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The shocking military gaffe that let Bin Laden escape just months after 9/11 as CIA boss admits ‘we could have ended it'

The shocking military gaffe that let Bin Laden escape just months after 9/11 as CIA boss admits ‘we could have ended it'

Scottish Sun14-05-2025

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HE was the most wanted terrorist in history.
But it took the American intelligence services almost 10 years to hunt down Osama Bin Laden after the 9/11 terror attacks shocked the world.
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For years Osama bin Laden managed to evade US authorities
Credit: AFP
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He was the mastermind behind 9/11, the worst terrorist attack in US history
Credit: Getty Images - Getty
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President Barack Obama, Joe Biden, Hillary Clinton and other top US officials nervously watch on as Bin Laden is hunted
Credit: AP
Now, a new Netflix documentary, American Manhunt: Osama bin Laden, charts the nerve-wracking, decade-long global missions to capture the world's most notorious criminal.
It also examines the costly errors that meant the Al Qaeda leader could have been brought to justice far sooner, with a senior CIA boss candidly admitting they "could have ended it" just months after the atrocity.
From the moment the World Trade Centre fell, US intelligence officers were focused on working out who was responsible.
The CIA immediately got to work trawling the flight manifests - the documents that detailed everyone who was on the hijacked planes that hit the two towers - as the terrorists would be on there too.
Gina Bennett, a CIA counter-terrorism analyst, says: 'There was a name on a manifest that was suspected of being a pretty major Al Qaeda operative.
"For years that was the terrorist group that we knew was determined to attack the United States. That name, that moment, there was just no way that was a coincidence. We knew immediately this was Osama bin Laden.'
Gina was part of a crack CIA team, mainly women, who had been focusing on Bin Laden since the Nineties.
Her colleague Cindy Storer says: 'We knew that Bin Laden was operating training camps and safe houses against the Soviet Union.
"When the war was over, we discovered he turned those camps into training camps for Islamic militants to go out and attack other countries. We knew they had terrorist capabilities.
"So we didn't know to what extent they were going to come directly after the US.'
Shameless Taliban claims there is 'no proof' Osama bin Laden was behind 9/11
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The events of 9/11 left 2,977 people dead
Credit: AFP
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The moment President Bush was told about the attacks while visiting a school
Credit: AFP
Attacks started across the world, heralding a new wave of terrorism, and in the months before 9/11, there was intelligence that Al Qaeda posed a threat to American targets.
Gina says: 'All the indicators were that something big was happening.'
Cindy adds: 'We got reporting that people in Bin Laden's network were calling their mothers and telling them goodbye and stuff like that. Something very serious was about to happen.'
Unimaginable atrocity
The US government was warned by the CIA that the likely targets would be famous landmarks or symbols of US capitalism - but they did not know when or how.
And none of them could have imagined the extent or horror of 9/11 when it did happen.
Cindy says: 'You can't not feel some responsibility for not stopping an attack that occurred on your watch. So you can't help but question yourself.'
It soon became clear that the Taliban government in Afghanistan were providing a safe haven for Bin Laden, who became the world's most wanted man after the events of 9/11 left 2,977 people dead.
We got reporting that people in Bin Laden's network were calling their mothers and telling them goodbye and stuff like that. Something very serious was about to happen
Cindy Storer
So America gave them an opportunity to turn him over, which they refused.
Just four days after 9/11, President Bush decided to go to war and put the CIA and its counterterrorism boss, Cofer Black, in charge of hunting him down.
'Operation Jawbreaker' sent small teams of CIA agents behind enemy lines to work with their Afghan allies, the Northern Alliance, who were already fighting the Taliban.
And Cofer Black's instructions were clear - he wanted Bin Laden's head on a stick to present to President Bush.
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Operation Jawbreaker tracked Bin Laden down to the mountainous stronghold of Tora Bora in the months after the atrocity
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Just four days after 9/11, President Bush decided to go to war
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Bin Laden released propaganda videos praising the attacks
Credit: Getty
By December, the Americans and the Northern Alliance had taken control of all the major Afghan cities - but Bin Laden had got away.
American intelligence located his whereabouts in the mountainous stronghold of Tora Bora, and a team was sent up to find him.
They needed military reinforcements, but they were denied. The decision was made to bomb anyway, despite CIA protestations that they needed support.
The mountain cave was hit for 56 hours with some of the heaviest bombing since World War Two - but there was no proof Bin Laden was dead and fears grew that escape routes had not been sealed off.
Then, six months later, the Americans' worst fears were realised - film footage emerged proving Bin Laden was alive.
Cofer Black says: 'We could have ended it and moved on. It would have given some closure to the survivors in New York.
