The White House backtracks on Bin Laden

Mark Mardell | 06:51 UK time, Wednesday, 4 May 2011

The White House has had to correct its facts about the killing of Bin Laden, 
and for some that has diminished the glow of success that has surrounded all 
those involved in the operation.
Jay Carney, the president's press secretary, gives a briefing at the White House

 

Bin Laden wasn't armed when he was shot. It raises suspicions that this was 
indeed a deliberate shoot to kill operation.

Here are the inaccuracies in the first version. The woman killed was not his 
wife. No woman was used as a human shield. And he was not armed.

The president's press secretary Jay Carney suggested this was the result of 
trying to provide a great deal of information in a great deal of haste.

I can largely accept that. There is no mileage in misleading people and then 
correcting yourself. But the president's assistant national security advisor 
John Brennan had used the facts he was giving out to add a moral message - this 
was the sort of man Bin Laden was, cowering behind his wife, using her as a 
shield. Nice narrative. Not true. In fact, according to Carney this unarmed 
woman tried to attack the heavily armed Navy Seal. In another circumstance that 
might even be described as brave.

Jay Carney said that Bin Laden didn't have to have a gun to be resisting. He 
said there was a great deal of resistance in general and a highly volatile fire 
fight. The latest version says Bin Laden's wife charged at the US commando and 
was shot in the leg, but not killed. The two brothers, the couriers and owners 
of the compound, and a woman were killed on the ground floor of the main 
building. This version doesn't mention Bin Laden's son, who also died.

By this count only three men, at the most, were armed. I do wonder how much 
fight they could put up against two helicopters' worth of Navy Seals.

Does any of this matter? Well, getting the fact right is always important. You 
can't make judgement without them. We all make mistakes, and journalists hate 
doing so because it makes people trust us less. For those involved an operation 
like this, time must go past in a confused and noisy instant, and they aren't 
taking notes. Confusion is very understandable. But you start to wonder how 
much the facts are being massaged now, to gloss over the less appealing parts 
of the operation.

And of course there is the suspicion that the US never wanted to take Bin Laden 
alive. Here at least many see a trial as inconvenient, awkward - a chance for 
terrorists to grandstand. Look at all the fuss about the trial of Khalid Sheikh 
Mohammed.

In the confusion of a raid it's hard to see how the Seals could be sure that 
Bin Laden wasn't armed, didn't have his finger on the trigger of a bomb, wasn't 
about to pull a nasty surprise. If he had his hands in the air shouting "don't 
shoot" he might have lived, but anything short of that seems to have ensured 
his death.

I suspect there will be more worry about this in Britain nd Europe than in the 
US. That doesn't mean we are right or wrong. It is a cultural difference. We 
are less comfortable about frontier justice, less forgiving about even police 
shooting people who turn out to be unarmed, perhaps less inculcated with the 
Dirty Harry message that arresting villains is for wimps, and real justice 
grows from the barrel of a gun. Many in America won't be in the slightest bit 
bothered that a mass murderer got what was coming to him swiftly, whether he 
was trying to kill any one in that instant or not.



------------------------------------

Post message: [email protected]
Subscribe   :  [email protected]
Unsubscribe :  [email protected]
List owner  :  [email protected]
Homepage    :  http://proletar.8m.com/Yahoo! Groups Links

<*> To visit your group on the web, go to:
    http://groups.yahoo.com/group/proletar/

<*> Your email settings:
    Individual Email | Traditional

<*> To change settings online go to:
    http://groups.yahoo.com/group/proletar/join
    (Yahoo! ID required)

<*> To change settings via email:
    [email protected] 
    [email protected]

<*> To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to:
    [email protected]

<*> Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to:
    http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/

Kirim email ke