The bin Laden photos


I don’t understand what is driving those people who demand that the photos of the dead bin Laden be released, other than the need to satisfy some prurient interest or to gloat. It is not that photos of dead people should never be published. Publishing the images of war dead and wounded can play an important role in highlighting the tragic cost of wars. But bin Laden’s photographs would serve no such a purpose. It would be more like publishing the photos of people executed for crimes or shot in gunfights and seems like a partial step backwards to the days of public executions to satisfy people’s blood lust

While I am in general in favor of not keeping information secret, such information should have some public benefit. What benefit would be gained by releasing the photos? It will not serve as proof that bin Laden is dead because die-hard skeptics can claim that the photos are faked, just like some are claiming that Obama’s birth certificate is a fake or that the moon landing was faked or that the Bush administration was behind the 9/11 attacks. They will then demand the release of the videos. There will never be definitive proof that will satisfy the skeptics and at some point you have to take the circumstantial evidence in support of a basic fact as conclusive, though one can legitimately have doubts about specific details.

I don’t see any reason to doubt the claim that bin Laden was killed in this attack. I don’t see any upside for the Obama administration to fake the news about the death and plenty of downside. So many people are involved that a lie could easily be revealed and blow up in their faces. Furthermore bin Laden had faded from the news a long time ago and the sense of urgency to capture him had dissipated to a low level of nagging dissatisfaction, so why create such a sensational falsehood?

I think it is very clear that the US government wanted bin Laden killed and not captured alive. The fact that he was unarmed and they were able to carry his dead body out along with computers and other stuff suggests that they could have easily overpowered him and taken him alive if they had really wanted to.

While he should have been given a fair trial, we seem to have gone long past the stage where people concern themselves with such quaint old-fashioned legal niceties and now live in an age of summary justice. While a captured bin Laden might have been a useful source of information, what to do with him would have been so problematic as to outweigh the benefits of treating him like a criminal. An open trial might have revealed embarrassing information about the former links between him and al Qaeda and the Taliban with the US and Pakistan. A secret trial or a kangaroo court comprised of a military tribunal followed by an execution would have been long drawn out and had negative implications. People in the US already get into hysterics about giving low-level Guantanamo detainees a trial in civilian courts or to even house them in prisons on the US mainland. Imagine their reaction if bin Laden were to be held in a US prison.

I think it is clear that the commandos had orders to kill him, although killing an unarmed person is a potentially illegal act, which is why Attorney General Eric Holder has conveniently come up with the novel doctrine that it was justifiable as an act of ‘national self defense’, whatever that is.

Leon Panetta, the head of the CIA, said that they were not certain that bin Laden was in the house, which clarifies another mystery which was why they carried out a high risk operation like they did without simply sending in a drone to bomb the building. After all, it is not like the government worries that much about innocent civilians being killed in their air strikes.

If they had held on to the dead body, that would become a hot potato too. What could they do with it? Where could they bury it? If his family asked for it, how could they respond? Once they had possession of the body, they would have to find ways to get rid of it. Later summarily dumping it into the sea with the whole world watching would have been explosive. It was this reason, rather than any concern to follow Islamic customs, that I think led to the hurried burial at sea, so that the world was presented with a fait accompli.

I think the US government carried out the mission this way because they wanted to make sure that bin Laden was dead, that they had proof, and also did not want his body and funeral and grave to become political symbols. I think it is reasonable to conclude that the bare bones of the story, that the US government gave the order to kill bin Laden and bury his body at sea, is true. The release of the photos and videos will not add anything to it.

Comments

  1. Matt says

    “While I am in general in favor of not keeping information secret, such information should have some public benefit.”

    This is my only problem with your post. Someone needs to be able to judge if information is a benefit to the public or not. Unless you release the info, the only entity able to make this judgement is rarely impartial. In this instance I agree with you that there is no benefit, but in general, who can make this call 100% of the time?

  2. Henry says

    I agree that releases the photos probably doesn’t do any benefit.

    That said, is it really that crazy to think Osama was captured, drugged, and carried out and is now in custody?

    It snow being reported that there was no 40 minute firefight as previously reported. Only one person was armed and they were quickly dispatched.

    With no immediate threat we must now ask why was Osama shot?

  3. Steve LaBonne says

    With no immediate threat we must now ask why was Osama shot?

    Because, given that the Administration chickened out from trying even his underling in a civilian court, can you imagine how they trembled at the thought of the politics involved in dealing with bin Laden himself? I doubt very much that there was ever the slightest intention of taking him alive.

  4. says

    Matt,

    I see your point about the fact that there is no such thing as a 100% objective judge of such things.

    But I would think that a minimum requirement for release is that I be able to make the case that there is some benefit from the release. In the case of the WikiLeaks releases, for example, I can make the case why it is important that we know what the government does and why.

    In the case of the death photos, I cannot find anything that would benefit the public from their release since I believe that bin Laden is dead. So I will not call for their release.

    Things could change so that this becomes a crucial issue, and then my view could also change.

  5. Kay Haytha says

    I do not think the USA had any choice but to kill OBL. If he was put on trial, OBL may have revealed the role played by the USA in his transformation from being a USA-backed Mujjahideen ‘Freedom Fighter’ to an anti-USA ‘Terrorist’.

  6. says

    I was a little uneasy about the news of the shooting of Bin Laden when it first came out, however on reflection it was probably the best option, I also did have a doubt in my mind that it may have been an elaborate staged killing of someone else to gain popularity from the American people. However he would have more to loose if this ever got out which as you say would inevitably happen!

  7. says

    If president, Donald Trump would have put the carcass on display in the Lincoln Memorial and charged the general public $100 per head to see it. For an extra fee, visitors would be allowed to spit on the body. And, before the grand finale of public dissolution in concentrated sulfuric acid -- also before a paying audience -- those with million-dollar VIP passes would have been allowed to fire a few more rounds into the body and/or urinate thereon.

    This would be a great opportunity to finance the National Park Service and reduce the deficit. There’s a free-market solution to every problem, and plenty enough suckers out there to make it work. C’mon, Republicans, where’s your creativity?

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