There were “the Shooter” and “the Point Man.” Now a third member of SEAL
Team 6 offers another account of the raid on Osama bin Laden that led to his
death in 2011.
The report from CNN
appears to contradict Esquire’s widely circulated story, "The Man Who
Killed Osama bin Laden," by Phil Bronstein. The unnamed source from CNN
calls the Esquire account "complete B-S."
The SEAL team
member in the Esquire profile, who was described simply as the Shooter, claimed
that he entered the compound and found bin Laden with a gun in reach and shot
him.
“In that second, I
shot him, two times in the forehead. Bap! Bap! The second time as he’s going
down. He crumpled onto the floor in front of his bed. He was dead. I watched
him take his last breaths,” the Shooter told Esquire.
That account
conflicts with the first-person narrative from the bestselling book “No Easy
Day,” written by Matt Bissonette under the alias Mark Owen.
According to a
third account from the anonymous Navy SEAL Team 6 member who talked to CNN, the
Point Man rushed up the stairs and shot bin Laden in the head, gravely wounding
him.
CNN adds, “Having
taken down bin Laden, the point man proceeded to rush two women he found in bin
Laden's bedroom, gathering them in his arms to absorb the explosion in case
they were wearing suicide vests, something that was a real concern of those who
planned the raid.”
Two more SEALs then
found bin Laden wounded on the floor, and shot him in the chest. CNN’s source
said there was no way the Shooter could have seen a gun in reach of bin Laden
-- since a gun was only discovered in the the suspected terrorist leader's room
after a thorough search.
This account
appears to square with the one in “No Easy Day,” which asserts the Point Man
took the first shots. Bissonette writes in his book that he was one of the
members to shoot bin Laden as he lay on the floor.
Bronstein, when
contacted by CNN, said he had passed along the questions around the raid to his
source but had not heard back.
But according to
CNN’s Peter Bergen, there’s no “I” in this SEAL team: He writes that in the
briefing to President Obama post-raid, the members explained, "If you took
one person out of the puzzle, we wouldn't have the competence to do the job we
did; everybody's vital. It's not about the guy who pulled the trigger to kill
bin Laden, it's about what we all did together."
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