(WASHINGTON DC, U.S)
On May 2, 2011, when (US) President
Barack Obama broke the news that “the United States has conducted an operation
that killed Osama bin Laden” in a televised address, he did not name any of the
servicemen or women involved in the strike. And while more and more details
were revealed in the ensuing days—the photo of the president and commanders as
they watched a live feed of the event, the helicopter that crashed in
Abbottabad—the identity of the Navy SEAL who pulled the fateful trigger was
never revealed.
That changed this week. Robert
O’Neill has emerged to take credit for personally shooting bin Laden. Fox News
planned an exclusive interview with O’Neill, a highly unusual occurrence in a
special-forces community known for discretion. SOFREP, a military and
special-forces news Web site, reported O’Neill’s identity on Monday, and an
anonymous Gawker reader also dropped O’Neill’s name in that site’s comments. On
Wednesday afternoon, the Daily Mail published an extensive interview with
O’Neill’s father, confirming the news.
O’Neill is 38 years old. He lives in
Washington, D.C., and is a motivational speaker. His biography on the Web site
of the agency that handles his bookings describes him as “one of the most highly-decorated
combat veterans of our time.” “O’Neill was the man on the ground we have never
heard of but know exists,” his description reads. “He was one of the quiet
professionals performing the most difficult tasks in the most difficult
circumstances, serving his remarkable career in the shadows and keeping America
safe in the process.”
Tom O’Neill, Robert’s father,
brushed aside concerns of a retaliatory attack. “People are asking if we are
worried that ISIS will come and get us because Rob is going public,” he said.
“I say I’ll paint a big target on my front door and say, ‘Come and get us.’”
The decorated former soldier grew up
in Butte, Montana, where his father still lives, in a house the Mail described
as full of taxidermy animals that Tom and Robert hunted.
In an Esquire profile, during which
he remained anonymous, Robert O’Neill expressed his dismay at the way veterans
were treated, and said he did not receive the medical attention he needed.
After the profile was published, some sources took issue with O’Neill’s
account, and questioned whether he actually shot the rounds that ended bin
Laden’s life.
Ahead of O’Neill’s Fox News
interview, and in the wake of disclosures by Matt Bissonnette, the former Navy
SEAL who wrote about his role in the bin Laden strike under a pen name, two of
the SEAL’s highest commanders reportedly issued a stern October 31 letter. “At
Naval Special Warfare’s core is the SEAL ethos,” Rear Admiral Brian Losey and
Force Master Chief Michael Magaraci wrote. “A critical tenant [sic]of our ethos
is ‘I do not advertise the nature of my work, nor seek recognition for my
actions.’ Our ethos is a life-long commitment and obligation, both in and out
of the Service. Violators of our Ethos are neither Teammates in good standing,
Teammates who represent Naval special Warfare.”
“We do not abide willful or selfish
disregard for our core values in return for public notoriety and financial
gain,” the commanders wrote. “We will actively seek judicial consequence for
members who willingly violate the law, and place our Teammates, our Families,
and potential future operations at risk.”
The elder O’Neill told the Daily
Mail that he felt such criticisms of his son’s decision to speak publicly are
unfounded: “What are you supposed to do when you come out of the military after
such service—become a greeter at Walmart?”
Bissonnette, who published No Easy
Day under the pen name “Mark Owen” in 2012, said this week that the intervening
two years have been hellish, as the government and his former fellow SEALs
express outrage at his disclosures. “I would go back overseas today and deal
with fighting ISIS face-to-face rather than deal with the last two years
again,” he said in a 60 Minutes interview. Bissonnette, who submitted his
second book to the Department of Defense for approval, remains under
investigation. He maintains, however, that if secretaries of defense and
generals are permitted to write memoirs, enlisted soldiers should be allowed to
do so as well.
O’Neill’s interview with Fox News
airs on November 11 and 12. The Navy said it will wait to respond to the news
of O’Neill’s identity being revealed until after the interview airs.
(Vanity Fair)
The Man Who Killed Bin Laden Revealed
Reviewed by Unknown
on
Thursday, November 06, 2014
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