The code name for Bin Laden was “Geronimo.” The president and his 
advisers watched Leon E. Panetta, the C.I.A. director, on a video 
screen, narrating from his agency’s headquarters across the 
Potomac River what was happening in faraway Pakistan.

“They’ve reached the target,” he said.

Minutes passed.

“We have a visual on Geronimo,” he said.

A few minutes later: “Geronimo EKIA.”

Enemy Killed In Action. There was silence in the Situation Room.

Finally, the president spoke up.

“We got him.”

--NY Times, May 2, 2011

----

http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/americas/the-big-question-who-was-geronimo-and-why-is--there-controversy-over-his-remains-1714167.html

The Big Question: Who was Geronimo, and why is there controversy 
over his remains?

By Guy Adams
Tuesday, 23 June 2009

Why are we asking this now?

The US government has been dragged into a bizarre legal battle 
between descendants of the Apache leader Geronimo and a secret 
society of Yale students called Skull and Bones, whose members 
allegedly raided his grave during the First World War. Yesterday, 
the Justice Department asked a judge to dismiss a lawsuit filed in 
February, on the 100th anniversary of Geronimo's death, seeking to 
recover the legendary warrior's remains and re-bury them near to 
his birthplace in the Gila Wilderness of southern New Mexico.

The legal action, by 20 descendants of Geronimo, claims a group of 
Skull and Bones members, including George W Bush's grandfather, 
Prescott, took his skull from Fort Sill in Oklahoma in 1918. The 
artefact has allegedly been stored in a glass case at the 
organisation's clubhouse in New Haven, Connecticut ever since. The 
Justice Department became involved because Barack Obama and his 
defence secretary Robert Gates are named alongside the Skull and 
Bones society as co-defendants, due to the fact that Geronimo was 
initially buried on public land.

So who was Geronimo?

For much of his lifetime, Geronimo was considered the greatest 
terrorist in America. These days, he's feted as a fearless 
guerrilla fighter, whose famously brave troops were the last 
American Indian force to hold out against the United States.

Born Goytholy, meaning "the one who yawns," he took up arms when 
his wife, children and mother were massacred by Mexicans in 1851. 
His nickname stems from daring retaliatory raids, when he led men 
on cavalry charges, often into a hail of bullets. Legend has it 
that victims would scream a plea to St Jerome (hence "Jeronimo!") 
as they died.

Geronimo evaded capture for more than three decades. Though 
wounded countless times, he was never defeated, and his men are 
perhaps the most effective light cavalry force in military 
history. They numbered no more than a couple of hundred at any one 
time, but are said to have killed more than 5,000 enemies.

Why did he fight?

Geronimo was a member of the Chiricahua Apache tribe whose 
homelands in the deserts of New Mexico were annexed first by 
Mexico and later by the United States during its expansion into 
the south-west during the 19th century. His insurgency was part of 
a wider rebellion by Native Indians against their treatment by 
white settlers, who carried out what in modern terms might be 
called ethnic cleansing: removing tribes from ancestral 
territories and (in some cases) placing a bounty on their scalps. 
Geronimo's success was down to old-fashioned derring-do, and sheer 
good luck. Because of repeated close shaves with mortality, many 
followers believed he was resistant to bullets. His men were adept 
at using their opponents' technology – including rifles and 
pistols – against them.

How was he captured?

After more than 30 years the US General Nelson Miles tracked 
Geronimo to Arizona. The rebels were exhausted after decades on 
the run, and their number had dwindled to just 36 men, many of 
whom (including their leader) had taken to heavy drinking. In the 
autumn of 1886, Geronimo negotiated a tactical surrender, agreeing 
to lay down his arms on condition that his followers would be 
allowed to disband and return home to their families. But the US 
reneged on its promises, and promptly took Geronimo and his troops 
into custody. They spent seven years in prison in Alabama before 
being transferred to Fort Sill, where they lived out the rest of 
their days in a form of open prison.

