benghazi a few months ago, i mean, what does this mean to the country? i think there is a dark, mysterious hand that doesn t like this country to prosper. they see system and organization as a big enemy to them. these concerns are slowly getting diminished. a matter of time before we can get rid of them. how hard do you think that s going to be? not at all. we got rid of gadhafi. nothing else is hard. i like your attitude. the fluid situation in libya has been intensifying since our arrival. we ve had to change our behavior, constantly moving. should i be wearing one of these cool journalist safari jackets at this point? so it seemed a good time or maybe not saddle up. to go to misrata. okay, guys. we can go. roger that. since the revolution, misrata has been the most secure city in libya, but over the last two
over what s going to happen, at that time, to where libya was moving politically and what it meant to the larger scale of that region and how we saw the arab spring filtering out of libya because of that. what it meant globally, what was going on in libya and the good riddance of gadhafi. what it s continuing to show itself to this day. you look at ramifications of what s happening in iraq. look at the recent assassinations and bombings in lebanon. you are watching how this stuff is continuing to fester and show itself in so many different dynamics in the same thing you have laid out. that s where, again, i understand the argument about whether or not they call it spontaneous or whether it s completely planned and so forth. the point becomes that if you have where the groups feel like they can easily navigate,
as ed pointed out there is a delicate relationship now between the u.s. and libya given the attack in benghazi that left four americans dead. what does this say to you tonight with the limited facts we know? delicate as well. this is the government that when the white house agreed to come into power after the overthrow of gadhafi. if this incident really is a conscious decision by the government to detain them, marine security guards. that will cause trouble for the administration in our efforts the to have libya extend control over the rest of the country which generated and the terrorist camp affiliates and the like. this could be a mistake by local police officials. it could be the marines were having a few pops. who knows at this point. i can understand why there is concern in washington that if
they see system and organization as a big enemy to them. these concerns are slowly getting diminished. a matter of time before we can get rid of them. how hard do you think that s going to be? not at all. we got rid of gadhafi. nothing else is hard. i like your attitude. the fluid situation in libya has been intensifying since our arrival. we ve had to change our behavior, constantly moving. should i be wearing one of these cool journalist safari jackets at this point? so it seemed a good time or maybe not saddle up. to go to misrata. okay, guys. we can go. roger that. since the revolution, misrata has been the most secure city in libya, but over the last two weeks in a hail of bullets and hand-thrown grenade attacks, an imam, security forces and a police officer have all been killed.
months ago, what does this mean to the country? i think there is a dark, mysterious hand that doesn t like this country to prosper. they see a system, an organization as a big enemy to them. these are slowly getting diminished. it s a matter of time before we can get rid of them. how hard do you think that is going to be? not hard at all. we got rid of gadhafi. nothing else is hard. i like your attitude. this is supposed to be the biggest, fanciest, new hotel development in town. like a lot of newer structures, they pretty much stopped when they started to pull down the government. there are a lot of cranes building nothing at the moment. a lot is sort of frozen as everybody figures out what happens next, let s wait and see. one of many moments of unexpected weirdness in libya.