U.S. Attorney for the District of Columbia Jeanine Pirro just dropped a bombshell on FNC’s Hannity, declaring We Are Not Done Yet in the Benghazi probe after the DOJ extradited suspect Zubayar al-Bakoush from overseas to face murder, arson, and terrorism charges. This isn’t some footnote in a dusty file—it’s a direct strike against one of the most gut-wrenching failures of the Obama era, where four Americans, including Ambassador Chris Stevens, were slaughtered in a jihadist ambush on a U.S. diplomatic outpost in Libya back in 2012. Pirro’s vow signals the long-dormant investigation is roaring back to life, with al-Bakoush now in U.S. custody to answer for his role in the flames and gunfire that exposed glaring vulnerabilities in our overseas defenses.
For the 2A community, this development cuts straight to the heart of why an armed populace isn’t just a right—it’s a national security imperative. Benghazi wasn’t felled by a lack of resolve; it was a disaster of denied air support, vanishing rescue teams, and pleas for firepower that went unanswered amid a politically timed video protest narrative. Fast-forward to today: as foreign-born terrorists like al-Bakoush are hauled into American courts, we’re reminded that threats don’t respect borders or gun-free zones. The implications are stark—gun-grabbers in D.C. and beyond push disarmed safe spaces while jihadists plot from safe havens abroad. Pirro’s team pursuing justice here underscores how 2A protections arm not just citizens against domestic tyrants, but indirectly fortify our will to confront global savagery without apology.
This isn’t closure; it’s a prelude. With Pirro channeling her prosecutorial fire, expect more indictments, deeper dives into Hillary’s infamous stand down fog, and a ripple effect that bolsters 2A arguments in courtrooms nationwide. Law-abiding gun owners have long known the state can’t always save you—Benghazi proves it lethally. Stay vigilant, Second Amendment faithful; this fight reignites the case for self-reliance in an increasingly hostile world.