Here's the real reason that photos of bin Laden's body won't ever be shown
There are a lot of puzzled expressions on people's faces when it
comes to the subject of Osama Bin Laden and why the White House has not
authorized the release of any pictures of his body.
Photographs and video were released of Saddam Hussein's hanging, as
were post-mortem pictures of his criminal sons, Uday and Qusay, after
Delta Force took them out.
Why not release a few pictures of Public Enemy No. 1 to prove that he
is dead and show the world what happens when you take on the US?
Matt Bissonnette, one of the SEAL Team Six operators on the raid, partially outs the reason in his book, "No Easy Day." The book reads, "In his death throes, he was still twitching and convulsing."
"Another assaulter and I trained our lasers on his chest and fired
several rounds," Bissonnette wrote. "The bullets tore into him, slamming
his body into the floor until he was motionless."
An aerial view shows the compound that Osama bin Laden was killed in, in Abbottabad, Pakistan.
But this is perhaps the most measured and polite description that one
could give of how operator after operator took turns dumping magazines'
worth of ammunition into bin Laden's body, two confidential sources
within the community have told us. When all was said and done, UBL had
over a hundred bullets in him, by the most conservative estimate.
But was it illegal? Under the Laws of Land Warfare, a soldier is
fully authorized to put a few insurance rounds into his target after he
goes down. Provided the enemy is not surrendering, it is morally,
legally, and ethically appropriate to shoot the body a few times to
ensure that he is really dead and no longer a threat. What happened on
the bin Laden raid, however, is beyond excessive. The level of excess
shown was not about making sure that bin Laden was no longer a threat.
The excess was pure self-indulgence.
You may not care whether bin Laden got some extra holes punched in
him — few of us do, but what should concern you is a trend within
certain special-operations units to engage in this type of
self-indulgent, and ultimately criminal, behavior. Gone unchecked, these
actions get worse over time.
The real issue is not that bin Laden was turned into Swiss cheese,
but rather that this type of behavior has become a Standard Operating
Procedure in this unit. Of course, these attitudes and behaviors do not
come out of nowhere. Endless back-to-back combat deployments, PTSD, broken families, and war itself all play into it.
Now you know the real reason that the Obama administration has not
released pictures of Osama Bin Laden's corpse. To do so would show the
world a body filled with a ridiculous number of gunshot wounds.
The picture itself would most likely cause an international scandal,
and investigations would be conducted that could uncover other
operations, activities that many will do anything to keep buried.
Comments
Post a Comment