Migrants warm themselves by the fire in front of an abandoned
warehouse in Belgrade, Serbia today. Hundreds of migrants are sleeping
rough in parks and make-shift shelters in the Serbian capital in
freezing temperatures waiting for a chance to move forward toward the
European Union.: photo by Darko Vojinovic/AP, 10 January 2017
Migrants warm themselves by the fire in front of an abandoned
warehouse in Belgrade, Serbia today. Hundreds of migrants are sleeping
rough in parks and make-shift shelters in the Serbian capital in
freezing temperatures waiting for a chance to move forward toward the
European Union.: photo by Darko Vojinovic/AP, 10 January 2017
SERBIA - A migrant walks out of a makeshift shelter at an abandoned warehouse in Belgrade. By @iandrej #AFP: image via Frédérique Geffard @fgeffardAFP, 10 January 2017
GAZA STRIP - A girl peers through the door of her house during protest against electricity shortages in Jabalia refugee camp. By @mohmdabed: image via Frédérique Geffard @fgeffardAFP, 10 January 2017
Pallbearers carry the coffin during the funeral ceremony for the late
former Portuguese President Mario Soares at Mosteiro dos Jeronimos in
Lisbon today: photo by Patricia De Melo/AFP, 10 January 2017GAZA STRIP - A girl peers through the door of her house during protest against electricity shortages in Jabalia refugee camp. By @mohmdabed: image via Frédérique Geffard @fgeffardAFP, 10 January 2017
GAZA CITY - A Palestinian girl takes part in a protest against ongoing electricity shortages. By @MahmudHams #AFP: image via Frédérique Geffard @fgeffardAFP, 10 January 2017
#Palestina A member of a military wing of #Hamas holds his weapon during a rally in #Gaza. By @MahmudHams #AFP: image via Photojournalism @photojournalink, 25 March 2016
Pallbearers carry the coffin during the funeral ceremony for the late former Portuguese President Mario Soares at Mosteiro dos Jeronimos in Lisbon today: photo by Patricia De Melo/AFP, 10 January 2017
WEST BANK - A relative mourns over a Palestinian man killed by Israeli troops during his funeral at Al-Fara refugee camp. By Jaafar Ashtiyeh: image via Frédérique Geffard @fgeffardAFP, 10 January 2017
Iranians gather around a hearse carrying the coffin of former
president Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani during his funeral ceremony in the
capital Tehran today: photo by Atta Kenare/AFP, 10 January 2017
IRAN - A woman carries a poster of late former President Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani during his funeral ceremony inTehran. By Atta Kenare #AFP: image via Frédérique Geffard @fgeffardAFP, 10 January 2017
IRAN - A woman carries a poster of late former President Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani during his funeral ceremony inTehran. By Atta Kenare #AFP: image via Frédérique Geffard @fgeffardAFP, 10 January 2017
IRAQ
- A picture taken through the bullet-riddled windshield of an Iraqi
Humvee shows a shepherd and his flock fleeing in Mosul. By @dilkoff: image via Frédérique Geffard @fgeffardAFP, 10 January 2017
AFGHANISTAN - Afghan security personnel walk past a damaged gate after twin blasts struck near the Afghan parliament in Kabul. By @kohsar: image via Frédérique Geffard @fgeffardAFP, 10 January 2017
AFGHANISTAN - Afghan security personnel walk past a damaged gate after twin blasts struck near the Afghan parliament in Kabul. By @kohsar: image via Frédérique Geffard @fgeffardAFP, 10 January 2017
Residents of a community in suburban Navotas sift through the
smouldering debris following an early morning fire, in northern suburb
of Manila, Philippines. Fire officials said the fire razed more than 600
shanty homes leaving more than 1,500 families homeless.: photo by Bullit Marquez/AP, 10 January 2017
Residents of a community in suburban Navotas sift through the
smouldering debris following an early morning fire, in northern suburb
of Manila, Philippines. Fire officials said the fire razed more than 600
shanty homes leaving more than 1,500 families homeless.: photo by Bullit Marquez/AP, 10 January 2017
THAILAND - A woman wades through a flooded village in the Chaiya district. By @TheLilyfish #AFP: image via Frédérique Geffard @fgeffardAFP, 10 January 2017
Zoya watches streams feeding Lake Anza: photo by Ed Oswalt, 10 January 2017
