Chair of the House Benghazi Committee Rep. Trey Gowdy slammed The Washington Post for unapologetically skewing America’s view on the 2012 Benghazi attacks in an article this week and in their reporting over the past few years.

“I’m really disappointed in some of the liberal media outlets for not having at least the decency to concede that they missed some really important things over the last two years,” Gowdy told Fox News’ Martha McCallum Tuesday.

Gowdy’s remarks came after a Washington Post editorial titled “The dangerous delusion that the Americans in Benghazi could have been saved.”

McCallum asked Gowdy if he believes, after years of work he did on the case, that the Americans who were killed in Benghazi “could have been saved.”

Gowdy responded that his hope is that “the Washington Post has read the report enough to know that the four men died at different times.”

“Two of them died early on and two of them died almost eight hours later. So the notion that the world’s greatest military can not get to a place in seven hours is surprising, to a lot of us. There were three assets that did make it: two unarmed drones and a group from Tripoli,” Gowdy said.

Gowdy does’t anticipate the media group will own up to making any journalistic mistakes.

“It would be tough for them to have the humility to concede they were wrong,” Gowdy said.

To read more about investigations into the Benghazi attack, click here.