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On the night of May 1-2, 2011, United States forces conducted a direct action mission, flying from Afghanistan, to a compound in Abbotabad, Pakistan. Osama bin Laden was killed in the raid and his body, as well as computer storage devices and documents, were taken away. This article deals with the operational aspects and U.S. command authorization of the mission; the legality of the killing of bin Laden is treated separately. According to President Barack Obama, who personally authorized the raid under Presidential authority, operational control was given to the CIA, with most of the uniformed force coming from the Joint Special Operations Command. The assaulters were Navy SEALs. Command[edit]
The operation[edit]Details of the force and tactics remain clouded. The raid was under the control of the CIA, with military personnel from the Joint Special Operations Command of which the Navy SEALs are assigned. CIA control does present some possible problems under U.S. law. [1] During the raid three of the four compound walls were breached by Navy SEALs as they entered the compound. Upon entry they killed two al-Qaeda couriers along with an unidentified woman who was caught in the gunfire.[2] One of the helicopters developed mechanical difficulties, was later blown up to protect US assets, and the 25 personnel performed a "surgical raid" to limit collateral damage. One of the couriers killed was named Abu Ahmed al-Kuwaiti who some sources state was killed in the compound along with the unidentified woman with him. The Navy SEALs then entered the first floor of the compound where they killed an unidentified man and bin Laden's son who was using a staircase. The SEALs entered bin Laden's bedroom where they found him along with one of his wives. His wife was shot in the leg after she tried to "rush" the SEALs during the incident. Bin Laden was shot in the chest and head by an unidentified US Navy SEAL.[3] Infiltration and exfiltration[edit]The assault force flew from Bagram Airfield in Afghanistan. Helicopters[edit]Aviation Week and Space Technology gave a preliminary report that two H-60 and two CH-47 Chinook helicopters were seen flying over the compound. Specifically, the H-60's were the primary assault helicopters, and at least one was heavily modified with previously unknown stealth technology. "it appears to be a significantly modified version of a Sikorsky H-60 Black Hawk, although whether an MH-60K, MH-60L or MH-60M version is still unknown. The U.S. Army’s 160th Special Operations Aviation Regiment (Airborne) (Airborne), the Night Stalkers, uses all three types of MH-60s."[4] With 25 military personnel in the assault force, operating at a high altitude, the H-60's would have been operating near their maximum weight capability. Air temperature is also important, and Aviation Week quoted the chair of the House Armed Services Committee, Representative Buck McKeon "it was a miscalculation of temperature in and outside the compound. The Black Hawk ran into lift trouble due to a 15F difference inside the courtyard, 'They couldn’t hold the hover.'" The H-47 helicopters carried return fuel, backup assets, and recovered the personnel on the crashed H-60. While the force attempted to destroy the crashed helicopter, part of the tail broke off on a wall, and was left relatively intact outside the compound wall. Unusual features observed on it, associated with stealth technology, include:[5]
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