Please tell us that's not a selfie Photo @somogettynews #Sessionsdarkside #protestmarginalized: image via Reading The Pictures @ReadingThePix, 10 January 2017
Another storyfull #Sessions shot by @somogettynew. Frames GOP Senators as offensive line #FaitAccompli #laughingallthe waytothejusticedept: image via Reading The Pictures @ReadingThePix, 10 January 2017
As we keep illustrating, #Trump era not about ideas, but gestures. Talking body language, how familiar. #Sessions @mollyriley @AFPphoto: image via Reading The Pictures @ReadingThePix, 10 January 2017
Another Sessions pic by @somogettynews, almost too obvious to be appreciated. #tvshow #closedloop #echochamber: image via Reading The Pictures @ReadingThePix, 10 January 2017
#Sessions framed by Asian-Amer grandchild and 2 African-Americans is standard viz propaganda. MTV mean tweet and backlash helps even more. Photo @AFP: image via Reading The Pictures @ReadingThePix, 10 January 2017
Besides wall of African-Americans and 1 of mil uniforms, @AFPphoto captures (in contrast w grand kid) how painfully rigid and stiff #Sessions is: image via Reading The Pictures @ReadingThePix, 10 January 2017
With opposition's hands tied, personality = protest #visualcultures #Sessions #KhizrKhan @somogettynews: image via Reading The Pictures @ReadingThePix, 10 January 2017
With opposition's hands tied, personality = protest #visualcultures #Sessions #AlSharpton @somogettynews: image via Reading The Pictures @ReadingThePix, 10 January 2017
Report claims Russia wanted to blackmail Trump w/ evidence of him hiring sex workers to perform "golden showers": image via Reading The Daily Beast @thedailybeast, 10 January 2017
Are there any other kind? #GoldenShowers: image via Donald J. Drumpf @RealDonalDrumpf, 10 January 2017
ReginaSmith️ added,
tweet via ReginaSmith @regina_smith67, 10 January 2017
Personally, we don't see what the big deal is. Our Postal Dude's been doing it since 2003! #peeotus #goldenshowers: image via RunningWithScissors @RWSbleeters, 10 January 2017
One clear sign that all was not right with the command was the way sadism crept into the SEALs’ practices, with no apparent consequences. A few months after Objective Bull, for example, one of Hyder’s operators began taunting dying insurgents on videos he shot as part of his post-operation responsibilities. These “bleed out” videos were replayed on multiple occasions at Bagram Air Base. The operator who made them, a former SEAL leader said, would gather other members of Red Squadron to watch the last few seconds of an enemy fighter’s life. “It was war porn,” said the former SEAL, who viewed one of the videos. “No one would do anything about them.” The operator who made the bleed-out videos was forced out of SEAL Team 6 the following year after a drunken episode at Bagram in which he pistol-whipped another SEAL.
*
After the Chinook miniguns strafed the vehicles and stopped them, [Navy SEAL Britt] Slabinski and his team of snipers landed and moved to a rise several hundred yards away from one of the trucks and began firing sniper rounds at the militants. In that brief firefight, the SEALs killed nearly 20 foreign al Qaeda fighters, some of whom carried U.S. military equipment taken from Takur Ghar. Slabinski told MacPherson that Wolverine had been “really good payback.”
Although canoeing as a ritualized form of enemy mutilation ceased to be a widespread practice after [Vice Adm. William McRaven, new commander of the Joint Special Operations Command]’s clamp-down on the SEALs’ atrocities, it did not entirely cease. And though the gruesome and illegal practice has never been previously reported, at least one canoeing incident is quite well known, if hidden in plain sight.
On May 1, two stealth Black Hawk helicopters took off from Jalalabad, Afghanistan, and headed east toward Abbottabad. The flight took 90 minutes, and as the Black Hawk Bissonnette rode in approached the compound walls, it effectively slammed on the brakes. The pilot who had warned that one of the helicopters would stall was right. Bissonnette’s helicopter crashed into bin Laden’s side yard. Bissonnette and his teammates were nearly killed, and many of the operators aboard ended up with chronic injuries.
