Read 13 Hours The Inside Account of What Really Happened In Benghazi Online
Authors: Mitchell Zuckoff
In Germany after the attacks (l to r): Dave “D.B.” Benton, Kris “Tanto” Paronto, John “Tig” Tiegen, and Jack Silva
(Courtesy of Kris Paronto)
Looking ahead, the surviving Benghazi operators know that the events of those thirteen hours will color the rest of their lives. They remain in close contact, and all wear black aluminum bracelets etched with the names of the two
fallen operators, along with the location and date of their deaths.
Above all, the surviving special operators hope that Chris Stevens, Sean Smith, Tyrone Woods, and Glen Doherty, to whom this book is collectively dedicated, will be remembered not as victims or political pawns, but as brave Americans who put themselves in harm’s way, who believed in their work and their country, and who died serving others.
The Compound before September 11, 2012. At the top right is the main gate; at the top left is the building converted into a barracks for 17 February militia guards. (State Department photo)
The pool outside the diplomatic Compound’s main villa. (State Department photo)
A sandbag fighting position outside the main villa on the Compound, before September 11, 2012. (State Department photo)
A sandbag fighting position on the Compound, before September 11, 2012. (State Department photo)
The vineyard on the diplomatic Compound. (State Department photo)
A view of the front of the villa before September 11, 2012. (State Department photos)
Interior views of the villa before September 11, 2012. (State Department photos)
The main gate to the CIA Annex in Benghazi. (AP photo/Mohammad Hannon)
Satellite image of the Annex. (Map data: © 2014 DigitalGlobe)
Inside the walls of the Annex, showing the operators’ “prison gym” under construction. (John Tiegen)