What became of him?

Ironically, Geronimo's fame only grew during his year in 
captivity. He became a local celebrity, charging visitors to Fort 
Sill to have their photo taken with him, and keeping a stock of 
autographed cards and other souvenirs to sell to tourists. In old 
age, he was constantly interviewed (for a small fee) by the US 
press, and took part in Buffalo Bill Cody's Wild West Circus, 
where performers recreated his most daring battles. He was a star 
attraction at the 1904 World's Fair in St Louis, and had a 
prominent place in Theodore Roosevelt's inaugural parade in 1905.

Having embraced capitalism, Geronimo also took up the white man's 
religion, converting to Christianity saying he believed it to be 
"better than the religion of my forefathers." He joined the Dutch 
Reformed Church in 1903, but was expelled four years later, 
apparently for gambling. He died in 1909, at the age of 79.

What happened to his remains?

Three members of the Skull and Bones society, including Prescott 
Bush, were stationed at an artillery school at Fort Sill during 
the First World War. In a bizarre prank, they are rumoured to have 
dug up his grave, and taken his skull and femurs back to their 
alma mater.

Why does this matter?

Although unproven, the alleged desecration of Geronimo's grave 
carries significant political baggage. Like Chief Sitting Bull, 
who defeated General Custer at the battle of Little Bighorn, 
Native Americans view him as a symbol of their people's righteous 
rebellion against white colonialists. Geronimo is also firmly 
embedded in the US psyche as a symbol of bonkers bravado. 
Paratroopers shout his name after leaping from aeroplanes, 
apparently as part of a tradition that began in 1940, when they 
prepared for their first mass jump by watching the film 
"Geronimo." In a scene based on one of its subject's many narrow 
escapes – and mimicked by generations of schoolchildren – the 
movie's hero yells his own name as he leaps from a cliff into a 
river to escape capture by approaching soldiers.

What is the Skull and Bones?

Adding to the intrigue is long-standing public fascination with 
the Skull and Bones society, an organisation of privileged Yale 
Students whose alumni include both Presidents Bush and John Kerry. 
The club, founded at the Ivy League school in 1832, selects 15 new 
members each year. They are sworn in at the "Tomb," a windowless 
campus clubhouse which is purported to hold the skulls of a range 
of famous figures, including Che Guevara. During the initiation 
ceremony, recruits are apparently required to kiss the skull of 
Geronimo, which is said to be held in a glass case near the door, 
and take a solemn oath to support fellow members.

Since the society is secret – it has never clarified the exact 
contents of the "Tomb" – some regard it as vaguely sinister. 
Others say it is a harmless networking organisation. In this 
respect, it is perhaps best described as an upmarket version of 
the Freemasons.

What happens next?

The lawsuit by Geronimo's descendants was filed in a federal 
district court in Washington DC, and seeks: "to free Geronimo, his 
remains, funerary objects and spirit from 100 years of 
imprisonment at Fort Sill, Oklahoma, the Yale University campus at 
New Haven, Connecticut and wherever else they may be found."

Presuming the case isn't immediately thrown out – and the 
political ramifications of doing so would be enormous – the 
court's immediate next step must be to determine if the Skull and 
Bones society really does own Geronimo's disputed skull.

Does the Skull and Bones society really have Geronimo's skull?

Yes

*The Skull and Bones has repeatedly refused to discuss the skull, 
still less surrender it for DNA testing

*A letter written in 1918 by a society member says it gained 
possession of it

*A history of the society written in 1933 claimed that Prescott 
Bush 'engaged in a mad expedition' at Fort Sill to obtain 
Geronimo's skull

No

*Geronimo's grave was miles from where Prescott Bush was stationed

*The exact location of Geronimo's grave was unmarked at the time 
of the alleged theft

*Historians say that, while the Skull and Bones may very well have 
a Native Indian's skull, it is unlikely to be that of Geronimo

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