'Osama Bin Laden was unarmed and ALREADY DEAD when Navy SEALs burst into bedroom': Shocking claim by retired soldier that threatens to debunk official story of raid
Cover: No Easy Day is scheduled for release on September 4
A blow-by-blow account of the Navy SEAL raid that took down Osama bin Laden has revealed that the al-Qaeda chief was unarmed and already dead when soldiers burst into his room in his Pakistan compound.
The book, No Easy Day: The Firsthand Account of the Mission That Killed Osama bin Laden, was written anonymously under the name Mark Owen, who was one of the SEAL Team Six members who saw the terror leader die in May 2011.
A copy of the book, obtained by The Huffington Post, says that the mission was quite unlike the popular version of what went on at the house in Abbottabad.
Owen wrote that a member of the elite squad saw the terror leader as he ducked into his bedroom, and the soldiers, who were climbing stairs to the third floor, followed.
He said: 'We were less than five steps from getting to the top when I heard suppressed shots. BOP. BOP. I couldn't tell from my position if the rounds hit the target or not. The man disappeared into the dark room.'
While various media outlets reported that bin Laden was armed and showed no intention of going quietly, the soldier wrote that the notorious terror boss was already taking his last breaths.
Owen writes that as bin Laden lay dying, he and another commando 'trained our lasers on his chest and fired several rounds. The bullets tore into him, slamming his body into the floor until he was motionless.'
The book described bin Laden as wearing a white t-shirt, loose-fitting tan pants and a tunic.
While photographing the terror leader's body, two guns were found in the room, but neither was loaded.
Target: A member of Seal Team Six shot and
killed Osama bin Laden during the elite squad's daring raid of his
compound in Abbotabad, Pakistan
'In all of my deployments, we routinely saw this phenomenon. The higher up the food chain the targeted individual was, the bigger a p**** he was.'
The book was originally slated to hit book stores on September 11 but will now come out seven days earlier
It has already stirred a considerable amount of controversy as it was revealed that the Pentagon, the CIA, the Office of the Director of National Intelligence, and even the White House appeared to have no idea that the book was being written.
The autobiography may also be heading to the big screen, as it was revealed on Sunday that director Steven Spielberg met with the retired commando to discuss making a movie about his experience.
Commando: A photo purported to be of Matt Bissonnette was published by Business Insider on Thursday. MailOnline has decided to blur the image so as not to show the soldier's face; he is now facing death threats from al Qaeda in addition to possible criminal prosecution
Hollywood knocking: Director Steven Spielberg
and HBO co-president Richard Plepler have both met with the Navy SEAL to
discuss turning the book into a movie
In addition to Spielberg, who
directed 'War Horse' and 'Saving Private Ryan,' Dreamworks and HBO’s
Richard Plepler have met with the author. 'He is still talking to DreamWorks and Spielberg,' a source told the New York Post.
This would be the third movie to tell the story of the raid that killed the mastermind of the September 11 terrorist attacks.
'Zero Dark Thirty,' directed by Oscar-winner Kathryn Bigelow will open December 19. Sony pushed back its opening to after the presidential election after it was revealed Bigelow was granted special access to the Pentagon and the CIA to make the movie.
The Weinstein Company has suggested it could release its own film about the May 2011 commando raid in Pakistan, 'Code Name Geronimo' before the election.
In the dark: The Pentagon said that it has not seen a copy of the book, despite regulations designed to keep former and current military personnel from spilling military secrets
An official al-Qaeda website on Friday posted a photograph and the name of the former Navy commando responsible for the book, calling him 'the dog who murdered the martyr Sheikh Osama bin Laden.'
Meanwhile the head of U.S. Special Operations Command told current and former troops that the military would take legal action against anyone found to have exposed sensitive information that could cause harm to fellow forces.
'We will pursue every option available to hold members accountable, including criminal prosecution where appropriate,' Admiral Bill McRaven wrote in an open, unclassified letter emailed to the active-duty special operations community.
Tension: The raid of bin Laden's Abottabad compound was watched by President Obama and his closest advisers in the Situation Room of the White House
Not long after the announcement of the book, FoxNews.com identified the soldier - Matt Bissonnette, 36, who retired from service shortly after the bin Laden raid.
It was followed by comments that called for the man's death, including one response that said, 'O' Allah, kill every one of them,' and another that said, 'O' Allah, make an example of him for the whole world and give him dark days ahead.'
Terror house: Bin Laden's compound has since been torn down
But that didn’t stop the Associated Press, which later confirmed the the FoxNews.com report through their own sources, and circulated the information through its subscribers.
The revelation had alarm bells ringing in military circles.
