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  • 30
    Apr
    2012
    4:24am, EDT

    Did rogue spies or 'Pakistani Blackwater' shield Osama bin Laden?

    AP, file

    Al-Qaida leader Osama bin Laden is seen in an image taken from a video found at his walled compound in Abbottabad, Pakistan. The first anniversary of bin Laden's killing by U.S. Navy SEALs is on Tuesday.

    By Amna Nawaz, NBC News Correspondent

    ABBOTTABAD, Pakistan -- A year after Osama bin Laden was found and killed in Pakistan, one key question has yet to be answered: how did the world's most wanted man manage to move and live, undetected, in this country for so long?

    Journalists, analysts, and others have been working to fill in the narrative holes over the last 12 months. Leaked and strategically released nuggets of information have helped to paint a vague picture of what life was like inside the Abbottabad compound where bin Laden spent his final years, living with three of his wives, and several children and grandchildren. We've learned of the austere conditions inside the home, the restricted lifestyle led by all inside, and the discipline with which the head of al-Qaida communicated with a trusted few. But the crucial questions -- how he got to that compound in the first place and who helped him to do so -- remain unanswered.

    Kamran Bokhari, vice-president for Middle Eastern and South Asian Affairs at Stratfor, a global intelligence company, believes the idea that bin Laden moved around without a network of individuals organizing his transportation and logistics is simply not possible.

    "If you're a six-foot-five Arab, and the most wanted man on the planet, you can't just walk into a place like Pakistan without support," Bokhari said. "So what's the nature of that support?"


    U.S. officials publicly state they have no evidence that any Pakistani institutional leaders had any knowledge of bin Laden's presence here, nor played any role in helping to move him. Privately, however, some admit that the deep mistrust between the two nations has led to strong, lingering suspicions within many in the U.S. that Pakistan's premier intelligence agency -- Inter-Services Intelligence, or the ISI -- must have known, at some level.

    Slideshow: After the raid: Inside bin Laden's compound

    Farooq Naeem / AFP - Getty Images

    U.S. forces found and killed the al-Qaida leader in the affluent Pakistani town of Abbottabad, where he had been living in a large compound.

    Launch slideshow

    "There are deep suspicions on both sides," says retired General Mahmud Ali Durrani, a former national security advisor and ambassador to the United States. "I think the biggest concern in the U.S., if I put it in a phrase, is that Pakistan is hunting with the hounds and running with the hares. That is the perception."

    Panetta recalls nail-biting moments of bin Laden raid

    That perception has not been helped by what seem to be Pakistan's action priorities over the last year. The prevailing public dialogue among military and government officials in the immediate raid aftermath focused on how the U.S. had managed to breach Pakistan's borders, not how bin Laden had. The Pakistani doctor who ran a fake vaccination program in Abbottabad for the CIA in an effort to secure DNA samples from inside the bin Laden compound was swiftly tracked down, arrested, and remains in detention, possibly to stand trial for treason. Authorities quietly began work after dark to demolish the compound in February, keeping press behind a security cordon half a mile away, and after a year in custody, the widows and their families were shuttled out of their house in the dead of night and deported to Saudi Arabia.

    The wives and children of Osama bin Laden are taken to a chartered flight out of Islamabad after being deported to Saudi Arabia.

    Pakistan did immediately launch a formal commission with wide-reaching powers soon after the raid, pledging to investigate both the U.S. border breach and bin Laden's presence here. The Abbottabad Commission, as it's come to be known here, has enjoyed unparalleled access to anyone and everyone associated directly or peripherally with either issue, interviewing over 100 witnesses over the last year, including bin Laden's widows, the detained doctor who worked for the CIA, and high-level Pakistani officials.  But there is no working deadline and expectations vary as to how blunt and definitive an account commission members will be able to put forth.

    "Given how previous commissions in Pakistan have behaved, I'm not really hopeful that much will come out of this," Bokhari said. "This is not like the 9/11 Commission or anything similar elsewhere in other countries where there's a process and transparency and rule of law."

    Nearly a year after Osama bin Laden was killed by U.S. forces, President Barack Obama spoke exclusively to NBC's Brian Williams inside the Situation Room and reflected on the raid. The full report airs Wed., May 2 at 9pm/8c on NBC's Rock Center.

    'Embarrassment'
    Durrani, who's been in touch with members of the commission, says the length of time it's taken for them to compile findings speaks to their determination to fulfill their mandate to the best of their ability.

    "If the report comes out tomorrow and it's a whitewash, then people will ask -- what have you done?" Durrani said. "They [the commission members] are keen to get to the bottom of this, to find out what happened, why it happened, who's at fault, and what needs to be done so we don't have such embarrassment and such issues in the future."

    Slideshow: World reacts to death of Osama bin Laden

    Arshad Butt / AP

    Osama bin Laden is dead following a military operation in Pakistan and the US has recovered his body, US President Barack Obama announced Sunday night.

    Launch slideshow

    Driving the investigators' query is a widely-held belief here in Pakistan that bin Laden was never here at all -- that the entire raid was an effort by the U.S. to defame and destabilize Pakistan's security establishment. Residents of Abbottabad with whom NBC News spoke reiterated that skepticism, saying they don't believe the U.S. claim that bin Laden was living in their midst, particularly in the absence of any evidence of his death.

    Low expectations
    Commission members have been reluctant to speak with the media until their findings are complete, but the head of the commission, retired Supreme Court Judge Javed Iqbal, confirmed to NBC News that one of the key issues his team is investigating is whether bin Laden was ever really here at all.

    PhotoBlog: Abbottabad -- One year after Osama bin Laden raid

    Despite low expectations for the pending report, Bokhari admits the commission is tasked with an enormously difficult job, one that will have repercussions for generations to come in the form of Pakistan's official narrative of this historic event.

    "This is the biggest event in recent history since the fall of the Soviet Union -- 9/11 and its impact, the killing of Osama bin Laden -- so I'm not surprised it's taken them this long to come up with a report," Bokhari said. "It may take decades before anybody can actually come up with a comprehensive view of what was really happening."

    Nearly one year after the death of Osama bin Laden, some Republicans are accusing the Obama administration of using the event for political gain. NBC's Mike Viqueira reports

     

    The few specifics that have emerged from Pakistan in the last year in effect lead to more questions officials here must attempt to answer, through the commission or otherwise.

