US charges Libyan militant in Benghazi attack - reports

6 Aug, 2013 23:23 / Updated 11 years ago

Reports have emerged of the first suspect to be charged for last year’s attack on a US diplomatic compound in Benghazi that left four people dead, including the American ambassador to Libya.

Ahmed Abu Khattalah is accused of having played a key role in the attack, according to officials who spoke to US media, although authorities did not confirm whether he had yet been arrested. The US Department of Justice has so far declined to comment on the matter.

Khattalah is described as the founder of Ansar al-Sharia, a Libyan extremist group which first attracted attention in October of last year when it was revealed that Khattalah had been present at the US consulate compound at the time of its attack.

For months investigators have believed that Khattalah was involved in the September 11, 2012 attack, although the specific charges against him remain undisclosed as they were made in a sealed complaint.

Critics of the ongoing investigation - many of whom are Republican members of Congress - have pointed to a lack of progress in addition to purportedly misleading explanations of the incident in the days following the attack.

The US sent a team of FBI agents to launch a probe into the attack, although they have been mainly working out of the Libyan capital city of Tripoli - some 400 miles away from Benghazi.

Security officials fear that moves by Libya’s police force against radical Islamists or Al-Qaeda sympathizers in Benghazi could create a backlash.

The Ansar al-Sharia group has been a focus of the joint US-Libyan investigation since intelligence indicated that members were in contact with Al-Qaeda leaders in Northern Africa immediately after the attack on the Benghazi consulate, reportedly even bragging about the incident.

The American team in Tripoli was said to be working primarily with the newly formed Libyan intelligence agency under former US citizen Salem al-Hasi - a political dissident who for decades lived in the Atlanta area and taught Arabic to US soldiers, according to several Libyan officials who spoke with The Wall Street Journal last year.

Although Khattalah is the only known individual charged so far by investigators, officials have indicated that other charges have been filed - with around half a dozen additional people currently suspected of involvement in the attack.

According to NBC News, the charges now filed under seal could generate a political battle, with Republicans likely pushing to have Khattalah treated as an enemy combatant. The Obama administration is thought to be seeking to bring him back to the US for trial in a civilian court.

Libyan officials said last year that evidence of Abu Khattalah's presence at the consulate at the time of the attack came from witness statements, as well as from raids against Ansar al-Sharia members' homes.

"There's no doubt the sheik was there," said one of the officials to The Wall Street Journal, referring to Khattalah’s religious title used by his followers. "If the sheik was there, then the sheik was giving commands. That's how the group operates."