THAILAND - A woman wades through a flooded village in the Chaiya district. By @TheLilyfish #AFP: image via Frédérique Geffard @fgeffardAFP, 10 January 2017
Zoya watches streams feeding Lake Anza: photo by Ed Oswalt, 10 January 2017
Please tell us that's not a selfie Photo @somogettynews #Sessionsdarkside #protestmarginalized: image via Reading The Pictures @ReadingThePix, 10 January 2017
Another storyfull #Sessions shot by @somogettynew. Frames GOP Senators as offensive line #FaitAccompli #laughingallthe waytothejusticedept: image via Reading The Pictures @ReadingThePix, 10 January 2017
As we keep illustrating, #Trump era not about ideas, but gestures. Talking body language, how familiar. #Sessions @mollyriley @AFPphoto: image via Reading The Pictures @ReadingThePix, 10 January 2017
Another Sessions pic by @somogettynews, almost too obvious to be appreciated. #tvshow #closedloop #echochamber: image via Reading The Pictures @ReadingThePix, 10 January 2017
#Sessions framed by Asian-Amer grandchild and 2 African-Americans is standard viz propaganda. MTV mean tweet and backlash helps even more. Photo @AFP: image via Reading The Pictures @ReadingThePix, 10 January 2017
Besides wall of African-Americans and 1 of mil uniforms, @AFPphoto captures (in contrast w grand kid) how painfully rigid and stiff #Sessions is: image via Reading The Pictures @ReadingThePix, 10 January 2017
With opposition's hands tied, personality = protest #visualcultures #Sessions #KhizrKhan @somogettynews: image via Reading The Pictures @ReadingThePix, 10 January 2017
With opposition's hands tied, personality = protest #visualcultures #Sessions #AlSharpton @somogettynews: image via Reading The Pictures @ReadingThePix, 10 January 2017
Report claims Russia wanted to blackmail Trump w/ evidence of him hiring sex workers to perform "golden showers": image via Reading The Daily Beast @thedailybeast, 10 January 2017
Are there any other kind? #GoldenShowers: image via Donald J. Drumpf @RealDonalDrumpf, 10 January 2017
My childhood is ruined I'm ok with that This is worth it #GoldenShowers #ThanksDonald
What the hell happened last night? #goldenshowers #trumpleaks: image via Scott Dworkin @funder, 10 January 2017
Kanye’s new hair makes a lot more sense now #goldenshowers: image via Chelsea Handler Verified account @chelseahandler, 10 January 2017
Personally, we don't see what the big deal is. Our Postal Dude's been doing it since 2003! #peeotus #goldenshowers: image via RunningWithScissors @RWSbleeters, 10 January 2017
Bloody the Hatchet
One clear sign that all was not right with the command was the way sadism crept into the SEALs’ practices, with no apparent consequences. A few months after Objective Bull, for example, one of Hyder’s operators began taunting dying insurgents on videos he shot as part of his post-operation responsibilities. These “bleed out” videos were replayed on multiple occasions at Bagram Air Base. The operator who made them, a former SEAL leader said, would gather other members of Red Squadron to watch the last few seconds of an enemy fighter’s life. “It was war porn,” said the former SEAL, who viewed one of the videos. “No one would do anything about them.” The operator who made the bleed-out videos was forced out of SEAL Team 6 the following year after a drunken episode at Bagram in which he pistol-whipped another SEAL.
*
In keeping with Red Squadron’s appropriation of Native American
culture, Howard [Red Squadron commander Hugh Wyman Howard III] came up with the idea to bestow 14-inch hatchets on each
SEAL who had a year of service in the squadron. The hatchets, paid for
by private donations Howard solicited, were custom-made by Daniel
Winkler, a highly regarded knife maker in North Carolina who designed
several of the period tomahawks and knives used in the movie “The Last
of the Mohicans.” Winkler sells similar hatchets for $600 each. The
hatchets Howard obtained were stamped with a Native American warrior in a
headdress and crossed tomahawks.
At first the hatchets appeared to be merely symbolic, because such
heavy, awkward weapons had no place in the gear of a special operator.
“There’s no military purpose for it,” a former Red Squadron operator
told me. “But they are a great way of being part of a team. It was given
as an honor, one more step to strive for, another sign that you’re
doing a good job.”
For some of Howard’s men, however, the hatchets soon became more than
symbolic as they were used at times to hack dead fighters in Iraq and
Afghanistan. Others used them to break doorknobs on raids or kill
militants in hand-to-hand combat.
During the first deployments in both Iraq and Afghanistan, it was
common practice to take fingers, scalp, or skin from slain enemy
combatants for identification purposes. One former SEAL Team 6 leader
told me that he feared the practice would lead to members of the unit
using the DNA samples as an excuse to mutilate and desecrate the dead.
