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Osama Dead. Obama Confirms.

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Death of a Failure
By ROSS DOUTHAT
Published: May 1, 2011

For months after 9/11, people watched planes. They watched skyscrapers. They looked over their shoulders in crowded places — at baseball games, college graduations, New Year’s celebrations. They eyed bearded men on planes and trains, glanced nervously at suspicious packages in shopping malls, and listened for the lilt of Arabic in airports and bus stations. They profiled relentlessly and shamelessly, and waited for the next attack to come.

I moved to Washington, D.C., a year after the twin towers fell, and there was a touch of London during the blitz in the way that people carried themselves in those days.

My friends and neighbors rode the Metro with stiff upper lips, kept calm and carried on as they headed to work at the Pentagon or the State Department (or a minor think tank or political magazine, for that matter), and generally behaved as if even the most everyday activities were taking place in the valley of the shadow of death. We felt as if we were living with targets on our backs. We assumed that it was only a matter of time until Al Qaeda struck again.

Ten years later, we’re still waiting. There have been many plots, certainly, foiled by good intelligence work or good police work or simple grace and luck.

There have been shoe bombers and there have been underwear bombers and Times Square bombers — and others still, presumably, that were cut short before they reached the headlines.

But the wave of further violence that seemed inevitable in those fraught months after 9/11 never materialized within our borders. And what seemed like the horrifying opening offensive in a new and terrifying war stands instead as an isolated case — a passing moment when Al Qaeda seemed to rival fascism and Communism as a potential threat to our civilization, and when Osama bin Laden inspired far more fear and trembling than his actual capabilities deserved.

Now the man is dead.

This is a triumph for the United States of America, for our soldiers and intelligence operatives, and for the president as well. But it is not quite the triumph that it would have seemed if bin Laden had been captured a decade ago, because those 10 years have taught us that we didn’t need to fear him and his rabble as much as we did, temporarily but intensely, in the weeks when ground zero still smoked.

They’ve taught us, instead, that whatever blunders we make (and we have made many), however many advantages we squander (and there has been much squandering), and whatever quagmires we find ourselves lured into, our civilization is not fundamentally threatened by the utopian fantasy politics embodied by groups like Al Qaeda, or the mix of thugs, fools and pseudointellectuals who rally around their banner.

They can strike us, they can wound us, they can kill us. They can goad us into tactical errors and strategic blunders. But they are not, and never will be, an existential threat.

This was not clear immediately after 9/11. On that day, they took us by surprise. They took advantage of our society’s great strength — its openness and freedom, the welcome it gives to immigrants and the presumption of innocence it extends. And in the wake of their attack, we did not know what they were capable of, or how they might follow up their victory.

Now we know. We know because bin Laden is finally dead and gone, but in a sense we knew already.

We learned the lesson in every day that passed without an attack, in every year that turned, and in the way our eyes turned, gradually but permanently, from the skies and the sky-scrapers back to the ordinary things of life.

We learned when the planes landed safely, when the malls stayed open, when the commencements came and went, when one baseball season gave way to another.

Day after day, hour after hour, we learned that we were strong and they were weak.

One of bin Laden’s most famous quotations (there were not many in his oeuvre) compared the United States and Al Qaeda to racing horses. “When people see a strong horse and a weak horse,” he told his acolytes over table talk, “by nature, they will like the strong horse.”

In his cracked vision, America was the weak nag, and Al Qaeda the strong destrier.

But the last 10 years have taught us differently: In life as well as death, Osama bin Laden was always the weak horse. 
 
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Last time US shared information with Pakistani officials, only thing they killed was bunch of bugs. Well this time they went alone and wallah!!
 
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Aw, crumbs! His body is in Afghanistan and they are going to treat it according to Islamic ritual. So in a few hours he'll be under six feet of Earth.
Am pissed about that too...
 
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Members of Pakistan's intelligence service - the ISI - were on site in Abbotabad, Pakistan, during the operation that killed Osama bin Laden, CNN's Nick Paton Walsh reports, citing a senior Pakistani intelligence official. The official said he did not know who fired the shot that actually killed Bin Laden. -CNN
 
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Bharatis are out in full force (well some of them at least) trying to spin this their way. :lol:

Even American government isn't supporting them. :lol:


They're getting more and more desperate! Its funny to see them troll so miserably.
 
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Pakistan's involvement might be kept ambiguous because Pakistan will face new wave of suicide attacks if it is clear that Pakistan military was involved.
 
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I'm willing to bet a fair penny that it was a joint operation. The US had Intel on Bin laden's hideout for a very long time, something like a year. But it wasn't until recently that they felt they had enough Intel to kill or capture him. There is no way that the US would not or did not participate in the operation. The old saying goes, if you want something done right; do it yourself. It would be an epic embracement and blunder if the US chose to let Pakistan be the sole spearhead in the assault only to watch Bin laden escape. Bin laden was too high of a target for the US to just sit back and watch.

Well it happened before and US special forces were there when OBL escaped, the cost of that has proven to be huge so let us not assume that US is blunder proof and Pakistan is completely inept.
Still, it is good that he is finally dead now and that is all that matters.
 
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The most wanted maan in this world was sitting in a large mansion, mostly used by retired PA officers, just 50-100 kms from the capital of Pakistan- Islamabad.

Period.

Yes you seem to be on your period by issuing retarded statements like this. Get your head out of the arse.
 
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lolzz fk their attempts. they are our enemies they are going to spew dirrt. but we need to focus on what statement our Government is going to come up with.


US indeed is trying to conceal our role and get the entire credit.


even an idiot of a high caliber can understand that NO US aircraft or eveb Helicopter and ground troops can operate without permission of Pakistan. Because if you have any understanding of this area (Abbottabad) its not a tribal area but an urban area and as i know the region in and out i tell you its not closed anywhere to Afghanistan from where US helicopters can fly in that area

we are not saying pakistan did not try, PAF had to back off when they realized the payload.
 
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Why? It's possible OBL had just recently crossed some border into Pakistan. He wasn't just sat in one place for the last 10 years. DOH.

RR that is one thing but according to our information on ground here is that other men of OBL were there in this area for last many months, a high level terrorist was arrested from this area few weeks back, i filed that story but paper was not publishing it though the information was 200 % correct the Indonesian terrorists of al qaeda was arrested from Abbottabad few weeks back.
 
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Bharatis are out in full force (well some of them at least) trying to spin this their way. :lol:

Even American government isn't supporting them. :lol:

Bharatis and Americans and Canadians and French and English....Perhaps, there is more to world than this forum..perhaps...
 
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OBL is dead whether Pakistan army cooperated or not just leave it aside for a second... and concentrate why US media is crying loud that Pakistan didn't cooperated why they are letting down their own ally ?? :-O

What US wants now what are they gonna do now ??
 
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GEO TV Pakistan showed mansion in Pakistan

one of helicopter mechanical failure landed and then destroyed by the US

operation took place at 3:30 PM eastern standard time

some of intelligence came from some detainees
 
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It's official, Pakistan is ranked Legendary.


Well actually it was already legendary historically but it's even more legendary now.


flag.jpg
 
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