ABBOTTABAD, Pakistan – Four helicopters swooped in early Monday and killed
Osama bin Laden in a fiery American raid on his fortress-like compound in a
Pakistani town that is home to three army regiments. His location raised pointed
questions of whether Pakistani authorities knew the whereabouts of the world's
most wanted man.
The al-Qaida chief was living in a house in the town of Abbottabad that a
U.S. official said was "custom built to hide someone of significance."
Abbottabad is around 60 miles from the capital Islamabad, far from the remote
mountain caves along the Pakistan-Afghanistan tribal border where most
intelligence assessments had put bin Laden in recent years.
The house was close to the Kakul Military Academy, an army run institution
where top officers train and one of several military institutions in the
town.
An American administration official said the compound was built in 2005 at
the end of a narrow dirt road with "extraordinary" security measures. He said it
had 12 to 18-feet walls topped with barbed wire with two security gates and no
telephone or Internet service connected to it.
A Pakistan intelligence official said the property where bin Laden was
staying was 3,000 square feet.
Critics have long accused elements of Pakistan's security establishment of
protecting bin Laden, though Islamabad has always denied this. Ties between the
United States and Pakistan have hit a low point in recent months over the future
of Afghanistan, and any hint of possible Pakistani collusion with bin Laden
could hit them hard even amid the jubilation of getting American's No. 1
enemy.
One Pakistani official said the choppers took off from a Pakistani air base,
suggesting some cooperation in the raid. President Barack Obama said Pakistan
had provided some information leading to the raid, did not thank the country in
his statement on bin Laden's death.
Pakistan's intelligence agency and the CIA have cooperated in joint raids
before against al-Qaida suspects in Pakistan on several occasions since the
Sept. 11, 2001 attacks. But U.S. and Pakistani officials indicated that this
mission was too important to let anyone know more than a few minutes in
advance.
Pakistan's foreign office hailed the death as a breakthrough in the
international campaign against militancy, and noted al-Qaida "had declared war
on Pakistan" and killed thousands of Pakistani civilians and security
officers.
It stressed that the operation to kill bin Laden was an American one, and did
not mention any concerns that Pakistani officials may have been protecting bin
Laden in some way. Domestically, the government may yet face criticism by
political opponents and Islamist for allowing U.S. forces to kill bin Laden on
its soil.
Pakistani officials said a son of bin Laden and three other people were
killed. Other unidentified males were taken by helicopter away from the scene,
while four children and two woman were arrested and left in an ambulance, the
official said.
A witness and a Pakistani official said bin Laden's guards opened fire from
the roof of the compound in the small northwestern town of Abbottabad, and one
of the choppers crashed. However U.S. officials said no Americans were hurt in
the operation. The sound of at least two explosions rocked Abbottabad as the
fighting raged.
It was not known how long bin Laden had been in Abbottabad, which is less
than half a days drive from the border region with Afghanistan.
Locals said large Landcruisers and other expensive cars were seen driving
into the compound, which is in a regular middle-class neighborhood of dirt
covered, litter-strewn roads and small shops. Cabbage and other vegetables are
planted in empty plots in the neighborhood.
Salman Riaz, a film actor, said that five months ago he and a crew tried to
do some filming next to the house, but were told to stop by two men who came
out.
"They told me that this is haram (forbidden in Islam)," he said.
Abbottabad resident Mohammad Haroon Rasheed said the raid happened about 1:15
a.m. local time.
"I heard a thundering sound, followed by heavy firing. Then firing suddenly
stopped. Then more thundering, then a big blast," he said. "In the morning when
we went out to see what happened, some helicopter wreckage was lying in an open
field."
Qasim Khan, 18, who lives in a house just across the compound, said he saw
two Pakistani men going in and coming out of the house often in the past several
years. One of them was relatively a fat man with a beard, he said.
"I never saw anybody else with the two men but, some kids sometime would
accompany them. I never saw any foreigner."
Relations between Pakistan's main intelligence agency and the CIA had been
very strained in recent months. A Pakistani official has said that joint
operations had been stopped as a result, and that the agency was demanding the
Americans cut down on drone strikes in the border area.
In late January, a senior Indonesian al-Qaida operative, Umar Patek, was
arrested at another location in Abbottabad.
News of his arrest only broke in late March. A Pakistani intelligence
official said its officers were led to the house where Patek was staying after
they arrested an al-Qaida facilitator, Tahir Shahzad, who worked at the post
office there. AP