By 2007, when Howard and Red Squadron showed up with their hatchets in
Iraq, internal reports of operators using the weapons to hack dead and dying militants were
provided to both the commanding officer of SEAL Team 6 at that time,
Capt. Scott Moore, and his deputy, Capt. Tim Szymanski.
Howard, who declined to answer questions from The Intercept, rallied
his SEALs and others before missions and deployments by telling them to
“bloody the hatchet.” One SEAL I spoke with said that Howard’s words
were meant to be inspirational, like those of a coach, and were not an
order to use the hatchets to commit war crimes. Others were much more
critical. Howard was often heard asking his operators whether they’d
gotten “blood on your hatchet” when they returned from a deployment.
Howard’s distribution of the hatchets worried several senior SEAL Team 6
members and some CIA paramilitary officers who worked with his
squadron.
Head on a Platter
After the Chinook miniguns strafed the vehicles and stopped them, [Navy SEAL Britt] Slabinski and his team of snipers landed and moved to a rise several hundred yards away from one of the trucks and began firing sniper rounds at the militants. In that brief firefight, the SEALs killed nearly 20 foreign al Qaeda fighters, some of whom carried U.S. military equipment taken from Takur Ghar. Slabinski told MacPherson that Wolverine had been “really good payback.”
“Just a phenomenal, phenomenal day. We just slaughtered those dudes.”
After describing one particular fighter who from a distance had
resembled Osama bin Laden, Slabinksi continued: “To this day, we’ve
never had anything as good as that. Oh my gosh. We needed that … there
was not a better group of people to go and do that. The guys needed that
to get back in the saddle because everyone was gun shy.”
“I mean, talk about the funny stuff we do. After I shot this dude in
the head, there was a guy who had his feet, just his feet, sticking out
of some little rut or something over here. I mean, he was dead, but
people have got nerves. I shot him about 20 times in the legs, and every
time you’d kick him, er, shoot him, he would kick up, you could see his
body twitching and all that. It was like a game. Like, ‘hey look at
this dude,’ and the guy would just twitch again. It was just good
therapy. It was really good therapy for everybody who was there.”
*
According
to two senior SEAL Team 6 sources... the leadership
dynamic in Blue Squadron was a failure. By 2007, the command’s
leadership was aware that some Blue Squadron operators were using
specialized knives to conduct "skinnings." Using the excuse of
collecting DNA, which required a small piece of
skin containing hair follicles, operators were taking large strips of
skin from dead enemy fighters. The two leading officers at the command,
Moore and Szymanski, were informed that small groups in each of the
three squadrons were mutilating and desecrating combatants in both Iraq
and Afghanistan.
Slabinkski and others in the squadron had fallen under the influence
of an obscure war novel, “Devil’s Guard,” published in 1971 by George
Robert Elford. The book purported to be a true account of an S.S.
officer who with dozens of other soldiers escaped Germany after World
War II, joined the French Foreign Legion, and spent years in Vietnam
brutalizing the insurgency. The novel, which glorifies Nazi military
practices, describes counterinsurgency tactics such as mass slaughter
and desecration and other forms of wanton violence as a means of waging
psychological warfare against the “savage” Vietnamese.
“These fucking morons read the book ‘The Devil’s Guard’ and believed
it,” said one of the former SEAL Team 6 leaders who investigated
Slabinski and Blue Squadron. “It’s a work of fiction billed as the
Bible, as the truth. In reality, it’s bullshit. But we all see what we
want to see.” Slabinski and the Blue Squadron SEALs deployed to
Afghanistan were “frustrated, and that book gave them the answers they
wanted to see: Terrorize the Taliban and they’d surrender. The truth is
that such stuff only galvanizes the enemy.”
One telling illustration of what had gone wrong with Blue Squadron
occurred on December 17, 2007, during a raid in Helmand province.
Slabinski had told his operators
that he wanted “a head on a platter.” Although some of the more
seasoned SEALs took the statement metaphorically, at least one operator
took Slabinski at his word, interpreting it as an order.
Later that night, after Blue Squadron’s assaulters had successfully
carried out the raid, killing three or four armed men and recovering
weapons and explosives, Vasely and Slabinski conducted a walk-through of
the compound. Vasely, who was wearing night-vision goggles, looked
through a window and saw one of his operators, his back turned,
squatting over the body of a dead militant. Vasely later told
investigators he saw the operator moving his hand back and forth over
the militant’s neck in a sawing motion. Alarmed at seeing what he
believed was a decapitation, he told Slabinski to go inside and see what
the young operator was doing. By the time Slabinski entered the room
where the dead militant lay, according to three former SEAL Team 6
leaders, the operator had severed much of the dead man’s neck.