"This was the best chance we ever had and I am sorry we didn't take it.'
Hunt for the henchmen
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Osama bin Laden with Ayman al-Zawahiri, an Egyptian who was known as his right-hand man
Credit: Getty
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Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, who was being tracked by American intelligence for years, was the 'architect' of 9/11
Credit: AP
As Bin Laden released another propaganda video, the hunt for him and his henchmen intensified.
The Al Qaeda founder was at the top; after him was his deputy Al Zawahiri. Next in command were a handful of lieutenants who were also very close to Bin Laden.
These were Abu Zubaydah, who was suspected to be Bin Laden's chief operations operative, and a mysterious figure known only as Mukhtar.
In December 2001, three months after 9/11, a flight attendant on an American airliner thwarted another terror attack when he discovered a passenger with a bomb in his shoes.
The investigators felt they were at a dead end, but then they managed to capture Abu Zubaydah in a raid in Pakistan.
Unbelievably, he cooperated with the FBI and named the mysterious Mukhtar as a man they had been tracking for years - Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, known as KSM.
But that was nothing compared to what happened next.
Mastermind unmasked
Zubaydah revealed KSM was not just one of Bin Laden's closest accomplices, but the chief planner behind the September 11 attacks.
FBI Special Agent Ali Sofan says: 'He was the architect, the visionary, the mastermind of 9/11.'
He had been the man behind the first attack on the World Trade Centre back in 1993, but considered it a failure when he failed to topple the towers.
So he found his way to Afghanistan and Al Qaeda and pitched an idea to Osama Bin Laden to target not only the World Trade Centre, but also the Capitol Building and the Pentagon.
After 9/11, KSM went into hiding, but intelligence revealed he was in Pakistan.
In March 2003, they raided his villa in Rawalpindi, and he was captured. But what became clear was that Bin Laden was still very much in charge - and there were real concerns about additional attacks.
In the months that followed came the 2004 Madrid train bombings, which killed 193 people, then the 7/7 bombings in London that left 52 dead.
Cindy Storer says: 'There was attack after attack, we knew there could be another attack at any time, anywhere."
KSM provided information about Al Qaeda as an organisation. But there was one thing he wouldn't talk about - Bin Laden.
The hunt for Bin Laden stalled. But the terror plots continued - another was uncovered to blow up the New York subway, another to blow up 15 airliners over the US.
Bin Laden was looking for his next 9/11.
Monster hunt
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Osama Bin Laden occasionally released videos so his followers knew he was alive
Credit: AP
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US intelligence managed to trace his whereabouts to a large house in Abbotabad, Pakistan
Credit: EPA
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Obama gave orders for the operation, despite the uncertainty that Bin Laden was in the home
Credit: Netflix
In September 2007, six years after 9/11, Bin Laden released a new videotape proving he was alive and still plotting against the US. But the trail on him had gone cold.
Barack Obama was sworn in as US President, and he told the CIA their number one task was to find Bin Laden.
The CIA analysed every video Bin Laden put out, and the focus was on how he was getting them to the news - there must be a trusted courier.
An Al Qaeda operative arrested in Africa named the courier as Abu Ahmed.
But he proved elusive until the summer of 2010, when they were able to track his phone to Pakistan.
They managed to follow him to a large house in Abbottabad. It was a bigger compound than any other in the area, boasting 18ft tall walls topped with barbed wire. It was clear that someone of high value was located there.
The CIA started immediate surveillance of the compound, but it had no phones or internet, and all their rubbish was burned.
They started to track the women and children who were seen coming and going, and they discovered that there were two families living in the compound - those of Abu Ahmed and his brother.
But then satellite footage revealed that there was a third family living in the house that never left the compound.
There was a man who would come outside every day and walk in the garden, but the walls and security meant it was impossible to get a clear image of his face.
Without exact proof that Bin Laden was there, it was difficult for the President to make a decision to take action against the compound.
If this was a botched operation, his reputation would be in tatters. But he asked the CIA to prepare to go into the compound.
Bin Laden's reign of terror
By Kevin Adjei-Darko
EVIL mastermind Osama Bin Laden orchestrated some of the deadliest terror attacks the world has ever seen.
As the leader of al-Qaeda, he was the brain behind the September 11, 2001 atrocities that killed nearly 3,000 people in New York, Washington D.C., and Pennsylvania.
Nineteen hijackers took over four planes, slamming two into the Twin Towers, one into the Pentagon, and another crashing in a field after passengers fought back.
Before 9/11, Bin Laden's fingerprints were all over other deadly plots. In 1998, he ordered truck bombings at US embassies in Kenya and Tanzania, killing 224 and injuring thousands.