    The U.S. moved quickly on the message-control front after the Abbottabad raid, releasing selective video clips and pieces of information from the "treasure trove" of evidence seized from bin Laden's compound. An NBC News team was given an exclusive briefing by a senior U.S. counterterrorism official on currently classified intelligence from the raid, including details of the role bin Laden played in al-Qaida from his hideout in Pakistan, who he was in touch with, and more on the life he lived within that compound. Those details will air on Discovery Channel on Tuesday as part of a one-hour special on the anniversary of the U.S. raid.

    U.S. counterterror officials say that after years of drone strikes and other activities against the leaders of Al Qaida, the group is no longer able to pull off a major attack against U.S. interests, such as 9/11. NBC's Mike Viqueira reports.

    But the details from within Pakistan have been few and far between. A rare piece of evidence -- a confidential interrogation report of bin Laden's youngest wife, Amal, obtained by NBC News -- did reveal some surprising details about the family's life on the run after the attacks of September 11.

    According to the report, Amal told investigators that the family scattered after 9/11, bouncing from house to house and place to place in Pakistan. In her complicated timeline, she moved across multiple residences in the southern mega-city of Karachi, then moved on to Peshawar to link up with her husband. From there, the family moved to Swat, then to Haripur, and finally settled in the Abbottabad home for about six years until the U.S. raid that killed her husband.

    On the anniversary of Osama bin Laden's death, there have been no signs of plotting by any terrorist groups, but officials say there is always a concern that homegrown terrorists could do something on their own. NBC's Pete Williams reports.

    "These people are fanatics. They're ideological but keep in mind that they are also very professional at what they do," Bokhari explained. "They're in a business where if you make a small error in judgment it can easily translate to death for many people. There are people waiting for you to make a mistake. You have to be highly disciplined."

    Co-conspirators?
    But the pace of movement believed to have been followed by bin Laden and his family -- traversing entire provinces in Pakistan, and including rural, tribal, settled, and urban areas while remaining completely undetected -- would be difficult without some sort of network of support. Current and former Pakistani officials and analysts have offered up the possibility of "rogue or retired" elements from within Pakistan's military or intelligence establishment as possible facilitators or co-conspirators helping to hide bin Laden.

    Osama bin Laden's brother-in-law, Zakaria al-Sadah, spoke to NBC News in Islamabad in his first interview with an American television network. He said he is concerned for his sister, who was shot in the raid that killed the al-Qaida leader, and frustrated she and her children have been in custody ever since. NBC's Amna Nawaz reports.  

    The nature of Pakistan's retired uniformed corps, many of whom stay involved with the work of the agencies long after they leave as the new leadership continues to make use of their experience and contacts, albeit in unofficial capacities and with limited authority. As the largest employer in Pakistan, it follows that the Pakistan army also has the largest pool of retirees, some of whom spent significant time working closely with and gaining the trust of jihadi groups in the 1980s and 1990s.

    "If it's a retired network of people, what I call the 'Pakistani Blackwater,' that's not that bad. It's bad, but not that bad," Bokhari said. "But if it's someone who's serving, or more than one person, then [Pakistan's leaders] have a leak in [their] system and that's terrifying. Anyone who's a very nationalistic, Pakistani leader who doesn't want al-Qaida or the CIA to be able to get into their house will want to get to the bottom of that."

    Bin Laden's widow's condition worsens, brother says

    As potentially worrying or damaging as some of the information in the commission's report may be for Pakistan's institutions, it is also widely believed that the organizations cannot survive without taking a hard look at their own potential faults, and admitting mistakes where they did occur. The military and intelligence establishments were already raked over the coals by the government and media after last year's raid in Abbottabad, and are now under the highest level of scrutiny in the country's history.

    January 16, 1997, nearly four years before the 9/11 terror attacks,  NBC Nightly News aired the first network television report on Osama Bin Laden.  NBC's Tom Brokaw referred to Bin Laden as "maybe the most dangerous man in the world."  NBC's Andrea Mitchell profiles Bin Laden who commanded a business empire dedicated to terrorism.

    A failure, at this point, to produce a credible, official version of events will only damage Pakistan, according to Durrani.

    "Pakistan wants to move forwards not backwards. They have to get to the bottom of this, in their own interest," he says. "If they don't, it will be another major issue buried in the sands of history. And people will forever be looking for answers."

    NBC's Fakhar Rehman contributed to this report from Abbottabad.

    500 comments

    Given that those who helped the US kill him were arrested for treason and Bin Laden remained in Pakistan without "being detected" for so long, do we really need to ask who shielded him?? Of course there was government involvement. How high we can't be certain, but it wasn't so low level commander. T …

    Show more
    Explore related topics: pakistan, terrorism, al-qaida, osama-bin-laden, featured, abbottabad, amna-nawaz
  • 28
    Apr
    2012
    8:16am, EDT

    Panetta recalls nail-biting moments of Osama bin Laden raid

    Handout / Reuters

    A hand-written memo by then CIA Director Leon Panetta in which U.S. President Barack Obama authorised a Navy SEAL team operation that resulted in the death of Osama bin Laden at his hideout in Pakistan one year ago.

    By The Associated Press

    With the first anniversary of Osama bin Laden's death approaching, Leon Panetta has spoken of the nerve-wracking moments of the night of the raid by U.S. Navy SEALs.

    The picture in Defense Secretary Leon Panetta's office captures the "mission accomplished" moment. 


    It shows Panetta, then the head of the CIA, and a group of U.S. commandos and others in the CIA operations center on the night of May 2 with their arms around each other — a quiet celebration just after U.S. helicopters crossed back over the border into Afghanistan. 

    Not until then — 90 minutes after U.S. special operations forces had lifted off from the heavily fortified compound in Pakistan where they went in search of Osama bin Laden — was he sure they could breathe a sigh of relief. 

    "We got the job done," Panetta said Friday as he recalled the long silences and the tense, heart-pounding moments before Adm. William McRaven's words finally came through loud and clear. 

    "Geronimo EKIA" — the code name for bin Laden, and the signal for "enemy killed in action." 

