Bin Laden’s Daughter: My Father Was Captured Alive, Then Shot Dead
posted at 1:45 pm on May 4, 2011 by Howard Portnoy
According to Al Arabiya, the Arabic-language television news channel, senior Pakistani security officials are claiming today that Osama bin Laden was taken alive by U.S. Special Forces and executed as his family members watched. The source of this seemingly outrageous allegation is identified as bin Laden’s 12-year-old daughter, who was an eyewitness.
The article further notes that four bullet-riddled bodies were recovered from the compound, only two of which were confiscated by the U.S. assault team—one belonging to bin Laden, the other to his son. It asserts, finally, that by the time Pakistani security forces arrived on the scene of the raid (which the Pakistani government angrily insists was “unauthorized”), the U.S. commandoes had claimed their prizes and cleared out.
The surviving members of the bin Laden family are said to have transported by security chopper to Rawalpindi, where they are now receiving treatment.
Other occupants of the house have been detained for questioning by Pakistani officials. According to Al Arabiya, one of these individuals maintains that the occupants of the compound did not fire so much as “a single bullet” on U.S. choppers or commandoes.
The account flies in the face of the official U.S. version of events, which includes detailed descriptions of a 40-minute fire fight. Rational minds would expect that forensic evidence collected from the compound will disprove the detainee’s preposterous assertion.
Yet, troubling discrepancies between the initial report released by Washington and subsequent versions are sure to become grist for all manner of speculation about what really happened.
In the earliest reports of the events on the ground, for example, bin Laden was said to be armed or reaching for a weapon and to seize a female in the compound as a human shield. In the revised account the terrorist was unarmed, and the woman, who may have been one of his wives, sacrificed herself.
And then there is the ticklish matter of the raid’s violation of Pakistani sovereignty, an issue that arose during the 2008 presidential debates, when a somewhat defiant candidate Barack Obama boasted:
If we have actionable intelligence about high-value terrorist targets and [then-Pakistani President Pervez] Musharraf won’t act, we will.
The only problem is that the Obama administration didn’t give the current president, Asif Ali Zardari, a chance to act. Not ultimately that it should make any difference if cooler heads are permitted to prevail. The Pakistani government is itself on the hot seat over its own failure to have recognized bin Laden’s hiding place “in plain view” of a military base. Before the U.S. starts answering questions about the way the raid went down, Pakistan needs to explain why it didn’t occur six years sooner, and on their watch.
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….and then there’s this….
cthulhu on May 4, 2011 at 2:05 PM
cthulhu: Interesting theory.
Howard Portnoy on May 4, 2011 at 2:10 PM
If the White House actually did have streaming video access to what was going on inside the compound building, as opposed to video from the helicopter’s vantage point outside the building, demands to release the videos may become an even bigger kerfuffle than the demands to release the pictures.
The child or other family members’ statements — true or not — pretty much confirm that Osama’s dead without having to show the images (unless the bin Laden clan is part of the conspiracy to hide the truth that daddy/hubby’s still alive or died years ago). But the claims now that the Seals basically lined bin Laden up and shot him seem tailor-made to try and excite the Muslim street against the U.S. more than releasing any photos would (and while the photos might be grizzly, I can see the same images in just about any paper across the border from Texas in Mexico, so in third-world nations with endemic violence, dead-in-the-head pictures are pretty much routine Page 1 images).
jon1979 on May 4, 2011 at 2:16 PM
Utterly meaningless. Pakistan ceded its sovereignty on this matter when they decided to shelter him.
Crawford on May 4, 2011 at 2:45 PM
I assume you have proof.
Howard Portnoy on May 4, 2011 at 2:51 PM
It was not my intention to do this in front of you. For that, I’m sorry. But you can take my word for it, your
motherfather had it coming.When you grow up, if you still feel raw about it, I’ll be waiting.
This isn’t a game and it isn’t a bunch of policemen on a midnight raid. War is violent and ugly and there are no wars without tears. You order attacks that will WITH ABSOLUTE CERTAINTY kill innocents. Bombs, rockets, artillery often do not hit their targets and kill those who had no part in much of anything.
We try to avoid the death of innocents… they try to kill innocents. Innocents do end up dead either way, but it is a lie to pretend there isn’t a substantial difference in how we conduct business.
Osama Bin Laden ordered the murder of thousands of American citizens as well as the citizens of many other countries. We hunted him down and killed him. It’s not complicated.
I want to know what happened, but not because I have any concern about how he was treated. I don’t care if they lit him on fire and him burn to death. That would be a poetic end for someone who incinerated thousands.
He wasn’t a soldier. He was a mass murdering terrorist and he got a cleaner death than he deserved.
sharrukin on May 4, 2011 at 3:07 PM
Here is the link to the Al Aribya website and the story.
lexhamfox on May 4, 2011 at 3:44 PM
Not to pick on a 12-year old who probably loved her father, but, too bad. I couldn’t care less if he had been forced to beg and then shot anyway. Osama’s roasting spirit shouldn’t consider itself lucky that he wasn’t flayed alive.
If they did line him up against a wall and shoot him, it was still justice.
irishspy on May 4, 2011 at 3:44 PM
Maybe one day it’ll occur to her that her father was neglectful in keeping family members around when he had such a high price on his head. Reading accounts from one of his other sons, he expected them to commit suicide missions on his behalf. Some father.
tpitman on May 4, 2011 at 4:54 PM
The location is the proof… That spot, where it is, what it is close to, proximity to Islamabad…
Khun Joe on May 5, 2011 at 4:19 PM
So? This is supposed to bother me?
tballard on May 5, 2011 at 8:36 PM
if we captured him alive, he’d be in gitmo right now being repeatedly waterboarded until he told us everything we want to know.
in fact, we’d have been better off not releasing that we had this mission at all. right now all of al queda is changing their e-mail addresses, codes, and phone numbers. which makes the intel from the computers we found there have a very limited shelf life.
warhorse_03826 on May 6, 2011 at 1:32 PM