In 2000, al-Qaeda struck again with the bombing of the USS Cole in Yemen, killing 17 American sailors.
Bin Laden used his fortune and twisted ideology to fund global jihad, radicalise followers, and build terror networks.
The Saudi-born terror chief became the world's most wanted man, hiding in plain sight in Pakistan for years before U.S. Navy SEALs took him out in a daring 2011 raid.
Admiral William McRaven, head of the Navy Seals, was tasked with planning the raid.
Seal Team Six was sent to Jalalabad, where they built a mock-up of the compound and practised for weeks.
On May 1, 2011, the most classified operation of the last 20 years was launched. Bin Laden's codename was Geronimo.
As the helicopters carrying the team hovered over the compound, one of them crashed - but miraculously, the Navy Seals walked away.
The crash had awoken the neighbourhood, but the decision was taken to carry on with the mission.
Within minutes, the Seals were within the compound and shot and killed Abu Ahmed.
As they made their way up the stairs, their next target was Bin Laden's son, Khalid. As the Seals peeled off to search, there were only two of them left to go to the top floor, where Bin Laden could be hiding.
Officer Robert J O'Neill says: 'Standing in front of me, two feet away, was Osama Bin Laden. It was one of those moments in life where it did slow down.
"He's taller than I thought, he's skinnier than I thought. His beard was grey/white. But I recognised his nose. This is definitely him. He's not surrendering, he's a threat, not just to me but to my team. He has to die.'
Back in America, President Obama and his team were about to hear the words America had wanted for 10 long years: 'Geronimo, Geronimo, we got him.'
American Manhunt: Osama bin Laden is out now on Netflix.
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Robert O'Neil was the Navy SEAL who fired the bullet that killed Osama bin Laden
Credit: Universal News and Sport (Scotland)
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In May 2011, Barack Obama announced to the world that Bin Laden had been killed
Credit: Reuters

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The mother of an autistic teenager who was groomed and 'brainwashed' by right-wing extremists says she was not treated as a vulnerable child before she took her own life. Rhianan Rudd, who died aged 16, had an 'obsession with Hitler', downloaded a bomb-making manual, and threatened to 'blow up' a synagogue after she was radicalised online by an American neo-Nazi. In the 18 months before she died, Rhianan was diagnosed with autism, investigated by counter-terrorism policing and MI5, and prosecuted over terrorism charges after she had been groomed and allegedly sexually exploited by extremists. Senior coroner Judge Alexia Durran concluded that she was not satisfied that Rhianan intended to end her own life at Chesterfield Coroner's Court on Monday. She said that 'missed opportunities' in Rhianan's case were 'not systemic' and she will not make a prevention of future deaths report. 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The inquest heard that the police did not refer Rhianan to the National Referral Mechanism (NRM), which identifies victims of human trafficking or modern slavery, when they began investigating her in 2020, but the referral was made by Derbyshire County Council in April 2021. Her mother says the NRM referral should have been done 'at the very beginning' because 'they could see that she was vulnerable'. Ms Carter added that she thinks Rhianan should not have been charged, and said: 'She was a child, a vulnerable child. A child with mental health issues. 'She should have been treated as a victim more than anything.' The mother also said it 'angered' her that Rhianan was investigated by MI5 before her death and added: 'If they knew that my daughter was being groomed and sexually exploited online, and then you're investigating at that time, why did nobody come and stop it? 'Why watch a child be completely humiliated, sexualised, trafficked, brainwashed?' 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Groomed terror suspect not treated as a ‘vulnerable child', says her mother
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Rhianan Rudd, who died aged 16, had an 'obsession with Hitler', downloaded a bomb-making manual, and threatened to 'blow up' a synagogue after she was radicalised online by an American neo-Nazi. In the 18 months before she died, Rhianan was diagnosed with autism, investigated by counter-terrorism policing and MI5, and prosecuted over terrorism charges after she had been groomed and allegedly sexually exploited by extremists. Senior coroner Judge Alexia Durran concluded that she was not satisfied that Rhianan intended to end her own life at Chesterfield Coroner's Court on Monday. She said that 'missed opportunities' in Rhianan's case were 'not systemic' and she will not make a prevention of future deaths report. In an interview, Rhianan's mother, Emily Carter, said she believes the teenager's death was preventable and the agencies involved in her case need to be held accountable. Ms Carter said: 'They need to recognise that the way they dealt with things was not the correct way, because she's dead. 'I don't ever want this to happen to another family. This has been devastating. 'If I could save just one child from these people making all their changes and making sure they follow through with everything, there's justice in my eyes – my daughter didn't kill herself for no reason. 