    Abbottabad - One year after Osama bin Laden

    With the first anniversary of the al-Qaida leader's death approaching, Panetta spoke to reporters on his plane as he flew back from a series of meetings with defense leaders in South America. Perched on a table inside the Airstream trailer — dubbed the Silver Bullet — that serves as his office inside his C-17 transport plane, Panetta traced back through the nerve-wracking moments of that night. 

    And he talked about its impact over the past year. 

    "I don't think there's any question that America is safer as a result of the bin Laden operation," he said. 

    While al-Qaida and its offshoots remain a threat, he said, the military and intelligence communities have learned to work better together since Sept. 11, 2001. Still, he acknowledged, there is no single, completely effective way to destroy the terror network. 

    "The way this works is that the more successful we are at taking down those who represent their spiritual, ideological leadership, the greater our ability to weaken their threat to this country," he said. 

    The story of the raid is well-known: The SEALs and special operations forces that flew deep into Pakistan; the wrenching moment when one of the helicopters went down in the heat, landing hard with its tail on the wall; the SEALs' assault on the house where they believed bin Laden and his wives had been living for several years; and what Panetta on Friday called the "fingernail-biting moments." 

    Nearly one year after the death of Osama bin Laden, some Republicans are accusing the Obama administration of using the event for political gain. NBC's Mike Viqueira reports

    "We knew that there were gunshots and firing, but after that we just didn't know," said Panetta, describing the nearly 20 minutes of silence after the SEALs went into the house. 

    PhotoBlog: Osama bin Laden's hideout revealed

    Then came confusion. McRaven, commander of the operation, told him that he thought he'd picked up the word "Geronimo." 

    "The way he said it was like, you know, 'We think,'" said Panetta. "It wasn't ideal. We were still waiting." 

    A few minutes later came the KIA message. Then came the long flight out of Pakistan. 

    "By that time they had blown the helicopter that was down and we knew we had woken up all of Pakistan to the fact that something had happened," Panetta said with a laugh. "The concern was just exactly what were they thinking and how were they going to respond." 

    The moment they crossed the border, he said, was "the moment when we finally knew the mission had been accomplished." 

    Then they could embrace the victory. 

    The raid created a deep fissure into the already rocky U.S.-Pakistan relations. U.S. officials, including members of Congress, were irate that the al-Qaeda leader had been able to hide — virtually in plain sight — in a Pakistani military town. Some suggested there was at least some knowledge of his hiding place. 

    Pakistani leaders, meanwhile, were outraged that the U.S. had launched a military mission deep within the country's borders without alerting them, violating their sovereignty. Islamabad's military commanders were embarrassed that the U.S. was able to carry out the raid without being detected. 

    The bin Laden saga has continued in Pakistan. His three wives and their families were deported early Friday to Saudi Arabia. Officials have said that the wives and as many as eight children and some grandchildren were living in the compound when it was raided. 

    The anniversary has triggered security warnings for Americans in Pakistan. The U.S. Embassy said its employees would be restricted from restaurants and markets in Islamabad for the next two weeks. While there was no mention of bin Laden, the period includes the anniversary date.

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    © 2013 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

    237 comments

    Glad OBL is gone. Gratz ST6!

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    Explore related topics: cia, terror, security, defense, raid, osama-bin-laden, al-qaeda, featured, panetta
  • 8
    Dec
    2011
    5:18am, EST

    Hidden in plain sight: Inside a secret CIA prison

    By The Associated Press

    WASHINGTON - In northern Bucharest, in a busy residential neighborhood minutes from the heart of the capital city, is a secret the Romanian government has long tried to protect.

    For years, the CIA used a government building — codenamed "Bright Light" — as a makeshift prison for its most valuable detainees. There it held al-Qaida operatives Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, the mastermind of 9/11, and others in a basement prison before they were ultimately transferred to Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, in 2006, according to former U.S. intelligence officials familiar with the location and inner workings of the prison.

    The existence of a CIA prison in Romania has been widely reported, but its location has never been made public. The Associated Press and German public television ARD located the former prison and learned details of the facility where harsh interrogation tactics were used. ARD's program on the CIA prison is set to air Thursday.


    The Romanian prison was part of a network of so-called black sites that the CIA operated and controlled overseas in Thailand, Lithuania and Poland. All the prisons were closed by May 2006, and the CIA's detention and interrogation program ended in 2009.  

     Unlike the CIA's facility in Lithuania's countryside or the one hidden in a Polish military installation, the CIA's prison in Romania was not in a remote location. It was hidden in plain sight, a couple blocks off a major boulevard on a street lined with trees and homes, along busy train tracks.

    • Excerpt: 'Black Banners: The Inside Story of 9/11 and the War Against al-Qaida'

    The building is used as the National Registry Office for Classified Information, which is also known as ORNISS. Classified information from NATO and the European Union is stored there. Former intelligence officials both described the location of the prison and identified pictures of the building.

    In an interview at the building in November, senior ORNISS official Adrian Camarasan said the basement is one of the most secure rooms in all of Romania. But he said Americans never ran a prison there.

    "No, no. Impossible, impossible," he said in an ARD interview for its "Panorama" news broadcast, as a security official monitored the interview.

    The CIA prison opened for business in the fall of 2003, after the CIA decided to empty the black site in Poland, according to former U.S. officials, who spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to discuss the detention program with reporters.

    Shuttling detainees into the facility without being seen was relatively easy. After flying into Bucharest, the detainees were brought to the site in vans. CIA operatives then drove down a side road and entered the compound through a rear gate that led to the actual prison.

    The detainees could then be unloaded and whisked into the ground floor of the prison and into the basement.

    Imported Halal meat
    The basement consisted of six prefabricated cells, each with a clock and arrow pointing to Mecca, the officials said. The cells were on springs, keeping them slightly off balance and causing disorientation among some detainees.

    The CIA declined to comment on the prison.

    During the first month of their detention, the detainees endured sleep deprivation and were doused with water, slapped or forced to stand in painful positions, several former officials said. Waterboarding, the notorious interrogation technique that simulates drowning, was not performed in Romania, they said.

    • Video: Report: CIA spied on bin Laden for months

    After the initial interrogations, the detainees were treated with care, the officials said. The prisoners received regular dental and medical checkups. The CIA shipped in Halal food to the site from Frankfurt, Germany, the agency's European center for operations. Halal meat is prepared under religious rules similar to kosher food.

