The article I posted wasn't a press release from the White House though, it was a news article from the LA Times with sources from the intelligence community, and it (including quotations from apparently in-the-know people) makes affirmative claims. It's naturally a combination of facts, evidence, testimony, and yes speculation -- some of which might not turn out to be true in the end -- but still, it's not the White House. So maybe that's why I'm a little confused by your response. It seems you are suggesting that this article's information should be grouped as adding to the confusion of information -- but I never accepted the premise that the info we were getting was confused. It was
wrong at first, sure, but that's because it was essentially a guess (one that probably shouldn't have been voiced by officials). But further investigation has gathered better information. I don't feel remotely overwhelmed or duped by the accumulation so far.
All that aside, like I said, I don't disagree with your initial logic. It doesn't cancel out the scenario you present by any means. But it does suggest to me -- and I find it highly plausible -- that an assault on the embassy by a group of armed men was relatively easy to pull off, planned or not. A capital P Plan organized by a capital N Network wasn't necessary...however a lowercase p plan -- little more than the idea, firepower, willpower, and timing to do it -- was sufficient. And sure, any group of people communicating in lines and circuits could be considered a network...any city street is potentially a network...but when you have an armed compound I don't see much point in giving them the rhetorical weight of "network". If adjacent bunkhouses two and three at summer camp decided to pull off a panty raid of bunkhouse nine, I wouldn't there either. It's not a matter of accuracy, it's the weight.
I suppose what I'm arguing is that the article presents evidence for the simpler explanation -- it certainly doesn't invalidate the more complex one you suggest, but
that's still the one that requires evidence to be more convincing, just by virtue of requiring more complexity and coordination than the simple, highly plausible scenario.
This post has been edited by worrywort: 20 October 2012 - 09:53 AM