole source. But it was a source. And the spooks did know in 24 hours that it was Al-Qaeda. there's no strategic reason to withold that detail, or at least say vaguely, "My preliminary information is that this is a planned terrorist attack unassociated with the video". No reason at all, except political gain.
is "The White House" the source for the UN Secretary-General's statement for example?
Yeah, dude. The White House went before the Secretary-General and said that. Susan Rice initially informed the UN of the video angle, followed by Obama himself two weeks later. Didn't you know?
The UN doesn't have an intelligence network, so how else can it get briefed? The US has intelligence agents, and Benghazi was actually a CIA center, so it was well monitored... and Obama has direct access to that intel.