    Former U.S. officials said that because the building was a government installation, it provided excellent cover. The prison didn't need heavy security because area residents knew it was owned by the government. People wouldn't be inclined to snoop in post-communist Romania, with its extensive security apparatus known for spying on the country's own citizens.

    Human rights activists have urged the Eastern European countries to investigate the roles their governments played in hosting the prisons in which interrogation techniques such as waterboarding were used. Officials from these countries continue to deny these prisons ever existed.

    "We know of the criticism, but we have no knowledge of this subject," Romanian President Traian Basescu said in a September interview with AP.

    The CIA has tried to close the book on the detention program, which President Barack Obama ended shortly after taking office.

    "That controversy has largely subsided," the CIA's top lawyer, Stephen Preston, said at a conference this month.

    'Years of official denials'
    But details of the prison network continue to trickle out through investigations by international bodies, reporters and human rights groups. "There have been years of official denials," said Dick Marty, a Swiss lawmaker who led an investigation into the CIA secret prisons for the Council of Europe. "We are at last beginning to learn what really happened in Bucharest."

    During the Council of Europe's investigation, Romania's foreign affairs minister assured investigators in a written report that, "No public official or other person acting in an official capacity has been involved in the unacknowledged deprivation of any individual, or transport of any individual while so deprived of their liberty." That report also described several other government investigations into reports of a secret CIA prison in Romania and said: "No such activities took place on Romanian territory."

    Reporters and human rights investigators have previously used flight records to tie Romania to the secret prison program. Flight records for a Boeing 737 known to be used by the CIA showed a flight from Poland to Bucharest in September 2003. Among the prisoners on board, according to former CIA officials, were Mohammed and Walid bin Attash, who has been implicated in the bombing of the USS Cole.

    • Video: Report: CIA lacks accountability

    Later, other detainees — Ramzi Binalshibh, Abd al-Nashiri and Abu Faraj al-Libi — were also moved to Romania. A deceptive al-Libi, who was taken to the prison in June 2005, provided information that would later help the CIA identify Osama bin Laden's trusted courier, a man who unwittingly led them the CIA to bin Laden himself.

     Court documents recently discovered in a lawsuit have also added to the body of evidence pointing to a CIA prison in Romania. The files show CIA contractor Richmor Aviation Inc., a New York-based charter company, operated flights to and from Romania along with other locations including Morocco and the U.S. military prison at Guantanamo Bay.

    For the CIA officers working at the secret prison, the assignment wasn't glamorous. The officers served 90-day tours, slept on the compound and ate their meals there, too. Officers were prevented from the leaving the base after their presence in the neighborhood stoked suspicion. One former officer complained that the CIA spent most of its time baby-sitting detainees like Binalshibh and Mohammed whose intelligence value diminished as the years passed.

    The Romanian and Lithuanian sites were eventually closed in the first half of 2006 before CIA Director Porter Goss left the job. Some of the detainees were taken to Kabul, where the CIA could legally hold them before they were sent to Guantanamo. Others were sent back to their native countries.

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    105 comments

    These prisons, where the CIA routinely torture prisoners, are coming to a neighborhood near you.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: cia, europe, romania, terrorism, intelligence, osama-bin-laden, george-bush, detention, rendition, interrogation, khalid-sheikh-mohammed, ramzi-binalshibh, bright-light, abu-faraj-al-libi, abd-al-nashirim, richmor-aviation, orniss
  • 5
    May
    2011
    1:04pm, EDT

    'Relief,' then a release: Students explain bin Laden bashes

    Anna F. Curtis, journalism student at University of Missouri

    Huge celebration in University of Missouri's Greektown. Champagne, fireworks, crowd surfing.

    By Ian Sager, TODAY.com

    It started as a murmur, but quickly grew into a roar.

    Chants of "U-S-A! U-S-A!" riccochted across the campus of The Ohio State University, building and evolving until it found a sympathetic audience near the famed Mirror Lake.  

    If this were any night but Sunday, May 1, 2011, the revelry would have been chalked up to pent-up finals stress, or a successful sporting victory. But, this was not the case as college students across the country had the monster pulled from their their closets, and in Columbus, that meant a dip in the chilly water despite air temperatures and weather patterns that were less-than ideal.

    Nearly ten years after 9/11, the children who watched the towers fall fill America’s colleges and universities, and on the evening the world learned of Osama bin Laden’s death, many took to the streets, celebrating the death of their generation's boogeyman. 

    'There is finally justice'
    Though they were young at the time - most were between the ages of 8 and 12 - many millennials cast the al-Qaida chief's death as a pivotal moment in their development. They came of age of age under the shadow of 9/11 and its vestiges: the war on terror, color-coded terror alerts and seemingly endless security lines at airports -- and Sunday offered the chance to shed a portion of that weight.

    "We watched the second plane hit the tower, and just watching that was painful," University of Oklahoma senior Steve Sichterman told msnbc's Contessa Brewer. "We were just solemn, and so it is really a great thing to know there is finally justice for those 3,000 plus people that were killed."

    “It was really a feeling of relief," said Oklahoma student Timothy Marquis when asked how he reacted to news that bin Laden was dead.

    "For ten years we had been searching for him and I remember being in middle school and seeing the attacks on 9/11. Relief came from the feeling that we finally got him," he told Brewer.

    At The Ohio State university (user-submitted image below) students plunged into Mirror Lake, a tradition usually saved for the hours surrounding a football game against Michigan.

    David Krogh

    Students at The Ohio State University jump into Mirror Lake, a tradition marked and remembered during Beat Michigan Week.

    Similar scenes were acted out across the country (sans lake, but with the same energy and excitement).

    George Washington and American students helped fill the area outside the White House.  

    Demi McLaren, 20, a sophomore history and secondary education major at American told the Washington Post "someone put, ‘Party on the White House lawn,’ on Facebook,” then immediately packed into a car with six other students. “We knew it was going to be a rager.”

    Boston Common rocked late into the night thanks to the city's many colleges. Penn State looked like it had just won the Rose Bowl (user-submitted image below). From the looks of pictures submitted to msnbc.com, West Virginia University, known for its couch burnings after Mountaineer football games, lost many a living room centerpiece during the course of the evening. 

