As the staccato blades of two Black Hawk helicopters whipped up dust outside a compound deep inside hostile Pakistani territory, SEAL Team Six put on their night vision goggles and prepared for blood.
Minutes later, three rapid-fire gunshots ended a decade-long manhunt filled with false leads and fatal missteps, as the world’s most wanted terrorist lay bloodied in his own filth. Now, the elite commando who killed Osama bin Laden has told The Sun about the moment he watched life slip away from his eyes for the millions of people victimized by the mastermind of the 9/11 attacks in 2001.
On the 15th anniversary of those fateful moments, Robert J. “I’m the last person to see him standing,” says O’Neill.
“He had less than a second to convince me not to kill him. And he didn’t convince me.”
On April 30, 2011, as President Barack Obama and his most trusted U.S. government aides gathered in the ballroom of the Washington, D.C. Hilton for the White House Correspondents’ Dinner, they were well aware that next 24 hours will shape them Heritage.
He had spent weeks fine-tuning Operation Neptune Spear – a generation-defining mission to execute the al Qaeda leader who had waged an unforgiving war on the West for more than two decades.
The Americans had tried to kill or capture bin Laden since he admitted sending two passenger jets into New York’s World Trade Center in 2001, killing about 3,000 people.
They now knew that he was hiding in a security compound in the Pakistani holiday town of Abbottabad, surrounded by family – oblivious to the fact that he was entering the last days of a life dedicated to destruction.
A few weeks ago, a team of brass-knuckle frogmen in America’s most elite military unit – SEAL Team Six – were soaking up the Florida sunshine on a much-needed war vacation.
Robert J. O’Neill, who carried out some of the SEALs’ most dangerous missions during his decade-plus tenure, explains how Holidays This was cut dramatically when the team was called to a remote training site in North Carolina.
SEALs were briefed on an operation on a mysterious compound hidden deep in a Pakistani mountain range – but they were kept in the dark about it Target.
Then, the legendary CIA officer who was instrumental in tracking down one of the world’s most dangerous terrorists, known by the pseudonym Maya, broke this rule. news.
He told SEAL Team Six: “The reason you’re here is that this is as close to Osama bin Laden as we’ve ever been.”
Unable to recover from the heavy weight of his words, the reaction among the cold-blooded killers was clearly steely.
O’Neill recalls: “It was nice because there were no high fives. We were just like – OK, are we leaving now?”
The SEALs spent several weeks staging a large-scale heist in a carefully designed attack patterned after Bin Laden’s compound.
In form of destiny As the date approached, they were flown on special, never-before-used helicopters to the American airfield in Jalalabad, Afghanistan.
O’Neill says: “We were comfortable with it being a one-way mission, because if we have to die, we’re killing bin Laden, that’s what we were all here to do.
He recalled the heartbreaking moment he said goodbye to his children “forever”.
“The hard thing there was that I couldn’t tell them where I was going,” says O’Neill.
“They had just celebrated my coming back. And my youngest was three years old. But they’re strong, and we’re away from our kids 320 days a year, so they’ve got used to it.
“But I had to go again, and I said, this is my goodbye to him forever. And I can’t cry in front of him.”
“My three-year-old went and got a Hello Kitty carry-on. She packed a pillow and her favorite Mister Elephant, and she said, like a three-year-old, ‘Take me on vacation when you get back.'”
When O’Neal touched “J-Bad” the next day, he wrote letters to his children, and he remembered a letter addressed to his seven-year-old daughter.
He says: “I didn’t write to a seven-year-old, I wrote to a 27-year-old. I said, ‘I’m really sorry I couldn’t attend your wedding. I know you’re beautiful, and thank you for taking care of your sisters.’ Tears were hitting the pages.”
Despite consternation among top White House officials, O’Neill was confident that the CIA chief was not pushing him to go on a wild chase.
He explains: “I was 100 percent there – because of the team that found him. Every time we trained, (Maya) would point to a model and say – ‘Right now, Osama bin Laden is on the third floor of this house. I don’t understand why we’re not launching. Good night.'”
