The Secret Team That Killed bin Laden

yllus

Elite Member & Lifer
Aug 20, 2000
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I don't know much about this website, but they talk in a manner that suggests knowledge of the hard facts of how this operation went down.

National Journal - The Secret Team That Killed bin Laden

From Ghazi Air Base in Pakistan, the modified MH-60 helicopters made their way to the garrison suburb of Abbottabad, about 30 miles from the center of Islamabad. Aboard were Navy SEALs, flown across the border from Afghanistan, along with tactical signals, intelligence collectors, and navigators using highly classified hyperspectral imagers.

After bursts of fire over 40 minutes, 22 people were killed or captured. One of the dead was Osama bin Laden, done in by a double tap -- boom, boom -- to the left side of his face. His body was aboard the choppers that made the trip back. One had experienced mechanical failure and was destroyed by U.S. forces, military and White House officials tell National Journal.

Were it not for this high-value target, it might have been a routine mission for the specially trained and highly mythologized SEAL Team Six, officially called the Naval Special Warfare Development Group, but known even to the locals at their home base Dam Neck in Virginia as just DevGru.
This HVT was special, and the raids required practice, so they replicated the one-acre compound. Trial runs were held in early April.

DevGru belongs to the Joint Special Operations Command, an extraordinary and unusual collection of classified standing task forces and special-missions units. They report to the president and operate worldwide based on the legal (or extra-legal) premises of classified presidential directives. Though the general public knows about the special SEALs and their brothers in Delta Force, most JSOC missions never leak. We only hear about JSOC when something goes bad (a British aid worker is accidentally killed) or when something really big happens (a merchant marine captain is rescued at sea), and even then, the military remains especially sensitive about their existence. Several dozen JSOC operatives have died in Pakistan over the past several years. Their names are released by the Defense Department in the usual manner, but with a cover story -- generally, they were killed in training accidents in eastern Afghanistan. That’s the code.

How did the helos elude the Pakistani air defense network? Did they spoof transponder codes? Were they painted and tricked out with Pakistan Air Force equipment? If so -- and we may never know -- two other JSOC units, the Technical Application Programs Office and the Aviation Technology Evaluation Group, were responsible. These truly are the silent squirrels -- never getting public credit and not caring one whit. Since 9/11, the JSOC units and their task forces have become the U.S. government’s most effective and lethal weapon against terrorists and their networks, drawing plenty of unwanted, and occasionally unflattering, attention to themselves in the process.

...

A memo from CIA Director Leon Panetta sent Sunday night provides some hints of how the information was collected and analyzed. In it, he thanked the National Security Agency and the National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency for their help. NSA figured out, somehow, that there was no telephone or Internet service in the compound. How it did this without Pakistan’s knowledge is a secret. The NGIA makes the military’s maps but also develops their pattern recognition software -- no doubt used to help establish, by February of this year, that the CIA could say with “high probability” that bin Laden and his family were living there.

...

When Gen. Stanley McChrystal became JSOC’s commanding general in 2004, he and his intelligence chief, Maj. Gen. Michael Flynn, set about transforming the way the subordinate units analyze and act on intelligence. Insurgents in Iraq were exploiting the slow decision loop that coalition commanders used, and enhanced interrogation techniques were frowned upon after the Abu Ghraib scandal. But the hunger for actionable tactical intelligence on insurgents was palpable.

The way JSOC solved this problem remains a carefully guarded secret, but people familiar with the unit suggest that McChrystal and Flynn introduced hardened commandos to basic criminal forensic techniques and then used highly advanced and still-classified technology to transform bits of information into actionable intelligence. One way they did this was to create forward-deployed fusion cells, where JSOC units were paired with intelligence analysts from the NSA and the NGA. Such analysis helped the CIA to establish, with a high degree of probability, that Osama bin Laden and his family were hiding in that particular compound.

These technicians could “exploit and analyze” data obtained from the battlefield instantly, using their access to the government’s various biometric, facial-recognition, and voice-print databases. These cells also used highly advanced surveillance technology and computer-based pattern analysis to layer predictive models of insurgent behavior onto real-time observations.
The military has begun to incorporate these techniques across the services. And Flynn will soon be promoted to a job within the Office of the Director of National Intelligence, where he’ll be tasked with transforming the way intelligence is gathered, analyzed, and utilized.
 

yllus

Elite Member & Lifer
Aug 20, 2000
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A bit more from Wired:

Video: Inside Bin Laden’s Drone-Proof Compound

ABC News is the first to bring video direct from the compound in Abbotabad back to the outside world. The “first room on the right” after entering it remains “full of blood.”

