How It Happened
Osama Bin Laden's Death
Operation The White House watched
The previous page was: "Burma Commando II"
1 Helicopter-borne US Navy Seals fly from Afghanistan to Osama
Bin Laden's compound in Abbottabad, Pakistan, arriving at around
00:30 Hours Monday (09:30 GMT Sunday).
2 Two Black Hawk helicopters set down at the compound after one
develops problems. A team of 25 Seals 'mouse-holing' breaches at
least three walls to reach the main building.
3 As they go through the compounds one person fires on the
Commandos. Three men and a woman are killed in the return fire
by the US Navy Seals. There are no Seal casualties.
4 On the second floor the US Commandos find Osama Bin Laden in a
room with his wife. She is shot in the leg. Bin Laden, who is
unarmed, is shot twice and killed.
5 Computer hard drives and other evidence is taken from the
compound, along with Bin Laden's body. The Seals team then
departs after destroying the damaged aircraft.
Burma Commando II
Details Of The Action
The US operation to kill or capture Osama Bin Laden was months
in the planning but took just minutes to execute.
In the daring raid 120 miles (192km) inside Pakistan, a team of
US special forces flew from Afghanistan to Bin Laden's hiding
place in the dead of night.
They swooped down on the compound in stealth helicopters, swept
through the buildings within the high walled enclosure and shot
dead a total of five people including Bin Laden.
Around 40 minutes later they left, taking with them Bin Laden's
body and a hoard of computer data devices and other information
containing intelligence about al-Qaeda and Bin Laden's
activities.
They left behind the other dead, among whom were a woman and
one of Bin Laden's sons. They also left a group of three women
and 13 children; two girls and 11 boys; bound with plastic ties.
One Helicopter Destroyed
President Obama and his security team watched the operation in
real time from the White House. The US team was forced to
abandon one of its helicopters after it was damaged in a hard
landing at the compound site. It was mostly destroyed in an
explosion set up by the US forces as they departed.
Publicly, the US authorities have given few details about the
raid and some of these have changed since the news of Bin
Laden's death was officially announced.
Something Nasty
What follows has been pieced together from official US
statements and various off-the-record interviews, and other news
sources, also interviews with those living near the compound in
Abbottabad, the quiet, leafy garrison town 35 miles north of the
Pakistani capital, Islamabad.
Just a handful of US military and senior officials around
President Obama knew of the planned raid. However, within
seconds of the arrival of the US helicopters overhead in
Abbottabad on Monday, their presence was being advertised on
Twitter.
"Hello, helicopter hovering above Abbotttabad at 1am, this is a
very rare event out here," tweeted Sohaib Athar, an IT engineer
who lives about 3km (two miles) from the compound.
Eleven minutes later Athar reported: "A huge window-shaking bang
here in Abbottabad. I hope it's not the start of something
nasty."
Only Wanted Dead Not Alive
There is the suspicion that the US never wanted to take Bin Laden live; only dead. The obvious reprecussions; the possibiity of US citizens being kidnapped to trade for Bin Laden being the
highest intention; made it necessary for him to be eliminated.
On the other side of the world President Obama and his closest
advisers had gathered in the White House situation room to
monitor progress of the assault.
A few miles away, at CIA headquarters, the spy agency's director
Leon Panetta sat in a windowless seventh floor room, which had
been turned into the command centre for the raid.
From there he fed the president and his team details of the raid
as it unfolded. The operation now under way was the culmination
of weeks of intense surveillance and planning involving some of
the United States' most sophisticated technology.
Planning for the raid started late last year. US officials have
spoken of how an intercept in late August 2010 of a phone call
to a trusted courier of Bin Laden in Pakistan was the
breakthrough that made the raid a posibility.
The call was made to Abu Ahmed al-Kuwaiti, a man the US had been
seeking for years as part of the decade long hunt for Osama Bin
Laden. Controversially, they had learnt of his identity from the
interrogations of detainees in Guantanamo.
Armed with the mobile phone number, all they had to do was wait.
And wait they did, never giving up hope that one day the phone
would ring on that number. When it did, the US was able to track
him to the compound in Abbottabad.