    Robert A. Kolodzieski

    At Penn State University. Absolute once in a lifetime experience! USA! Can't believe this has happened after ten years.

    'Intense sense of closure'

    In addition to pouring outside, college students took to the Internet in heavy numbers in the hours following the announcement pf bin Laden's death. They searched for a semi-private place to vent, support one another and above all, find closure.

    University of Delaware celebrations were branded an "intense sense of closure for people who were frightened little kids in '01" on Twitter. 

    Of course, there are students who contend that the fun - which, it must be said, took place for many amid the stress of finals - was less meaningful and more effervescent.

    Sean Morrow, a senior at Clark University in Massachusetts, told the Associated Press, that it "is kind of surreal to watch people celebrating someone's death."

    Morrow contends he understands it because, for him and many others his age, bin Laden was their boogeyman, "the main negative person of our generation."

    "That’s why I think we all went out to celebrate what is not only for the victims receiving justice, but for all those men and women overseas that have fought for so long and are going to continue to be fighting the war on terror," he told the news service.

    John F. Ryan

    Virginia Military Institute celebrates on Sunday.

    Despite the overwhelming scenes of glee, millennials' reactions remain mixed, much like older generations that celebrated in similar fashions across the country. The one common thread seems to be that the evening will go down in history a "where were you when moment."

    “Without a doubt, just like with September 11th, we’re all going to remember where we were," University of Oklahoma student Sichterman explained.

    "We have all the country songs to remember where we were, and we’ll remember where we were on May 1st, 2011.”

    Toby Keith, the gauntlet has been thrown.

    Click here for more on the reaction across college campuses and in cities: Ohio State; Oklahoma State; Penn State University; Boston; Washington

    Click here and here for more images and accounts of spontaneous celebrations from the evening the world learned of Osama bin Laden's death.

    3 comments

    i dont wanna hear another damn thing thank you

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  • 5
    May
    2011
    12:43pm, EDT

    An 'inspirational' drive-by

    Szjuval Joseph, a student from the Bronx, talks about seeing President Barack Obama's motorcade pass by in New York City following the wreath laying ceremony recognizing the death of Osama bin Laden.

     

     ******

     

    David Friedman / msnbc.com

    Steve Archipolo waits for President Obama's motorcade at Ground Zero in New York City on Thursday.

    By Miranda Leitsinger, msnbc.com

     “I wouldn’t be anywhere else but here. … I haven’t slept since then, in peace,”  Steve Archipolo said Thursday, as he stood in the crowd gathered outside the World Trade Center memorial site for President Barack Obama’s wreath-laying ceremony.

    Archipolo was referring, of course, to the Sept. 11, 2001, terror attacks orchestrated by Osama bin Laden, who was killed Sunday by U.S. forces in his hideout in Pakistan.

    That conjured up fresh memories for the 44-year-old Archipolo, who lives just a few hundred yards from the World Trade Center site. On Thursday, he recalled that he was first alerted to the 9/11 attacks by his son,  who saw one of the planes strike a building from a window in their home.

    “This is a little closure in my life to remember the victims who died,” said Archipolo, who was carrying a large American flag he borrowed from his church. “(But) the nightmare is still there.

    “It’s 10 years, but we’re never going to be at peace. We’re never going to have that feeling where, ‘we’re safe. We’re always going to be on alert. … We know that we can be attacked at any time.”

    Still, he said Thursday’s gathering gave him a “good feeling.”

    “I’m proud to be here,” he said. “… Our freedom, they can’t take. It’s just nice to see people out here.”

    ******

     

    David Friedman / msnbc.com

    Malynda Irby, in yellow, reacts with the crowd on St. Peter's Church steps as President Barack Obama''s motorcade passes by at Ground Zero in New York City on Thursday. "I just really admire him as a leader," said Irby, who is visiting New York on a work trip from Buffalo. "I've never been so proud of any president in my life as I am of him."

    David Friedman / msnbc.com

    Irby, in yellow, is emotional after seeing President Obama waving and smiling toward her from the passing motorcade. Speaking about this week of Obama's presidency, Irby said,"This is just a high mark so far."

     

    ******

    President Barack Obama laid a wreath at ground zero in New York City to honor the people who lost their lives from the attacks of the World Trade Center on September 11th, 2001.

     

    From the pool report on the wreath-laying ceremony:

    Attendance at the wreath-laying ceremony was tightly restricted. Among those attending were New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo, New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie, Mayor Michael Bloomberg and Port Authority Chairman David Samson.  Uniformed officers from the FDNY, NYPD and Port Authority also stood at attention along the pathway to the site of the ceremony, the Survivor Tree. Other elected officials from the New York area and a group of 9/11 families also viewed the ceremony.  

    One of the youngest in attendance was 14-year-old Payton Wall.

    As is his habit, Obama read some of the letter sent to the president on Monday, including one from Wall. Payton lost her father, Glen James Wall, in the World Trade Center attack and wrote about how she has handled the loss.  

    So Obama asked that she be invited to the ceremony.  When White House staff called Payton's mother, she had no idea that Payton had written the president.  Payton, her mother, her sister and her friend (who also lost her father on 9/11) all were in attendance.

    The president is now meeting privately with family members of 9-11 victims.

     ******

    Out of sight of the crowd gathered outside, President Barack Obama soberly laid a wreath Thursday at New York's Ground Zero and declared, "When we say we will never forget, we mean what we say."

    Returning to the site where Osama bin Laden inflicted his greatest damage, the president closed his eyes and clasped his hands at the outdoor memorial where the twin towers of the World Trade Center once dominated the Manhattan skyline. He shook hands with 9/11 family members and others dressed in black at the site where the skyscrapers were brought down by planes commandeered by bin Laden's followers. Nearly 3,000 people were killed. (The Associated Press provided this reporting.)

    ******

    As President Barack Obama’s motorcade arrived at Ground Zero, the more than 1,000 people gathered outside screamed, jumped up and down, waved and flashed “V” signs with their fingers.

    Obama waved back from behind his limousine’s closed window.

    David Friedman / msnbc.com

    Carl Cumberbatch, left, and Adam O'Neil on St. Peter's Church steps, waiting to see the president's motorcade arrive at Ground Zero in New York City.