That’s in contrast to its calm surroundings: The area around it looks bucolic and manicured. It’s about a kilometer away from a Pakistani military academy, tweets a journalist on the scene. Built in 2005 at the end of a dirt road, it’s about “six times” the size of any of the houses around it, with fifteen-foot high walls guarded with barbed wire.

Though its main security measures come from where it was built: 35 miles “northeast – towards India – of Islamabad and within the Pakistan air defense intercept zone for the national capital,” as the Nightwatch intelligence newsletter observes.

It means no drone could’ve pulled off the hit on Bin Laden.

The Reaper robotic plane (pictured) is the most advanced in the U.S. unmanned fleet. It has a top speed of only 260 knots. And it lights up on radar like a Rockefeller Center Christmas tree. Pakistani surface-to-air-missiles would have brought it down in an instant. Nothing can fly in that region without detection and without permission from the Pakistan Air Force, even from Afghanistan,” as NightWatch notes. Of course, any possible drone shootdown near the compound would have risked tipping off bin Laden and scotching the entire painstaking manhunt.

What’s more, the Reaper doesn’t carry the weapons-load needed to ensure Bin Laden’s death. The drone carries up to four 500-pound bombs. That may sound like a lot of ordnance. But Bin Laden would’ve had plenty of places to dodge the bombs, in a compound where even the balconies had blast walls.

That’s why President Obama was presented in March with a plan to use a pair of B-2 bombers to drop “a few dozen 2,000-pound bombs” on the compound, according to ABC. The B-2s are stealthy enough — and high-flying enough — to avoid Pakistani air defense systems. And the bombers carry enough munitions to completely flatten the compound.

Eventually, the plan was called off, for fear of civilian casualties — and the destruction of bin Laden’s body, the only evidence it could present that the bombs hit their high-value target.

Instead, National Journal reports, a Navy SEAL team boarded a set of modified BlackHawk helicopters at Ghazi Air Base in Pakistan, and flew, ever-so-quietly, to Abbottabad.

According to ABC, inside the compound, the raiding team discovered “computers” — plural. Whatever information they contain is doubtlessly being picked over by intelligence officials for clues as to the locales and plans of bin Laden’s deputies, operatives and funding sources.

That’s ironic. One of the most important security measures the two brothers who hid bin Laden in the compound took was to take it off the grid. A senior intelligence official told reporters that it had “no telephone or internet service,” an anomaly for the area. (Residents even burned their trash instead of leaving it for the garbage man.) That attracted the attention of the satellite imagery sleuths of the National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency, the communications interceptions specialists of the National Security Agency and the spy-runners of the CIA — even if the latter couldn’t launch any drone strikes.

Notice that the compound itself is an intelligence asset. Its owners hid it in plain sight in the heart of Pakistan. That makes bin Laden only the latest al-Qaida leader to be taken down far from the tribal areas. Khalid Shaikh Mohammed, the architect of 9/11, was arrested in 2003 in the garrison city of Rawalpindi; another key 9/11 figure, Ramzi Binalshibh, was taken down in the port city of Karachi. Intelligence officials scouring the contents of bin Laden’s computers are surely looking for more evidence that might fit that pattern — and similar compounds.
 

CPA

Elite Member
Nov 19, 2001
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Why am I picturing the practice run sessions in The Dirty Dozen?
 

bfdd

Lifer
Feb 3, 2007
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Honestly... we should say FUCK Pakistan. They have been fighting us tooth and nail ever since we started Afghanistan. They were harboring this motherfucker and they knew it for years.
 

Thump553

Lifer
Jun 2, 2000
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Excellent articles. It seems we learned from past mistakes and bad policies (ie torture and rigidly top-down command and control) to finally get it right.
 

rudder

Lifer
Nov 9, 2000
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Awesome job by this team. And to think of the irony... had the left forced Bush to shut down Guantanamo Bay earlier... the U.S. intel teams would never have gotten the names of bin laden's couriers who were ultimately the ones to unintentionally reveal his hiding place.
 

shiner

Lifer
Jul 18, 2000
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Honestly... we should say FUCK Pakistan. They have been fighting us tooth and nail ever since we started Afghanistan. They were harboring this motherfucker and they knew it for years.

Bingo
 

shiner

Lifer
Jul 18, 2000
17,112
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"One of the dead was Osama bin Laden, done in by a double tap"

Good to know they followed Zombieland rules. :)

I hope the entire team got a well deserved Twinkie once the mission was complete.
 

dfuze

Lifer
Feb 15, 2006
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I had always assumed (wrongly) that the SEALS only handled ops relating to water.