'It was just one thing after another basically, but all of them should learn from Rhianan's death, all of them.' Ms Carter said Rhianan was not treated as a vulnerable child, despite her autism diagnosis, and she does not believe her daughter was ever a threat to other people. The mother said: 'She was five foot one, weighed seven stone. She was tiny. 'I don't know what people thought she could do, but I don't believe that she was ever a threat. It was just what people would put in her head – brainwashed her, basically. 'They (the agencies) treated her as a child, but I don't believe they treated her as a vulnerable child. 'If you've got vulnerable children, you take extra steps to watch them, to look after them, to make sure they feel safe, even from themselves, and they didn't. Obviously, she's dead.' The mother said the moment 19 police officers and two detectives came to arrest her daughter at their family home was 'mind-numbing' and she felt 'violated' when officers turned her house 'upside down'. She said: 'It hurt … the fact that they thought that my daughter was some sort of massive terrorist. 'They were going to put her in handcuffs, but the handcuffs didn't go small enough. Even on the smallest ones, they just fell off her hands. That's how small she was.' The inquest heard that the police did not refer Rhianan to the National Referral Mechanism (NRM), which identifies victims of human trafficking or modern slavery, when they began investigating her in 2020, but the referral was made by Derbyshire County Council in April 2021. Her mother says the NRM referral should have been done 'at the very beginning' because 'they could see that she was vulnerable'. Ms Carter added that she thinks Rhianan should not have been charged, and said: 'She was a child, a vulnerable child. A child with mental health issues. 'She should have been treated as a victim more than anything.' The mother also said it 'angered' her that Rhianan was investigated by MI5 before her death and added: 'If they knew that my daughter was being groomed and sexually exploited online, and then you're investigating at that time, why did nobody come and stop it? 'Why watch a child be completely humiliated, sexualised, trafficked, brainwashed?' Speaking about her daughter's autism diagnosis, Ms Carter said Rhianan would get fixated and 'sucked into' something until it was the 'be all and end all of everything'. She said Rhianan's fixations began with My Little Pony before she became interested in German history, wanted '1940s German furniture in her bedroom', and eventually made contact with extremists on the messaging apps Telegram and Discord. Ms Carter said: 'Finding out that she'd been groomed, and the way these people talked to her … it really changed her wholeness as a person, the way she thinks, the way she feels, everything.' She said that Rhianan was a 'bubbly' girl but she became withdrawn after she was radicalised, and added that the extremists 'took away an innocent child' and 'took away her substance as a person'. She said: 'After she started talking to her so-called friend online – I thought she was talking to gamer friends and friends from school – she started withdrawing. 'She stopped talking about normal things. She wasn't very bubbly, and I'd literally have to drag her out the house.' Ms Carter said she believes Rhianan's death could have been prevented if she was placed in a mental health unit, rather than the children's home, to 'deal with her mood swings, her brain going mad'. She said: 'They don't know a child like a mother does. Even when she was at home, I would wake up two or three times throughout the night and go and check her. These houses aren't guaranteed to do that.' The mother added that it was 'scary' when she referred her daughter to Prevent but she 'knew it had to be done'. She said: 'I was hoping that it was just going to take her two or three times a week to work on her mind, unpick her head, and turn her back into Rhianan. 'Not end up with all these police officers turning up arresting her and pulling my house apart. You don't expect that at all.' The inquest heard that Rhianan took an overdose of her mother's medication after being encouraged to by the 'two competing individuals' in her mind a week before she was charged and moved to the children's home. Recalling that moment, Ms Carter said: 'I go down the stairs and Rhianan was laying on my living room floor. And I actually thought she was dead, but she wasn't. 'She basically called them (an ambulance) when she decided that she changed her mind and didn't want to die.' Ms Carter continued: 'I've made mistakes, and I want the organisations to put their hands up and admit they've made mistakes and to rectify their mistakes so it doesn't happen again. 'And then that way everybody can be happy, except me, because I've already lost my daughter.' Ms Carter described Rhianan as 'loving, kind' and a 'really beautiful soul'. She added: 'Her brother, Brandon, and Rhianan were like two peas in a pod, and he just feels completely lost without her.' Following the inquest, Ms Carter said the family's anguish was increased by hearing that Rhianan was 'let down by the police, the Prevent anti-terror programme, Derbyshire County Council and the mental health bodies'. In a statement read outside Chesterfield Coroner's Court on behalf of Ms Carter by Anna Moore of Leigh Day Solicitors, she added: 'The chief coroner has found that Rhianan was denied access to services which should have supported and protected her and, I believe, could have saved her life. 'Looking at the number of missed opportunities recognised by the coroner, it's hard to see how they cannot have had an impact on Rhianan's state of mind.'

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