    A few people in the crowd held up signs referring to the killing of Osama bin Laden on Sunday by U.S. special operations forces . “Congratulations! America and the world celebrates,” “Mr. President, America thanks you!” read two of them.

    ******

     A crowd of several hundred people gathered outside Ground Zero Thursday in advance of President Barack Obama’s arrival, even though they weren’t going to be able to see the wreath-laying ceremony at the World Trade Center memorial site in memory of 9-11 victims.

    The ceremony was taking place near the center of the plot where the Twin Towers once stood, and the view from beyond the police barricades was blocked by cranes and other construction equipment.

    But members of the crowd said they felt it was important to be there nonetheless.

    Australian Peter Dunstan, 55, a civil servant from Perth, said he and his wife planned their vacation trip across the U.S. long before they knew about the ceremony, but made sure they were there for it after learning that Obama planned to honor the victims.

    “One of the reasons we’re here is Australians died in the World Trade Center,” he said.

    He described his emotions as “mixed, bittersweet … just the fact that people died unnecessarily.”

    Dunstan said the death of al-Qaida leader Osama bin Laden also was on his mind.

    “The perpetrator is dead … he can’t do us any more harm. I think it was justice done. He probably ranks up there with Hitler and his ilk. … I hope it puts the demise of al-Qaida a step closer.”

    Adam O’Neil, 70, a retired New Yorker, stood on a nearby corner, in front of St. Peter’s Church.

    O’Neil, originally from Trinidad, said one of his third cousins died in the subway station beneath the World Trade Center on 9-11.

    He said he decided to stand in front of the church so he could offer a prayer for him as Obama was laying the wreath.  He said that he was doing so on behalf of his entire family – 11 brothers and sisters still in Trinidad.

    “I think of him all the time,” he said of his cousin, adding that the memory leaves him “very sad.” “This feeling will be with me the rest of my life.”

    ******

    David Friedman / msnbc.com

    Tyrone and Gayle Stallings took their great-nieces out of school to attend Thursday's wreath-laying ceremony at Ground Zero to commenorate the victims of the Sept. 11 terror attacks.

     

    More than an hour before President Barack Obama was due to arrive at Ground Zero to lay a wreath in memory of the victims of the Sept. 11 terror attacks, several hundred people were gathered outside police barricades in hopes of catching a glimpse of the president.

    Among them were Tyrone and Gayle Stallings from Roselle, N.J., who said they took their great-nieces, Brielle Campbell, 6, and Jaylaah Lee, 10, out of school to attend the ceremony at the site of the fallen World Trade Center.

    “I thought this was better history than a history class,” Gayle said. She said she hoped the girls would come away with the understanding “that the country is still together …  our spirit is alive.”

    She said she delivered the first piece of the lesson as they walked out of the subway, telling the girls that: “The souls of innocent people are in the building. It was full of life. Now we’re just coming through a hole.”

    Tyrone said that the death of al-Qaida leader Osama bin Laden on Sunday provided added impetus for the trip, adding, “Today feels good. … It did give some closure at least.”

    David Friedman / msnbc.com

    A flag seller works the crowd waiting outside the site of the fallen World Trade Center, more than an hour before President Barack Obama's arrival for a wreath-laying ceremony.

    But he echoed the words of U.S. counterterrorism officials in warning that the war on terror is not over. “We’re going to have to remain vigilant still ... probably forever,” he said.

    320 comments

    There is probably good reason Bush does not want to attend this. Now that the guy we should have been after all along has been brought to justice I think the United States should seek Damages form the Saudi Bin Laden Family. Our People and our Economy needs to be made whole again. We need to also De …

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  • 2
    May
    2011
    6:40pm, EDT

    When sports and serious news collide

     By Bob Sullivan, msnbc.com

    Sports are supposed to be a fun distraction from the heavy realities of life, but sometimes, the news is so big that it intrudes even on major sporting events – forcing sportcasters to become sober newscasters in an instant.

    Sunday night, those watching ESPN’s coverage of the Mets-Phillies baseball game learned about the death of Osama bin Laden from announcer Dan Shulman when the ninth inning began. As the inning played out, color commentators Bobby Valentine and Orel Hershiser couldn’t avoid mentioning the growing chorus of “USA” chants among the crowd, as news spread around the stadium. It was a spine-tingling moment.


    Fans at the game between the Mets and the Phillies chant USA as word spreads about the death of Osama bin Laden.

    At the same time, on the radio, WFAN Mets broadcaster Howie Rose gave listeners the news – but they must have already suspected something important had happened, as the “USA” chants were clearly audible even before Rose deftly slipped out of his jovial play-by-play calling and adopted the grave tone of wire reporter to explain the news. The audio can be heard here:

    http://newyork.cbslocal.com/2011/05/02/listen-howie-rose-reports-death-of-osama-bin-laden-during-mets-phillies/

    Sports are such an essential part of American life that it shouldn’t be surprising when sportscasts and news events overlap. Still, the moments can be chilling. Here’s a timeline of famous intersections between sports and news.

    1980: John Lennon’s death
    “Remember this is just a football game.”
    Howard Cosell keeps it all in perspective during a Monday Night Football game between the Miami Dolphins and the New England Patriots on Dec. 8. In the game’s waning moments, he tells viewers that “the most famous, perhaps, of all of the Beatles” is dead.

    brought to you by Tom LaPorte, Top Line Productions TLP John Lennon was announced dead by Howard Cosell at a football game

    Watch on YouTube

    1989: World Series interrupted by quake
    “I’ll tell you what, we’re having an earthquake.”
    The San Francisco Giants and Oakland A’s were about to begin Game 3 of their Bay Area World Series when disaster stuck on Oct. 17.  Initially, the signal from the game is cut. When backup audio-only broadcast is resumed, Al Michaels says, “I don’t know if we’re on the air. We’re in commercial, I guess.” The rumbling begins at about 4:30.

    So what does it take to shut Tim McCarver up? An earthquake.