A Kind of Sport
On the second floor of the SEAL Team 6
headquarters in the Dam Neck naval annex, a computer, known as the “ops
computer,” stores the classified data on every mission the unit has
completed for the past decade. Here, commanders returning from a
deployment leave their hard drives with technicians who transfer
PowerPoints, after-actions reports, and photos of each operation a
squadron conducted abroad. The database contains photographs of persons
killed by SEAL operators during their missions and other mission
documentation.
Some of those photographs, especially those taken of casualties from 2005 through 2008,
show deceased enemy combatants with their skulls split open by a rifle
or pistol round at the upper forehead, exposing their brain matter. The
foreign fighters who suffered these V-shaped wounds were either killed
in battle and later shot at close range or finished off with a security
round while dying. Among members of SEAL Team 6, this practice of
desecrating enemy casualties was called “canoeing.”
The canoeing photos are dramatic documentary evidence of the extreme
and unnecessary violence that began to occur during multiple high-risk,
exhausting, and traumatizing tours of duty in Iraq and Afghanistan.
“There is and was no military reason whatsoever to split someone’s skull
open with a single round,” said a former SEAL Team 6 leader. “It’s
sport.”
The former SEAL Team 6 leader said that he first noticed canoeing in
2004, and that it does occur accidentally on the battlefield, but
rarely. He said canoeing became “big” in 2007. “I’d look through the
post-op photos and see multiple canoes on one objective, several times a
deployment,” the retired SEAL said.
When SEAL Team 6 operators were
occasionally confronted about the desecration, the SEAL leader said,
they’d often joke that they were just “great shots.”
The President's Own
Although canoeing as a ritualized form of enemy mutilation ceased to be a widespread practice after [Vice Adm. William McRaven, new commander of the Joint Special Operations Command]’s clamp-down on the SEALs’ atrocities, it did not entirely cease. And though the gruesome and illegal practice has never been previously reported, at least one canoeing incident is quite well known, if hidden in plain sight.
By the time Robert O’Neill entered Osama bin Laden’s bedroom in the
Abbottabad compound on May 2, 2011, the al Qaeda leader was bleeding out
on the floor, possibly already dead, after being shot in the chest and
leg by the lead assaulter on the raid.
That operator, known as Red inside the unit, is still an active-duty
member of SEAL Team 6 and has never been publicly identified. O’Neill
entered the room, walked over to where bin Laden lay on the floor, and
shot him twice in the face. He then stood above the now indisputably
dead man and canoed him, firing a round into his forehead and splitting
open the top of his skull, exposing his brain. Osama bin Laden had been
branded by SEAL Team 6.
O’Neill
has not been shy about the fact that he canoed bin Laden. “His forehead
was gruesome,” he later told Esquire magazine. “It was split open in
the shape of a V. I could see his brains spilling out over his face.” He
has even alluded to to
the grisly practice on Twitter. What he has not done is name the
practice or reveal that by canoeing bin Laden he had secured the
ultimate war trophy, the culmination of a decade’s worth of bloody
“sport” by elements of SEAL Team 6 who considered themselves craftsmen
of killing.
Conspiracy theorists who have "trigger words" would certainly be offended by bin Laden's "face-split-open" pics.: tweet via Robert J. O'Neill Verified account @mchooyah, 20 October 2016
The story of the bin Laden raid has been told and retold, but crucial details have never been made public.
Local residents and media on May 5, 2011, outside the
compound where al Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden was killed in
Abbottabad, Pakistan: photo by AqeelAhmed/AP via The Intercept, 10 January 2017
The Raid
On May 1, two stealth Black Hawk helicopters took off from Jalalabad, Afghanistan, and headed east toward Abbottabad. The flight took 90 minutes, and as the Black Hawk Bissonnette rode in approached the compound walls, it effectively slammed on the brakes. The pilot who had warned that one of the helicopters would stall was right. Bissonnette’s helicopter crashed into bin Laden’s side yard. Bissonnette and his teammates were nearly killed, and many of the operators aboard ended up with chronic injuries.
Bissonnette and a small team of SEALs moved from the helicopter to a
small building adjacent to bin Laden’s main house. After the SEALs tried
blowing the building’s gated front door, someone inside fired several
rounds out a window. They were the only shots not fired by the SEALs
during the raid. One of Bissonnette’s teammates then put his gun through
the front door, which was now slightly ajar, and shot the gunman in the
head. He was Ahmed al Kuwaiti, one of bin Laden’s couriers.