The Pacer
It was an unusual building. How it happenedery high walls
prevented anyone from seeing anything inside. The privacy
screens on the main building's balconies, they blocked all sight
lines from every direction on the ground.
The residence had no phone or internet connection and all of the
rubbish was burnt inside the high walls rather than being
collected in the usual way.
The only access to the site was through two tall green metal
security gates which one led into a passageway with high walls
on either side, and the other security gate leading to an inner
compound at the other end.
According to the neighbours the occupants rarely went out and
when they did so, it was in either a red Suzuki jeep or van.
They passed through the heavy security gates which closed
immediately after had passed through.
Was This Osama Bin Laden's Den
US intelligence soon set-about an intensive period of
surveillance of Abbottabad. Searches for local information about
area were put into operation, maps were scanned and investigated
checking for possible escape routes.
While satellites watched from the sky a CIA safe house was set
up nearby. From the safe house, agents were able to observe the
comings and goings from the compound in order to establish a
"pattern of life" at the building.
Some details of how they tried to obtain key information about
the building have emerged.
Locals said that in the weeks leading up to the raid, people in
"simple, plain clothes" knocked on doors in the neighbourhood
posing as prospective property buyers.
They would admire the homes and asked permission to photograph
the rooms and they asked for any architectural plans, saying
that they wanted to build something very similar.
One of the men even went to Bin Laden's compound to make
inquiries, they said. Apparently the guard didn't see or suspect
anything was unusual about the enquiry.
CIA Used Sophisticated Technology
The CIA also employed a sophisticated stealth drone that could
float high above the compound without detection by the
Pakistani authorities.
With its distinctive bat-winged shape, the RQ170 Sentinel is
capable of flying undetected at high altitude taking photographs
and sending real-time video. The aircraft can also capture
images shot at an angle. This has the advantage of not having
to fly directly over its target.
Despite the presence on the ground and observation from the sky,
the CIA was still unable to positively identify Bin Laden as the
man often spotted often walking up and down outside the house.
Agents dubbed him "the pacer".
He and his associates went to extraordinary efforts to remain
undetected. According to a detailed account of the lead-up to
the raid in the Washington Post.
US officials were "stunned to realise that whenever al-Kuwaiti
or others left to make a call, they drove for 90 minutes before
placing" a battery in a mobile phone.
In the meantime, a team from the secretive US Navy Seal Team 6
unit, had been practising storming a mock up of the compound,
constructed at US bases on both coasts.
The Raid
In the end, after months of investigation, the US had no
conclusive proof of Bin Laden's presence in the compound. As
President Obama told CBS television news, "this was still a
55/45 situation."
Nevertheless, the 2nd May presented a moonless night on which to
mount the raid. The president formally gave the go-ahead on the
morning of Friday 29 April.
But despite the detailed planning, the operation began to go
wrong almost as soon as the raiders appeared overhead.
Five aircraft flew two teams of Navy Seals from a US base in
Jalalabad, Afghanistan, into Pakistan. Three large Chinook
helicopters carrying a back-up team of 24 Seals put down near
the Indus River, a 10-minute flight from the compound.
The two other aircraft, specially adapted Black Hawk helicopters,
flew on to Abbottabad. On board, were 23 Seals, a translator and
a tracking dog called Cairo. Three of the Seals were specifically
tasked to seek out and eliminate Osama Bin Laden.
In the original plan, one of the helicopters was to hover over
the main building allowing the Seals to clamber down ropes onto
the main roof.
The other was to drop its team within the grounds of the
compound. This should have taken just a couple of minutes
allowing the aircraft to fly away, thereby attracting less
attention.
However, on arrival, the Black Hawk hovering over Bin Laden's
building skittered around in the heat-thinned air forcing the
pilot to ditch the craft into the ground. It made a hard landing
inside the compound but its tail and rotor caught on one of the
high walls.
The other aircraft immediately landed outside the walls. Both
teams clambered out unhurt but they had now lost the element of
surprise and had to start blasting their way through walls
before they could get into the main compound.