Yeah, you would think that until you break down the SEAL name to SEa Air and Land.

Amazing work on their part, glad all of them got and out safely.
 

yllus

Elite Member & Lifer
Aug 20, 2000
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I thought the Helicopters flew from a base in Afghanistan and not Pakistan?

It sounds like there was some Pakistani assistance - multiple news sources have confirmed that the helicopters left from a Pakistani air base, and the codes needed to not light up the helis to the Islamabad air defence network must have been provided by the Pakistani military.
 

Firebot

Golden Member
Jul 10, 2005
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Awesome job by this team. And to think of the irony... had the left forced Bush to shut down Guantanamo Bay earlier... the U.S. intel teams would never have gotten the names of bin laden's couriers who were ultimately the ones to unintentionally reveal his hiding place.

Sorry did I miss some hidden info where anyone confirmed that intel came specifically from a detainee who was held in Guantanamo Bay longer then expected?

I'd like to see your source to make this claim.
 

yllus

Elite Member & Lifer
Aug 20, 2000
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Some more details about the flight...

ABC News - Some White Knuckle Moments for Elite Navy SEALs Team

The Navy SEALs team that conducted this operation was the legendary Team Six, aka DevGru, or the “Naval Special Warfare Development Group,” flown into Pakistan by helicopter teams from the 160th Special Operations Air Regiment, part of the Joint Special Operations Command.

The original plan was for the Navy SEALs to rappel down into the compound, and that’s how they practiced it in April on a replica of the compound the military constructed in the U.S. on which SEALs Team Six conducted two practice runs.

But Sunday, one of the helicopters had an issue – they’re not sure what as of now – and conducted a soft crash landing. The chopper hit the deck – “it was a real white-knuckle moment,” a US official tells ABC News.

Another white-knuckle moment – at the end of the operation, Pakistan’s military scrambled fighter jets looking for the US helicopters. Who knows what could have happened if the Pakistani planes had reached the US helicopters -- but they didn’t.

The US team got back to Afghanistan by around 5:45 pm ET.

This operation happened, an official said, because of dogged, relentless intelligence work. For years, from detainees at Gitmo, the CIA had the nom de guerre of the courier, but they didn’t have his true name until 2007.

Intel spotted him in early 2009 – it took a while to follow him . Last August when intel found the compound the reaction was along the lines of “Oh my God who are they hiding here?” a official said, recalling definite recognition this was a significant find. Congressional leaders were briefed about the compound in December.

One possible complication: While CIA contractor Ray Davis was in the Pakistani prison there were concerns about his safety were this mission to be conducted.

Davis’s March 16 release cleared that possible obstacle to the operation -- a kill mission, with the clear objective to kill bin Laden.
 

crisscross

Golden Member
Apr 29, 2001
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Wait now this source says they flew from a base in Afghanistan and avoided Pakistani radar. I have a hard time believing the Pakistanis knew about it prior to the operation.
 

yllus

Elite Member & Lifer
Aug 20, 2000
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compound.jpg


Minutes ago, the Pentagon released a 5 page powerpoint presentation showing exclusive details of the Abbottabad compound where bin Laden was supposedly killed (and where the PCR test to confirm he was in fact "he", took about 1/20th the time it usually takes in leading US Universities).
 

PeshakJang

Platinum Member
Mar 17, 2010
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It's a good thing the New York Times decided not to leak the info this time... might have had to wait another 5 years.
 

PeshakJang

Platinum Member
Mar 17, 2010
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This operation happened, an official said, because of dogged, relentless intelligence work. For years, from detainees at Gitmo, the CIA had the nom de guerre of the courier, but they didn’t have his true name until 2007.

Intel spotted him in early 2009 – it took a while to follow him . Last August when intel found the compound the reaction was along the lines of “Oh my God who are they hiding here?” a official said, recalling definite recognition this was a significant find. Congressional leaders were briefed about the compound in December.

I guess we know now why Obama did a 180 on his campaign promise to shut down that terrible humanitarian atrocity known as Gitmo.
 

ProfJohn

Lifer
Jul 28, 2006
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Awesome job by this team. And to think of the irony... had the left forced Bush to shut down Guantanamo Bay earlier... the U.S. intel teams would never have gotten the names of bin laden's couriers who were ultimately the ones to unintentionally reveal his hiding place.
ummm we knew who they were a LONG time ago. It is doubtful that anyone in Gitmo really helped post 2008. By then we probably knew all we were going to get from them.

Most likely the big break came from old fashioned detective work and just following these guys for a LONG LONG time.