SaltyDawg
Well-Known Member
You obviously didn't read the link that was posted when this thread got bumped. Here it is:I think you are giving him too much credit. Where is the evidence that we weren't in there already looking for him for years now? How do you know the ONLY reason we even thought about going there was because Obama ordered it. I think this kind of thing does not evolve overnight. We have had people scouring that part of the world for a DECADE. I really doubt that in some meeting Obama said "So in 10 years did you try looking in Pakistan?" and they said "Holy crap, what a great idea! I mean, we have never before had operatives in a country that didn't welcome us with open arms, so we never thought of that! You saved the day Obama!" I would bet dollars to donuts that the plan was PRESENTED to Obama after intelligence discovered OBL had ties in Pakistan and Obama signed off on it. As any president would have done. The bottom line is, in no way does that mission reflect on Obama being "gutsy" or having super-human courage. That is just yet another spin his party is trying to put on the whole thing (just like the repubs are spinning the whole debt thing right now). No, Obama just did what any sitting president would, and should, have done in his place. No great heroics there.
I have also heard what you are saying (above in bold) in forums and in conversations but have yet to find corroborating evidence of that. Do you happen to have any links?
https://www.newyorker.com/reporting/2011/08/08/110808fa_fact_schmidle?currentPage=all
It spells out exactly what happened, how it all came about, and what intelligence they had. Some blurbs that may surprise you:
"Four months after Obama entered the White House, Leon Panetta, the director of the C.I.A., briefed the President on the agency’s latest programs and initiatives for tracking bin Laden. Obama was unimpressed. In June, 2009, he drafted a memo instructing Panetta to create a “detailed operation plan” for finding the Al Qaeda leader and to “ensure that we have expended every effort.” Most notably, the President intensified the C.I.A.’s classified drone program; there were more missile strikes inside Pakistan during Obama’s first year in office than in George W. Bush’s eight. The terrorists swiftly registered the impact: that July, CBS reported that a recent Al Qaeda communiqué had referred to “brave commanders” who had been “snatched away” and to “so many hidden homes [which] have been levelled.” The document blamed the “very grave” situation on spies who had “spread throughout the land like locusts."
"In late 2010, Obama ordered Panetta to begin exploring options for a military strike on the compound."
"On March 14th, Obama called his national-security advisers into the White House Situation Room and reviewed a spreadsheet listing possible courses of action against the Abbottabad compound. Most were variations of either a JSOC raid or an airstrike. Some versions included coöperating with the Pakistani military; some did not. Obama decided against informing or working with Pakistan."
"The President’s military advisers were divided. Some supported a raid, some an airstrike, and others wanted to hold off until the intelligence improved. Robert Gates, the Secretary of Defense, was one of the most outspoken opponents of a helicopter assault. Gates reminded his colleagues that he had been in the Situation Room of the Carter White House when military officials presented Eagle Claw—the 1980 Delta Force operation that aimed at rescuing American hostages in Tehran but resulted in a disastrous collision in the Iranian desert, killing eight American soldiers. “They said that was a pretty good idea, too,” Gates warned. He and General James Cartwright, the vice-chairman of the Joint Chiefs, favored an airstrike by B-2 Spirit bombers. That option would avoid the risk of having American boots on the ground in Pakistan."
"Panetta asked the participants, one by one, to declare how confident they were that bin Laden was inside the Abbottabad compound. The counterterrorism official told me that the percentages “ranged from forty per cent to ninety or ninety-five per cent,” and added, “This was a circumstantial case.”
"Before taking that step for bin Laden, however, John Brennan made a call. Brennan, who had been a C.I.A. station chief in Riyadh, phoned a former counterpart in Saudi intelligence. Brennan told the man what had occurred in Abbottabad and informed him of the plan to deposit bin Laden’s remains at sea. As Brennan knew, bin Laden’s relatives were still a prominent family in the Kingdom, and Osama had once been a Saudi citizen. Did the Saudi government have any interest in taking the body? “Your plan sounds like a good one,” the Saudi replied."
Um, Bush was presented with the option to get Bin Laden at Tora Bora. He chose to send the Afgans with only limited Americans acting as basically supervisors. after that operation utterly failed, Bush started saying he wasn't too worried about Bin Laden. So it's absolutely NOT a safe bet that Obama only did what any other president would have done.https://thecable.foreignpolicy.com/...meline_of_the_mission_to_kill_osama_bin_laden
https://www.nytimes.com/2011/05/02/...laden-is-killed.html?_r=1&partner=rss&emc=rss
https://blogs.abcnews.com/political...in-laden-is-killed-white-house-time-line.html
From the last link:
https://www.nj.com/news/index.ssf/2011/05/death_of_bin_laden_took_many_t.html
These all support the fact that this mission was years in the making. It was not the brainchild of Obama alone, and he did not act against anyone's advice. They waited until they had the proper intelligence and acted, as any sitting president would have (and should have).
These are not all. Virtually every source I could find supports what these say.
Obama did the right thing. There is no doubt of that. Of course, up until they decided to dispose of the body for very specious reasons. But he didn't do anything heroic. Don't kid yourself. Any president in the white house at that point in time, following the wars that came after 9/11, would have done the same thing. Any and all presidents would KILL to be able to be "the one" who brought down OBL. You really underestimate the power of positive press in politicians' decision-making.
Tora Bora was in a mountainous region in a country we were already at war with. Obama sent military forces into a city in a country we are supposedly allies with. And it was unannounced, and less than a mile from a major military installation.
I posted a current link (actually reposted a link someone had already posted in this thread) that spells out exactly what happened. You should really read it. You are selling Obama short. It wasn't something that just fell into his lap, like you claim. And had he failed (Bin Laden not there, Pakistanis shoot down the Black Hawks and kill all the Americans, etc) I have no doubt in my mind you would be blasting Obama for it. It would not be "anyone would have done the same thing" if he had failed.