An arduous 90-minute flight over hostile Pakistani territory took the SEALs to Abbottabad – a tough wait for Obama and his top officials until the team reached their destination.
But for O’Neill and his brothers, the trip felt like just another day. Office.
“No point worrying about getting hit by a missile, I’m not going to stop it,” O’Neill says with a shrug.
“It’s okay to be afraid. It’s okay to be scared, because fear makes you think more clearly. But if you’re afraid of that, you can panic. And being nervous in a helicopter flying over a flock is a bad idea.
“That’s why I’ll trust myself and take my focus off that thing.”
But the mission suffered a fatal setback when the lead helicopter crashed while trying to land within the compound walls.
“The Dash One was supposed to hover in front of the house,” explains O’Neill.
“But for whatever reason, the pilot couldn’t stop it, and he decided to crash-land it, because he knew if he drove it, it would crash and kill everybody.
“The pilots are the heroes of this mission. And honestly, the pilots are the heroes of every mission.”
O’Neill’s team – Dash Two – was to take out snipers on the rooftop, but the unexpected crash of the first helicopter prompted the pilot to seek safe ground.
“Now I’m looking at the wall of bin Laden’s house,” says O’Neill.
A breacher moved in quickly to place a C6 charge on a set of double doors, but the team received a second blow when the explosion revealed a high brick wall behind them.
While a failed breach is normally cause for concern, this one only served to scuttle O’Neill’s sails.
“It’s good, because it’s a fake door,” he says.
“Nobody puts a fake door in their house. It’s right there.”
Once the SEALs charged the compound, they moved methodically through the lower floors before piling onto the stairs.
“We thought there were suicide bombers waiting at the top,” says O’Neill.
There was no clear view or guarantee of what was behind the curtain hanging where the door should have been.
O’Neill found himself directly behind the point man – the lead soldier in a patrol who acts as the team’s eyes and ears – with no time to wait for reinforcements.
“He wants more boys, I don’t have them, so we leave,” he says.
“I remember looking down and thinking I’m going to eat a blast. I’m tired just thinking about it. Go.”
After bravely climbing the stairs, the Point Man rushed forward and captured the two figures, believing them to be suicide bombers.
In a second, the way was cleared and O’Neill entered the room from the left.
“My first thought was how skinny he was,” he says.
“But I knew it was the one.”
Osama bin Laden was standing right in front of him – gaunt and emaciated – and moving to go after his wounded wife.
“Boom, boom, boom. I shot him three times.”
O’Neill remembers feeling sympathy for the terrorist’s two-year-old son, Hussein.
“As a father, my first thought was that this child has nothing to do with it.”
On the floor below, the house was evacuated for intelligence as operators ransacked the rooms looking for anything of value.
The team took possession of computers, hard drives and documents in order to extract as much intelligence as possible before time ran out.
Outside the compound, O’Neill helped carry bin Laden in a body bag through the courtyard and toward the extraction point.
Explosives were planted to destroy the crashed helicopter, destroying any sensitive technology before it could fall into the wrong hands.
A replacement Chinook helicopter roared into action to evacuate the team and everyone’s attention turned to survival.
He recalls thinking, “If I can survive 90 minutes, I’ll get a chance to see my daughters.”
The flight from Pakistan was initially tense and quiet, with Pakistani fighter jets following the helicopters.
Finally, he says: “The pilot came up radio In the same monotonous pilot voice and said: ‘Well, gentlemen, for the first time in your lives, you will be happy to hear this. Welcome to Afghanistan.
In the years that followed, O’Neill faced scrutiny over his account.
Matt Bissonnette, another member of SEAL Team Six involved in the raid, argued in his book No Way Out that a different, unnamed commando fired the fatal shots.
O’Neill insists: “I’m telling you about the Bible, I’m the last person to look him in the eye when he stands up.
“I’m not bragging. I’m just telling you what happened.”
