Rewinding OBL death drama

The United States got the tip on Osama bin Laden’s whereabouts in 2010. One has to assume the house was under surveillance. If they thought they ‘bagged him’ they would be watching closely and choosing the right time to get the target. Later, we learnt in ‘Breaking News’ from The Washington Post: “CIA had secret outpost in Abbottabad."

“The CIA maintained a safe house in the Pakistani city of Abbottabad for a small team of spies who conducted extensive surveillance over a period of months on the compound where Osama Bin Laden was killed by U.S. special operations forces this week (US officials),” read the Post story.

Both Afghan agents and Pakistani intelligence now claim to have told the US about the house as early as 2009. So, they knew he was there. That was a reason drones weren’t used. The CIA wanted a more controlled high profile and dramatic intervention for public consumption, in the end making it a marketing campaign for centrality of the agency’s role.

They needed a heroic narrative to revive support for a war they have been losing, and a scalp to sell to a conflict-weary and disillusioned population. It is no surprise that the Seals labeled OBL ‘Geronimo’ reviving memories of fighting guerilla-style Indian wars. Muslim renegades are apparently our new ‘savages’. The native Americans took their enemy’s head and hair – we shoot out their eyes and waterboard their brains.

The target was not ‘the terror mastermind’ but the American people. It was an exercise in political mobilization and perception management. It was the ultimate media operation, relying on many of the tactics used in Iraq that I document in my film ‘WMD: Weapons of Mass Deception.’

We are as conscious about what we say as what we do. We always fashion a propaganda storyline demonizing the enemy who is often compared to Hitler. The media reported that Bin Laden lived in a ‘million dollar mansion’ while it cost $48,000 about six years ago. The new reports claimed that OBL was heavily armed while the reality is on the contrary. The media factories also revealed quoting un-named sources that he hid behind female human shields. Such facts are only relevant when there is some to pay heed to them to. The Daily Mail, London, complained that their raising of questions led to being derided as “cheese eating surrender monkeys.”

The US troops could have captured him, but that would lead to the hassle of putting him on trial. Besides, what if he revealed his long connection with the CIA and US officials? We can't have that. So the kill order was given, along with a quick disposal of the body, mafia-style, as in ‘Sleeping with the fishes.’ The legal justification was self-defense, an argument that any government can use to dispatch its enemies.

Why was it done, and why now?

It was certainly not because Al-Qaeda is ascendant. Our experts believe only 100 of them remain in Afghanistan, where their capacity has been diminished. Please remember: Al-Qaeda is not a centralized top-down machine but a decentralized and sophisticated network.

We can only surmise all the factors, but the larger context here has fallen away with the focus on the narrowness of the dirty details. Many leaks were aimed to inspire enthusiasm for the bravery and heroism of the death squad, but not any reflection of the strategy and larger context of the events.

Even as the cover stories about what happened fell away into the foggy soup of covert action and its contradictions, it devolved into to a case of excuses about haste. “He said that but didn’t mean it.” Even as the raid inspires mass euphoria and self-righteous blood lust, the full meaning of it is missing in a media that is much better at the how than the why.

First of all, this operation reflected the reorganization of the national security state with the CIA taking over from the soldiers. This operation was Leon Panetta’s last hurrah as Spook-in Chief before he uses his covert ops portfolio to takeover the Pentagon.

Second, that most hyped soldier’s soldier, General David Petraeus, who has failed to end the insurgency in Afghanistan, that now threatens to enter Pakistan, is being moved into Panetta’s job. A Navy Seal Commander has now been promoted to the Central Command.

The bottom line: public accountability and open disclosure has become a thing of the past. No wonder the ongoing campaign to ‘get Wikileaks' before it exposes more secrets.

As the military privatizes wars, despite its size and technological superiority, the US has been losing the war to peasants with suicide belts and unconventional tactics.

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