    Watch on YouTube

    1994: NBA finals interrupted by a white Bronco
    “With a minute and 40 seconds to go in this first half, we will send it to NBC News.”
    As the New York Knicks and Houston Rockets battled near the end of the first half of Game 5, O.J. Simpson took police on an epic car chase around Southern California on June 17. For a while, NBC showed a split screen, with the game in a small box superimposed over the chase. With under two minutes remaining in the first half, Marv Albert kicks the broadcast to NBC’s Tom Brokaw. In a DVD set of the series released later, and in this YouTube video starting at 2:30, the game commentary is eerily silent.)

    The commentary of this game was interrupted by OJ Simpson's car chase. Boxscore http://www.basketball-reference.com/boxscores/199406170NYK.html Check my playlist for more games

    Watch on YouTube

    2001: Hockey game paused for presidential speech
    “There were bigger things to worry about” – announcer Jim Jackson
    The days following Sept. 11 brought many surprising moments of unity. On Sept. 20, the New York Rangers and Philadelphia Flyers squared off at First Union Center in Philadelphia for a typical, brawl-filled pre-season hockey game. But during the second intermission, President George Bush addressed the nation, and the speech was shown on the stadium scoreboard. The bitter rivals stayed on the ice to watch. The speech ran long, well past the time when the third period was set to begin; everyone watched until the end. Then, the game was called and teams exchanged handshakes usually reserved for the end of a playoff series.

    Nine days after the Sept. 11 attacks, the Flyers & Rangers meet at the then-First Union Center for a preseason game. It was called after President Bush's speech was shown.

    Watch on YouTube

    2011: WWE winner tells crowd bin Laden is dead
    “Compromised to a permanent end.”
    Professional wrestler John Cena, moments after winning the WWE Championship in Tampa on May 1, tells the crowd – and viewers at home – that bin Laden has been killed.
    http://offthebench.nbcsports.com/2011/05/02/watch-john-cena-announce-bin-ladens-death-at-wwe-event/

    Comment

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  • 2
    May
    2011
    6:38pm, EDT

    More photos of spontaneous celebrations across the US

    We continue to receive photos of gatherings and reactions following the news that Osama bin Laden is dead.

    See earlier ones here.

    More submissions:

    Zachary Krahmer

    District of Columbia firefighters celebrate with other civilians Sunday outside the White House.

    Miguel Moreno

    Washington D.C.

    Dubmaniac

    This was shot in downtown Denver on Sunday in front of the Capitol. A self-proclaimed patriotic flash mob assembled and chanted "USA! USA!" to passing cars. Even though it wasn't a huge crowd, they made up in energy what they lacked in numbers.

     


    Submitted by Aaron

    from Rob

    Orange, Calif.

     

    Hannah DeFarkas

    University of Missouri Tri Deltas celebrate on Sunday night

    John F. Ryan

    Virginia Military Institute celebrates on Sunday.

    Chris Lovuolo

    Celebration at Penn State University on Sunday.

    Amanda Davi

    Crowds rally at Radford University, Radford Va.

     

     

    Comment

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  • 2
    May
    2011
    4:00am, EDT

    Across New York City, joy that 'Obama got Osama'

    David Friedman / msnbc.com

    Cid Wilson joins the crowd at New York City's Ground Zero celebrating the news that Osama bin Laden had been killed on Monday, May 2.

    By Miranda Leitsinger, msnbc.com

    Nearly 10 years of pent-up emotion broke like a wave across New York City after news came late Sunday that al-Qaida leader Osama bin Laden had been killed in an American attack in Pakistan.

    At Ground Zero, where the twin towers of the World Trade Center fell on Sept. 11, 2001, people were screaming, reciting the Pledge of Allegiance, singing "America the Beautiful" and "The Star Spangled Banner," and waving big flags.

    Others chanted "Obama got Osama" in a scene overflowing with patriotism and happiness after President Barack Obama announced the death of the man who planned the terror attacks that scarred this city.

    Angelo Lopez, a 47-year-old filmmaker from Middle Village, Queens, was there early Monday with his 20-year old son, holding an American flag.

    “Justice has been served.  It's about time this guy gets wiped off the planet," Lopez said.

    David Friedman / msnbc.com

    Angelo Lopez, from Queens, N.Y., was in the crowd at Ground Zero celebrating the news that Osama Bin Laden had been killed on Monday, May 2.

    He said he and his son decided they couldn't go to bed and had to drive over. "Just had to come and feel the people. This is hallowed ground over here,” he added, gesturing toward where the memorial will be built.

    Cid Wilson, a 41-year-old financial analyst from Leonia, NJ, said he had to join the crowds at Ground Zero “to join my fellow Americans in celebrating a mission accomplished in defeating the leader of al-Qaida.”

    “To see a day like today … this was a victorious day,” he said.

    Jake Ray, 35, a morning radio show producer who lives close to Ground Zero, said he heard screaming before he knew about bin Laden, so he came over.

    He said the ceremonies there are usually somber events. “Never been this joyous,” he said.

    Still he worried about the effects of the al-Qaida leader's death. “Is it going to have some negative fallout?” he wondered.

    A large group of people gather at ground zero in New York City to celebrate the news that Osama bin Laden has been killed.

    In Times Square, several hundred people gathered, singing, chanting “USA, USA” and “Let’s Roll,” and waving American flags. The horns from police cars and fire trucks nearby added to the cacophony.

    Among the celebrants was Sophia Peng, 34, an IT consultant, who said she has not been able to venture downtown to the area around the World Trade Center since her college roommate, Christina Ryook, 25, was killed in the 9/11 attack. 

    “It brings back too many memories from that day,“ she said, adding that she may now be able to return to the WTC site “to go back and honor her.”

    A friend, Miles Oh of New York, said he was joining her in the celebration.

    “It’s not really good to celebrate someone’s death,” he said, “....  but it feels good for the country … for our lost friends.”

    Also joining in the celebration  was Umberto Navarrete, 24, from San Diego, a military veteran who served 18 months in Iraq.

    Navarrete said he was with friends at a restaurant when he heard the news. He left them there to come mark the occasion publicly, but alone.

    “My friends don’t know what this means to me,” he said.  “I’ve been waiting for this day for 10 years.”

    Following the news that Osama bin Laden was killed in Pakistan, celebrants say the pledge at Ground Zero, New York City.

    While the mood was overwhelmingly joyous, some in the square were struggling with other emotions.