Pentagon spokesman Lt Col James Gregory told MailOnline that the release of a former special ops soldier’s identity can be worrisome.
He said: ‘We protect the names of our special ops personnel for security reasons. Any time names are revealed, it’s a concern.'
Lt Col Gregory also joined a chorus of U.S. agencies who claim they had no knowledge of the book before Wednesday, a possible violation of regulations that bar current and former troops from spilling military matters and national security issues.
Watching: In this undated image from video
seized from bin Laden's compound, the Al-Qaeda chief watches a TV
programme showing an image of President Obama
McRaven's open letter to the active-duty special operations community said books and films about special operations teams could be useful educational tools, and the military would work with potential authors, but current and former service members would be held accountable if they endangered the safety of U.S. forces.
THE OFFICIAL ACCOUNT OF BIN LADEN'S DEATH IN PAKISTAN
It took approximately 15 minutes to find - and kill - Osama bin Laden in his Abottabad compound.
Involved in the mission in the early morning hours of May 2, 2011 were 79 commandos that arrived in off in military helicopters from Jalalabad, Afghanistan.
The first helicopter foundered above Bin Laden’s compound and crash-landed in the outer courtyard.
The other helicopter landed outside the house.
The SEAL team forced their way into the compound by blowing the door with explosives.
The commandos shot three men and a woman - whom U.S. officials said had lunged at them - as they went up floor-by floor.
On the third level, three of the Navy SEALs saw bin Laden standing at the end of a hallway as they reached the top of the steps.
Two women in the room took positions in front of the terror leader to protect him.
One of the soldiers grabbed the women and shoved them away while one of the SEALs behind him fired at bin Laden.
The al-Qaeda boss was shot once in the chest and once in the head.
Code-word ‘Geronimo’ is sounded to White House Situation Room, a signal that their target is dead.
The SEALs then photograph the body for identification.
On their way out of the compound, the soldiers blow up the broken-down chopper.
The teams fly back to Bagram Air Base in Afghanistan.
Bin Laden’s body was then flown to a waiting naval ship, that buried at sea.
Involved in the mission in the early morning hours of May 2, 2011 were 79 commandos that arrived in off in military helicopters from Jalalabad, Afghanistan.
The first helicopter foundered above Bin Laden’s compound and crash-landed in the outer courtyard.
The other helicopter landed outside the house.
The SEAL team forced their way into the compound by blowing the door with explosives.
The commandos shot three men and a woman - whom U.S. officials said had lunged at them - as they went up floor-by floor.
On the third level, three of the Navy SEALs saw bin Laden standing at the end of a hallway as they reached the top of the steps.
Two women in the room took positions in front of the terror leader to protect him.
One of the soldiers grabbed the women and shoved them away while one of the SEALs behind him fired at bin Laden.
The al-Qaeda boss was shot once in the chest and once in the head.
Code-word ‘Geronimo’ is sounded to White House Situation Room, a signal that their target is dead.
The SEALs then photograph the body for identification.
On their way out of the compound, the soldiers blow up the broken-down chopper.
The teams fly back to Bagram Air Base in Afghanistan.
Bin Laden’s body was then flown to a waiting naval ship, that buried at sea.
Kohlmann said the former Navy SEAL could now be in physical danger from al-Qaeda sympathizers seeking revenge for bin Laden's death, or hoping to gain prestige for themselves.
'They have a photo of the individual, they have his name, his age,' Kohlmann said. 'I wish that all this was bluster, but there are a lot of would-be jihadists out there, including some in North America. This is the ideal opportunity for those kind of people.'
It is not known whether 'No Easy Day' contains details of commando operations that the U.S. government considers secret, but U.S. government officials said the account had not been submitted for a required pre-publication review.
'Even if there is nothing classified disclosed, it should have been reviewed, and it was not,' said one official who spoke on condition of anonymity.
'He's going to become the poster child for recruitment and assassination,' Carr said, noting that the case underscored the need for anyone in a high-risk profession to take great precautions with any information available on the Internet.
Carr said the man's relatives and former Navy SEAL colleagues could also be in danger if they could be traced through the Internet.
No Easy Day is co-authored by journalist Kevin Maurer, has worked on four previous books - including two in the last year and a half about soldiers in Afghanistan.
Maurer spent the last several years embedded with troops in Iraq and Afghanistan as a military correspondent for the Fayetteville Observer.
The book's listing on Amazon.com says that among Owen's hundreds of missions around the world as a SEAL Team Six commando was the rescue of Capt Richard Phillips from Somali pirates in 2009.
Mission: Bin Laden was killed during the 40-minute operation by the elite Navy SEAL Team Six in his Abbottabad, Pakistan, compound, seen here
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