Afterward, Kuwaiti’s wife confirmed that bin Laden could be found on
the third floor of the main building, just as the team had been briefed.
Bissonnette and his team then moved to the main house.
Once inside, the SEALs proceeded slowly and methodically. O’Neill’s
teammates shot and killed Kuwaiti’s brother and his wife on the first
floor. After blowing open the iron gate blocking the main stairway, the
lead assaulters, among them Bissonnette and O’Neill, followed the
operator known as Red up the stairs. Red encountered and shot bin
Laden’s son just before the second floor landing, and the SEALs
following behind him fanned out into the hallways and rooms on the
second floor to search and secure the area. It was then that both
Bissonnette and O’Neill hung back
on the stairway. Both should have remained on the second floor.
Instead, as Red began his ascent to the third floor, they followed him
up, hoping to get in on the kill. O’Neill was closer to Red, one of the
first five assaulters. Bissonnette was much farther back down the stairwell.
As he approached the third floor bedroom, Red saw bin Laden standing
in the doorway, peering out. He was unarmed and wearing pajamas. A few
of his female relatives were nearby. Red came to a stop and fired two
shots with his suppressed rifle. One shot hit bin Laden in the chest and
the second shot glanced off his hip or thigh as Bin Laden stumbled
backward into his room and fell toward the foot of his bed.
Red watched bin Laden fall. He later told his teammates
that it was possible one arm was twitching reflexively as he died, but
otherwise he was effectively dead and not a threat. The distinction was
crucial. As the lead assaulter, it was Red’s job to make the most
important tactical judgments because he largely blocked the view of the
SEALs behind him. According to several former members of SEAL Team 6,
the most basic principle of assault training is “follow your shot,”
meaning that an operator who has fired on a target must ensure the
target no longer poses a threat. Your teammates beside and behind you
will cover all the other possible angles and areas of a room as you move
forward.
Red could see
bin Laden bleeding out from his chest wound but he still had not
entered the bedroom. Then, as two of bin Laden’s eldest daughters began
to scream, Red quickly corralled them at the doorway, a move considered
heroic by other SEALs on the mission. Had the daughters been wearing
explosives, Red would have died while shielding his teammates from much
of the blast. Instead, he held them back long enough for his teammates,
including O’Neill, to enter the bedroom.
O’Neill and two or three more assaulters moved past Red into the bedroom as bin Laden lay on the ground.
O’Neill then fired two rounds. According to his own description, the
first two rounds hit bin Laden’s forehead. Then O’Neill canoed bin Laden
with a final shot.
Conflicting accounts have emerged about how many other SEALs fired
rounds into bin Laden’s lifeless body, though one former SEAL Team 6
leader who viewed the body in Jalalabad told me the body appeared to be
intact aside from the chest wound and obliterated face.
The SEALs had been specifically asked to avoid shooting bin Laden in the face.
O’Neill’s decision to canoe the al Qaeda leader made him
unrecognizable. A SEAL who spoke Arabic interviewed bin Laden’s wives
and daughters until he was able to get two positive identifications.
O’Neill later implied in the Esquire profile that he shot bin Laden
because he wasn’t sure Red’s shots had hit the target. He also claimed
that bin Laden had been standing when he fired and that a weapon was
visible nearby. Yet immediately after the mission,
O’Neill described shooting bin Laden while he was on the floor. The two
weapons found on the third floor were not discovered until the rooms
were searched. Neither was loaded.
O’Neill’s canoeing of bin Laden cost his teammates precious time, but
his final shot to bin Laden’s head was unremarkable to them. They
ransacked the compound for documents and media for intelligence, left
the survivors inside, and returned to Jalalabad air base with the body.
SEAL Team 6 headquarters at Dam Neck naval annex,
Virginia Beach, Va., showing the 30-foot trident sculpted from a
fragment of the World Trade Center: image by Google via The Intercept, 10 January 2017
SEAL Team 6 headquarters at Dam Neck naval annex,
Virginia Beach, Va., showing the 30-foot trident sculpted from a
fragment of the World Trade Center: image by Google via The Intercept, 10 January 2017
Heard
about this so much recently it's going on reading list to finish asap
#ExtremeOwnership #navyseals #lead #win #crushedit #readinglist: image via Daniel Sweeney @danielmmssuibne, 10 January 2017
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