My expectations were actually low coming into this book. All I really wanted out of it was some general gathering of facts and a basic chronology. Like many, I'm burned out from all the bitching between Right and Left, so I had largely tuned out the Benghazi story. I vaguely sensed it had to do with CIA gun running (to Syria), and the possibly avoidable deaths of Ambassador Steven and those trying to protect him. I wasn't expecting, at this time, a real history to such a convoluted event so close in time. Such books usually fall into a gray area that assemble incomplete facts and trumpet polemic. Timmerman's take (Right leaning) is indeed that kind of telling, but it's far more restrained than such books usually are. So much so, that if I had been reading this as a draft, I would have encouraged the author to take out (or mute) his occasional digs at the Obama administration, change the lurid title, and let the damning facts speak for themselves. That said, I have no doubt this book will be a factual foundation for future historians looking into this depressing mess. One primary reason is that Timmerman understands, thoroughly, the murky world of Middle Eastern gun dealing. His ability to discern, and untangle deals, the multiple actors involved, and their motivations, is first rate.
"Dark Forces" is really more about this administration's policies toward the Middle East, and Terrorism. We are living -- bewilderingly -- with them right now as we watch events in Syria and Iraq bloodily unfold. Oh, the attack, and events leading up the attack, are all here. But Timmerman also spotlights an almost insane preoccupation with this administration's need to define ("workplace violence," "ISIS" vs. "ISIL") and control the narrative. Here, Hilary Clinton's need to call Libya a diplomatic success, prior to Obama's election, despite the obvious ongoing turmoil, is yet another example of politics trumping reality -- and with deadly results for Ambassador Stevens. On top of that, with Qaddafi's fall (as engineered by the U.S.), dragon's teeth, in the form of shoulder held rocket launchers, are now sprinkled throughout the Middle East. Timmerman's conclusion that it's only a matter of time before a commercial airline is brought down by a Stinger missile, is hardly far fetched. There's every reason to believe that the downing (in Afghanistan) of the helicopter bearing members of Seal Team 6 (whose identities should never have been revealed), was done by a Stinger-like missile that came from Libya. And, in the future, we should not be surprised at similar shoot downs of our aircraft now bombing ISIS, by weapons provided by the U.S. to support the Syrian "moderates."
Attempts to uncover the dimensions of the (disgusting) cover-up are ongoing. The story about the offending "anti-Muslim" video is about as thin as it gets, and really is an indictment of both Clinton and an acquiescent media. As big lies go, it's far worse than "yellowcake." There is, of course, some speculation by Timmerman. Most of it is grounded in surrounding facts, just not proven yet. And the author himself admits to not knowing. He also knocks down a few stories, such as Stevens being raped and tortured before his death. One real and believable nugget that jumped out at me is how CIA director Petraeus was probably pushed out. His affair was known about for months. but Petraeus was also not following the Benghazi script. John Brennan, the current director, was heavily involved in the events leading up to Benghazi, and a more trustworthy gatekeeper for the investigations to come. All in all, an infuriating read, but an important one.