Behind the perimeter walls were further inner walls cordoning
off the three-storey main building where Bin Laden and his
family lived and a smaller single-storey guard house.
Official Version
Leon Panetta, the CIA chief, has said the Commandos blasted
their way through "three or four" walls to get into the
buildings. As the raid got under way.
Panetta also said, he and those in the White House situation
room were in the dark for "around 20-25 minutes" as to what was
actually going on in the compound.
According to US officials, as the members of the US team moved
to search the buildings they were fired on by one of the two
brothers who were close confidantes of Bin Laden.
Al-Kuwaiti is said to have fired from behind a door of the
guard house. The Navy Seals killed him and his wife, who
reportedly made a lunge for the soldiers.
Moving into the main building the Commandos come across
al-Kuwaiti's brother on the ground floor. Believing that he was
about to shoot, they shot him dead.
On the way up the stairs, Bin Laden's adult son, Khalid Bin
Laden, met the Navy Seal team. He too was shot and killed.
We Got Him
On the top floor the trio of Seals looking for Bin Laden found
him, some 20 minutes into the raid, standing at the end of the
corridor. They recognised him immediately. He also saw them and
ducked back inside a room.
Initial US accounts of the mission said that before he was
killed he had exchanged fire with the Commandos while using his
wife as a human shield.
US officials have now told the Associated Press news agency that
after the Seals rushed into the room, they found two women in
front of Bin Laden, screaming and trying to protect him.
One of the soldiers pushed the women aside, the Seal behind him
fired at Bin Laden, hitting him in the head and chest killing
him instantly.
One of the soldiers radioed his commanders: "Geronimo EKIA". In
the cold military jargon, "EKIA" (Enemy killed in action)
signalled that the team had killed their target.
The message was relayed to the White House where President Obama
is said to have received the news with a terse "We got him".
Those in the situation room did not see the moment of Bin
Laden's death.
Geronimo, it has been suggested was the code name for Bin Laden,
but US officials have indicated that this referred to the stage
in the operation in which Bin Laden was either captured or
killed.
As they began photographing his body, an AK-47 and a Russian-
made Makarov pistol were discovered in the room, but Bin Laden
had not touched them.
The White House has corrected the version of events about the
death of Osama Bin Laden. Earlier reports suggested that Bin
Laden's wife, believed to be 29-year-old Amal al-Ahmed Sadah,
was in the room with him and was shot in the leg when she lunged
at the soldiers.
Pakistani police say that the couple's 12-year-old daughter was
also in the room and had witnessed Bin Laden's death.
As the minutes ticked by, a suspicious Pakistani air force began
scrambling some of its fighter jets, heightening fears in
Washington that the US Commandos could still be in danger as
they tried to return to Afghanistan.
Pakistan was not tipped off in advance about the raid although
a Pakistani intelligence official said once US helicopters
entered Pakistan air space the US officials told their
counterparts that an operation was under way against "a high
value target".
They were not told the target was Bin Laden. This ultimately
led to the jets being called back. With Bin Laden dead, the US
team prepared to leave.
They trawled through the rest of the compound collecting a
"treasure trove" of documents, computer hard drives, memory
sticks and other material that could provide useful
intelligence.
One of the Chinooks flew in to collect the team from the broken
helicopter. They loaded up Bin Laden's body on board, and
corralled those still alive into a room, piled explosives into
the damaged aircraft and blew it up. They then left for the US
air base in Bagram, Afghanistan.
One neighbour in Abbottabad told how one of the departing
helicopters swept past his house, "flying very low, and coming
very close". "I threw myself to the ground thinking it was going
to collide with my house," Zahoor Abbasi said.
From there Bin Laden's body was flown to the USS Carl Vinson, a
US aircraft carrier in the north Arabian sea, where Bin Laden
was prepared for burial.
A White House spokesman said the corpse was prepared for burial
"in conformance with Islamic precepts and practice", then placed
in a weighted bag and dropped into the water from the vessel's
deck. Officials said this was to prevent his grave from becoming
a shrine.
The next Link below will be: "Kukri Knife"
Osama Bin Laden
Kukri Knife
"Pirates Trilogy" $20

|