The Hunt for Bin Laden
By The Washington Post and Tom Shroder
3/5
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About this ebook
THE HUNT FOR BIN LADEN is a behind-the-scenes narrative that reveals the fourteen-year, billion-dollar effort that brought the hunt to a swift and conclusive end, including:
- The numerous times CIA agents had bin Laden in their crosshairs prior to 9/11, only to have missions canceled at the last moment.
- Vivid details of bin Laden’s behavior in the wake of the attacks on September 11th.
- The myriad of ways he evaded detection in his years on the lam, including his narrow escape from the caves and tunnels of Tora Bora.
- How the war in Iraq drained resources and diverted the spotlight from the hunt, turning the mission to kill or capture bin Laden into a back-burner operation and political liability for the Bush administration.
- It wasn't until the Iraq war began to wind down that the search gained its endgame momentum, the Post shows, reclassified as a highest priority again by a new president.
- How increasingly punishing drone attacks, interrogations of captured al Qaeda operatives, and an ever-expanding network of informants finally began to yield a trail that led to bin Laden’s courier, a cell phone interception, and ultimately, bin Laden.
The Washington Post
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The Hunt for Bin Laden - The Washington Post
The Hunt for bin Laden
by The Washington Post
Edited by Tom Shroder
Introduction
The long, secret campaign to track down Osama bin Laden has been called the biggest, costliest manhunt in history. It began in 1997 during the Clinton administration, when bin Laden was known as a jihadi money man, not a terrorist mastermind. As bin Laden issued increasingly explicit threats against the West, and America in particular, field CIA agents became convinced bin Laden posed a clear and present danger to the homeland. Time and again they had bin Laden in their cross-hairs only to have missions cancelled at the last moment by superiors in Langley and the White House.
As four hijacked commercial jets streaked toward their targets in New York and Washington, bin Laden was living comfortably in Afghanistan, trying to get a satellite signal to watch his handiwork on live TV. That evening, he toasted the collapsed towers at a collegial dinner, expressing pleasant surprise that the attack had killed so many. Then he went on the lam, touring strongholds of support in Afghanistan’s outback and making speeches. As the U.S. bombing campaign in Afghanistan began in earnest, bin Laden retreated to a complex of caves and tunnels dug into a mountainous region called Tora Bora. The CIA team hunting him had a solid fix on him there and concentrated huge blockbuster bombs on his location. But he escaped once more, and soon the war in Iraq drained the resources and diverted the spotlight from the hunt, turning the mission to kill or capture bin Laden into a back-burner operation and political liability for the Bush administration.
The hunt continued in the background for years without any solid leads as to where bin Laden had gone. The best guess put him in the almost lawless tribal regions on the border of Pakistan and Afghanistan, but the best guesses were wrong. As the treacherous attacks of 9/11 drifted almost a decade into the past, increasingly punishing drone attacks, interrogations of captured al Qaeda operatives and an ever expanding network of informants finally began to yield a trail, pebble by pebble.
It wasn’t until the Iraq war began to wind down that the search gained its endgame momentum, reclassified as a highest priority again by a new president. The breakthrough came when bin Laden’s shadowy courier was finally identified, and his cell phone intercepted. Wire intercepts and surveillance eventually led the CIA directly to a mysterious million-dollar compound in Abbottabad, Pakistan. After fourteen years, two wars and billions of dollars spent in the effort, a team of Navy Seals finally brought the hunt to a swift and conclusive end.
This is a reconstruction of the hunt culled from reporting by more than two dozen Washington Post correspondents and staffers over more than 15 years.
From stories by: John Ward Anderson, Peter Baker, Karin Brulliard, Steve Coll, Karen DeYoung, Michael Dobbs, Peter Finn, Marc Fisher, Bradley Graham, Anne E. Kornblut, John Lancaster, Richard Leiby, Vernon Loeb, Jerry Markon, Greg Miller, Molly Moore, Dana Priest, Ian Shapira, Ann Scott Tyson, Joby Warrick, Craig Whitlock, Scott Wilson and Bob Woodward.
Contributors: William Branigin, Pamela Constable, Susan B. Glasser, John Lancaster, Allan Lengel, Colum Lynch, Ellen Nakashima, Walter Pincus, John Pomfret, Keith B. Richburg, Thomas E. Ricks, Paul Schwartzman, Robert E. Thomason, Josh White, Griff Witte and Kevin Sullivan; staff researcher Julie Tate; and special correspondents Haq Nawaz Khan and Kamran Khan.
Edited by Tom Shroder
One Manhunt Creates a Bigger One
The seeds of the CIA’s first formal plan to capture or kill Osama bin Laden were contained in another urgent manhunt — for Mir Aimal Kasi, the Pakistani migrant who murdered two CIA employees while spraying rounds from an assault rifle at cars idling before the entrance to the agency’s Langley headquarters in 1993.
For several years after the shooting, Kasi remained a fugitive in the border areas straddling Afghanistan, Pakistan and Iran. From its Langley offices, the CIA’s Counterterrorist Center asked the Islamabad station for help recruiting agents who might be able to track Kasi down. Case officers signed up a group of Afghan tribal fighters who had worked for the CIA during the 1980s guerrilla war against Soviet occupying forces in Afghanistan.
The family-based team of paid agents, given the cryptonym FD/TRODPINT, set up residences around the city of Kandahar. They were rugged, bearded fighters — often in teams of a dozen or so — who rolled around southern Afghanistan in four-wheel-drive vehicles, blending comfortably into the region’s militarized tribal society.
When the TRODPINT team set out to find Kasi, one or two senior family members handled the face-to-face contacts with the CIA. Case officers working from the U.S. Embassy in Islamabad supplied them with cash, assault rifles, land mines, motorcycles, trucks, listening devices and secure communications equipment.
Together they concocted a bold plan to capture Kasi and fly him to the United States for trial. If the Afghan agents found Kasi, they would detain him until U.S. Special Forces secretly flew into Afghanistan to bundle the fugitive away. With the TRODPINT team acting as spotters, the CIA identified a desert landing strip near Kandahar that could be used for a clandestine American extraction flight. The White House approved the plan, and President Bill Clinton secretly dispatched a Special Forces team to southern Afghanistan to confirm the coordinates and suitability of the makeshift airstrip.
In the end, Kasi was found elsewhere. In late