    Among them was Daniel Epstein, 40, an architect from Los Angeles.

    “It’s emotional,” he said, adding that he felt like he was about to cry.  “ I feel like it’s not over, but it’s an important step that’s been long overdue. … It’s a bookend … another moment to remember the people who passed away.”

    Back at Ground Zero, Wilson said that he lost business colleagues in the 9/11 attacks and he remembers that day, “like it was yesterday.”

    Coming to Ground Zero “is also a way to connect with those who perished … to let them know that while their deaths were tragic, that we’re here to let you know that justice was served,” he said while holding an American flag. “And now they can truly rest in peace knowing that the perpetrator behind this heinous terrorist attack has been brought to justice."

    Follow Miranda Leitsinger on Facebook

    Fans at the game between the Mets and the Phillies chant USA as word spreads about the death of Osama bin Laden.

     

     

    254 comments

    Heard about it this morning, on the way to work. Got to job site, parked vehicle, put laptop and lunch box in office and walked to PA Security office to sign in. This walk takes me past the PA Police memorial for officers killed on 9-11-2001. I can tell you with certainty that there is nothing to c …

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  • 2
    May
    2011
    1:28am, EDT

    Initial reaction across the Web to bin Laden's death

    By Ian Sager, TODAY.com

    Editor's note: Msnbc.com is following the online reaction to President Barack Obama's announcement that Osama bin Laden is dead.

    Update: 2:00 a.m. ET

    Second Life gets in the game as participants dance to "The Angry American." (image below, from Alexandrea Ryada via FirstPerson)

    According to NBC's Luke Russert, Twitter user @ReallyVirtual accidentally live tweeted the activity that led to the 9/11 mastermind's death without knowing what was going on. The newsman writes, "Read back 9 hours to see his description of hearing the chopper of 1am. Amazing stuff." 

    @GhostOsama introduced himself to the world with a groan: "Well this sucks...I accidentally enabled location on my tweets."

    1:30 a.m. ET

    Reaction to the president's statement (click here to watch it in full) erupted on the Internet within moments.

    "Bin Laden dead. My dad died on 911. I feel free," tweeted one woman.

    Others, including filmmaker Michael Moore, used Twitter to ask for a moment of silence in honor of the victims of Sept. 11.

    On Facebook, users changed their profile pictures. "Change your profile picture to an American flag in honor and recognition of our soldiers who took down Osama Bin Laden in Pakistan! Finally the great terrorist mastermind is dead. God bless the USA," said one user.

    Twitter account @osamainhell announced itself to the world with a cheeky "Wait, what?" while @Real_Bin_Laden moaned that he was "watching footage of people partying in NYC," and that "If I didn't know better, I'd think you guys really didn't like me..."

    Jack Bauer -  the face of Fox's "24" - began trending on Twitter in the hours after the president's speech. "Right now @BarackObama is telling Jack Bauer he will never be able to thank him enough but sadly he must now leave the Country," tweeted one user. 

    Google Maps wasn't immune to the reaction: The mastermind's mansion hideout in Abbottabad, Pakistan, about 80 miles north of Islamabad, was mapped within hours. According to the Atlantic's Nicholas Jackson, the site is "about 800 feet to the west is the Cantt Police Station." Foursquare users don't worry: If you're ever in the neighborhood, you can now check in via the location service. 

    Some - likely still riding high from the correspondent's dinner - took to the the vast spaces of the Internet - for a victory lap of sorts (image below, h/t http://mikerelm.tumblr.com/post/5124100463).

    http://mikerelm.tumblr.com/post/5124100463

     

     

    Many noticed the eerie date of the announcement: May1 is also the day Germany announced Hitler's death.

    46 comments

    Good news. Obama killed Osama.

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  • 2
    May
    2011
    1:05am, EDT

    Photos of spontaneous celebrations across the US

    We've been receiving photos of gatherings and reactions following the news that Osama bin Laden is dead:

     

    Submitted by Annie Scheltens / UGC

    Ohio University students celebrate after learning that Al Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden was killed by a covert U.S. operation on Sunday, May 1, 2011.

    Zachary Krahmer

    Drivers celebrate near the White House.

    Abby Haa

    Can my daddy come home now?

    Submitted by Matthew Wittkopp / UGC

    The Brigade of Midshipmen celebrates the news. Many of the Mids were very young when Osama Bin Laden attacked the United States but it was enough of a calling for them to join the Navy to serve.

    Martin Eric Osborne

    Three young patriots in front of the White House

    Submitted by Sam Miller / UGC

    Iowa State University

    Cadet Matthew Bunker

    At the United States Military Academy, West Point, New York

    Robert A. Kolodzieski

    FirstPerson submission: At Penn State University. Absolute once in a lifetime experience! USA! Can't believe this has happened after ten years.

     


    Casey Seibert

    Norwich cadets

    Kazie Poole

    Appalachian State in Boone NC. Main Street through campus was shut down.

    Zack Mueller

    Boston university students, on Boston common, incredible scene of peaceful euphoria.

    Anna F. Curtis, journalism student at University of Missouri

    Huge celebration in University of Missouri's Greektown. Champagne, fireworks, crowd surfing.

    Bobby Narang

    NYC Times Square approximately 12:45 AM

    David Krogh

    Students at The Ohio State University are jumping into Mirror Lake, a tradition marked and remembered during Beat Michigan Week of the Ohio State vs Michigan football game.

    Matthew Petek

    Fernand R. Amandi

    Celebrating in Little Havana, Miami

    Zarith Pineda

    Tulane University Residence Hall, Students Celebrate

    Chad Davis

    Celebration of Osama bin Laden's death in Morgantown, WV ... home of WVU ... famous for couch burnings after Mountaineer football games

    Caitlin Peruccio

    Civ Scream at Providence College turned into a celebration

    Nick

    This is the celebration of midshipmen in Tecumseh Court at the United States Naval Academy.

    Sarah Benedek

    Ground Zero

    Have photos to share? Submit them here.

    12 comments

    I wish they would have hung Bin Laden upside down at Ground Zero and damn the consequences. Why should he have been treated like a devout muslim and buried within 24 hours of death? He was about as devout as I am rich. Because he was "disposed" of in such an expedited manner, I have my doubts that  …

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